HHmm never knew, thanks. I do buy the no phoshates one, but never thought about the anti-bacterial one. What about all those hand gels they have everywhere? Same thing eh?
Exactly. We have all these companies pushing these products, and they don't tell us that ultimately they'll make the bugs that people are so worked up about stronger. The vast majority of laypeople have no idea how quickly bacteria reproduce, mutate, and that the survivors can share the genes for success, even across species. I mean, it seems like no one ever thinks about what happened to that .01% that the stuff
doesn't eradicate. Now we pay with our immune systems, immunological diseases (think allergies for instance), and we could very well create "The" superbug that wipes us off the face of the earth.
My stepson almost died from becoming infected with one of those resistant strains, although it was a Staph infection he likely picked up in the hospital. Good old soap and water, doesn't need to be anti-bacterial unless you're in a special situation (such as working with people whose immune systems are compromised) and then you won't be using those products available at the regular market.
Phosphates are an issue of your waste water goes into municipal treatment, but even then, if it's a good treatment facility, they know how to handle that stuff (biological filtration and the like). If you're on your own septic such as we are, then it's not such a problem.