Thu. Aug 21st, 2025
alert-–-aussies-lose-it-over-ridiculous-takeaway-food-ban:-‘is-this-real?’Alert – Aussies lose it over ridiculous takeaway food ban: ‘Is this real?’

Aussies have vented their frustration over plans to ban a sushi store staple in one state. 

South ns will no longer receive fish-shaped soy sauce containers with their takeaway sushi from September 1, after the state targeted needless plastic pollution. 

Sydneysider Mahmoud Ismail claimed the 20c-sized plastic fish ‘was the last bit of happiness he had left’.

‘I’m still recovering from the fact that any drink now tastes like paper because of those f***ing paper straws,’ he said in a TikTok video. 

‘There’s so many things that we need to worry about rather than a little soy sauce fish, this is literally the most convenient thing.

‘What’s this going to change? It’s like spitting on a bushfire.’

Mr Ismail said there were bigger plastic items being thrown into the ocean, and that authorities should ‘get a grip’. 

But those supportive of the ban say the soy sauce packages pose unique dangers to native wildlife.

Seabirds and marine animals confuse the plastic ‘fish’ for a meal and fatally ingest them. 

Additionally, exposure to microplastics in humans has been linked to more than 350,000 deaths in a single year, according to New York University researchers. 

Microplastics consumed in food and water have contributed to plummeting sperm counts, kidney damage, and an array of birth defects. 

Food consumed from plastic containers alone has been linked to a number of heart disease deaths. 

But Mr Ismail said the ban would ‘do nothing, bro’. 

‘There’s bigger fish to fry,’ he said. 

‘Cost of living, inflation… and what about the potholes?

‘Let’s ignore the roads, let’s just ban soy sauce fish, this is going to solve ‘s problems.’ 

Social media users bemoaned the ban, saying the fish served ‘the perfect amount of soy sauce’. 

‘Can’t they just stop private jets,’ another wrote. 

‘Bro, wallah, I just realised it was a fish’ a shocked commenter said. 

ns consume more than 100million servings of sushi annually, according to previous data. 

Its prevalence in ns’ diets even led foreigners to refer to hand-roll style sushi as ‘n sushi’. 

South ‘s environmental and health experts decided the soy packages were becoming too common in plastic litter. 

Environment Minister and Deputy Premier Susan Close said the plastic products are used for mere seconds before being thrown away. 

‘Each fish-shaped container is used for just seconds, yet remains in the environment for decades or centuries if littered,’ she said earlier this month. 

‘Their small size means they’re easily dropped, blown away, or washed into drains, making them a frequent component of beach and street litter. 

‘In kerbside recycling, they’re too small to be captured by sorting machinery and often end up in landfill or as fugitive plastic in the environment. 

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