• Mateoto@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    We are over the edge of no return.

    We should stop begging for change and act now. Politics must hurt them with reforms, taxes, and the rule of law.

    We cannot stop climate change now, but we can try to de-accelerate by fighting against big oil, corrupt politics, and billionaire newspapers supporting them.

    • hh93@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Too many people believe they can just continue living like they were 30 years ago - if big oil would stop producing stuff and plastics, gas and airplane fuels would not be available anymore then people would riot

      Even threatening to increase prices to a level that would make sense to limit the use to absolutely necessary levels would piss off too many people to be a viable option because everyone just wants to believe that it’s just for “the others” to change but not for themselves.

      Everyone has to act and change their Livestyle…

      • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Lol that’s the world’s largest prisoner dilemma, never going to happen. People are big children, and you need to treat them as such. You don’t let the child decide whether it’s going to eat candy or real food, you take away the option of candy because they cannot be trusted to make decisions that are good for them in the long run. This is no different, it’s why we have things like regulations and the FDA.

        • hh93@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Yeah exactly but in our situation we also have the children voting and one party is promising them to not take away the candy

          I really don’t see how this can ever work out… :/

          • Matt Shatt@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Not to mention the “adults” in this comparison don’t actually care about the child or the candy, they just care about retaining the ability to control your candy and will do anything and everything to keep stockpiling that sweet, sweet money.

        • vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 year ago

          You do realize that they are children ruled by other children who shouldn’t get that kind of authority? Do you know what children with power over other children do?

        • Zeeroover@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          Absolutely correct. I myself don’t have children, don’t have a car, and I don’t eat meat. Just pick any of those 3 and try to deal with the reactions to it. People are big children.

        • Uli@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          Cool metaphor and all, but just want to be super clear. We’re talking about regulating oil, right? And plastics, coal, other fossil fuel derivatives. And no one’s going to come take away my candy. Stay away from my candy. Don’t take it, it’s mine.

      • DreamerOfImprobableDreams@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        This is the truth right there. Gas prices went up two measly dollars compared to normal in 2022, and everyone flipped the fuck out. People were prepared to elect Republicans-- fucking Republicans- to office, they were so furious about it.

        And don’t @ me about “100 corporations are responsible for like 90% of emissions”. Who’s buying those corporations’ goods? Who’s refusing to vote for politicians that’ll meaningfully regulate these corporations? Who’s spending all day fantasizing about Da Revolushun^TM that’ll never fucking come (and would kill tens of millions of civilians and likely result in fascists winning and seizing control of your country, if not the whole thing splintering into a bunch of warring fiefdoms controlled by ruthless oligarchs) instead of getting to actual work trying to effect real change in the real world? And I don’t mean “direct action” (read: looking edgy and getting photos for the 'gram), I mean actually fucking getting policy passed that’ll have a real impact on people’s real lives.

        • Ooops@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          Gas prices went up two measly dollars compared to normal in 2022, and everyone flipped the fuck out.

          Yeah, sure. They flipped out because the love their cars so much and don’t want to change anything. Oh, wait. No, they flipped out because companies and corrupt politicians made them completely dependent on cars so they will starve without them and kept them so poor that even increasing the cost of using the cars they dependent on just a bit again ends with starving.

          And here you are babbling none-sense again about how it’s the stupid people buying products -as if they had a choice- and not the companies and politicians that are to blame.

          • Balex@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Not to mention that the gas companies were reporting record profits after increasing the price.

            • Aesthesiaphilia@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Seems odd to say

              And don’t @ me about “100 corporations are responsible for like 90% of emissions”. Who’s buying those corporations’ goods?

              People bringing up the 100 corporations are usually calling for regulations on them, and the “you’re the ones buying the goods” people are usually calling for Personal Responsibility and Voting With Your Wallet.

              • 1stTime4MeInMCU@mander.xyz
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                1 year ago

                It’s possible to both think those companies should be regulated and that people are doing almost nothing personally to help, including electing people to enact those policies. For most people I talk to the “but 100 corps” is a total deflection of personal responsibility. This crisis will not be solved without a good heaping helping of both personal responsibility and aggressive government regulation. If nothing else because that aggressive regulation will never pass into law unless people acknowledge their personal responsibility and are willing to accept the sacrifices that will come with it.

                • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  In the US, unless you are willing to vote third party, you don’t get the choice to vote for Anti-Capitalist politicians. And there are millions of liberals waiting in line to scold you for not voting for the parties of Capital.

                • Aesthesiaphilia@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  This crisis will not be solved without a good heaping helping of both personal responsibility and aggressive government regulation.

                  100%. People usually argue for one to the exclusion of the other but we need both.

              • DreamerOfImprobableDreams@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                Sorry, I’m so used to hanging out in left-of-center places I make the mistake of assuming everyone understands how BS the whole “personal responsibilty” shtick is and is onboard with strict regulations to fight climate change. So I tend not to explicitly call it out in my posts, assuming it goes unsaid. Which might be a bad assumption to make in more centrist / non-explicitly-liberal spaces.

                Will try to be clearer in the future :)

          • Solar Bear@slrpnk.net
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            1 year ago

            They didn’t say we can stop it at our individual points of consumption. They explicitly mentioned policy. People need to be willing to support policy that will drastically change their own lives, likely in ways they don’t even realize, and be ready to live with that. Otherwise pretty soon we won’t be living with much at all.

            • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              don’t @ me about “100 corporations are responsible for like 90% of emissions”. Who’s buying those corporations’ goods?

              Suggesting that the consumer is responsible for emissions at the point of production betrays a deep misunderstanding of climate change.

              Suggesting that “people’s” willingness to support policy that would change their lives is holding back cuts to emissions at the point of production betrays a similarly deep misunderstanding of political power.

          • reverendz@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            This is it exactly. We have to turn off the f*cking spigot at the source!

            There is no amount of science or innovation that’s going to save us. It’s going to take “holy shit we’re all going to die horribly” panic from world leaders to forcefully cut off the source, which is oil and its byproducts.

            Short of that, no amount of responsible consumerism can stem this tide.

          • Flygone@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Not immediately but they’ll stop producing if people stop buying. Just takes a lot of people to have any meaningful change. And that starts with every single one of us.

            • boonhet@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              And that’ll never happen, because everyone else will ignore you and just buy the shit anyway.

              It NEEDS to be regulatory change. Shaming consumers into not consuming doesn’t work. Oil companies want you to think it works, that’s why THEY invented the concept of the carbon footprint. To make everyone ignore real solutions that could actually work.

              • reverendz@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                “Think globally, act locally” and other such clever slogans that seemed so logical and made so little impact.

                How about “round up the heads of oil companies and deliver them to a firing squad?”

                Not as much zing to it though.

        • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          If i could buy none polluting alternatives to anything i currently buy, you can bet your life that i would.

          But i dont have alot of choice.

          I do what i can.

          Maybe ill give it all up and go live in the woods somewhere. Become self sufficient. Maybe the capitalists will notice im gone… or not… probably not.

        • BartsBigBugBag@lemmy.tf
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          1 year ago

          It’s almost like our society is car centered, and raising gas prices directly results in worse outcomes for the majority of people. You can’t expect people to just stop using cars, but you can use the state to create massive infrastructure policies paid for wholly by the polluting industries who most heavily profit from our current situation. Use the next decade to build high speed rail, electrified busses and lightrails, subway systems, and other mass transit, and then when gas prices go up, people will have an option other than cutting back on their food to ensure they make it to work every day.

          I replied to the wrong comment in this thread, but if I delete it’ll only delete from my instance, so I’m just gonna leave it.

          • lka1988@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Our society is 100% car centered. My kids’ schools are miles away from my house, my job is miles away, and you cannot convince me to ride a bike or walk when it’s over 100°F outside. Fuck that shit. I’m happy to take public transit, but any public transit available to me isn’t feasible because it would take literally 1.5-2 hours to get to work and back each way, which cuts down severely on my family time. And I can’t work from home either due to the nature of my job, which is maintaining the machines that build microchips.

            • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              Maybe don’t move somewhere that your job and kids school is hundreds of miles away? My child’s school is down the street, and I can take the subway to work in about 15min. This was a specific choice my wife and I made when we chose to live here.

              • lka1988@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                Hundreds of miles? I think you misread. They’re several miles away.

                Also it’s a lot easier said than done to just up and move somewhere more convenient. I don’t have that luxury, and telling me to do so will get you a big fat “go fuck yourself” from me for being so insufferable about it.

                Now move along and go bug someone else with your luxury conveniences.

                • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  Oh great, let’s use privilege as a bludgeon to enforce the status quo. This is great and also happens to be indistinguishable from doing nothing.

      • mars296@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I agree with you… It passes people off because their entire life is dependent on fossil fuels. When its been encouraged by society/government for decades and now people have to drive miles to get to the nearest grocery store/point of interest they don’t have an alternative that isn’t uprooting their whole lives.

        If you are going tax gas what it should be taxed, you also need to simultaneously make changes that will help people transition to sustainable alternatives. An amount of people will resist no matter what but you need a carrot to go along with the stick.

      • SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Where I live we get one or more times a week 40°C and over days.

        Going from home to work is a 30 minutes drive for me. I drive a 2004 petrol Opel Agila.

        The train requires you to be on-point, otherwise is a 50 minutes wait for the next run. Also, from the main train station to work is a 20 minutes added walk. This is not too bad, but the worst part is doing the walk under the heat we have here during the summer. Good thing it ends up actually being cheaper than driving my Agila, counting a subscription is €30 while I fuel €15 each week.

        The bus is never on-point, always late, always destroyed, always trashy, always overwhelmingly full, skips runs and its not uncommon for it to stop working while you are on it. And you still need the 20 minutes walk. By the way, its too a paid service.

        When I will be able to financially, I want to at least move to a newer electric vehicle or use the train during fall and winter. But at least right now during summer, I just can’t without arriving at work like a bucket of salt water had been thrown at me (as there is little good shade on the way) and we don’t have showers at work.

        Other people might not even have the chance to made this decision, as public services can be even harder to use in some other areas.

      • nexusband@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Everyone has to act and change their Livestyle…

        I “kinda” disagree, because we have a lot of alternatives now. Some are more expensive, some need a bit more work, but the alternatives are there and are coming as well. And little changes can do good things, for example not eating Avocados is something everyone can do. If only 50k people stop eating Avocados, that’s one hell of an impact in the rainforest areas. Because those 50k people don’t eat one Avocado per Month, they eat a lot more (generally). A single Avocado Tree can produce 80-100 Kg per year and generally, avocados are somewhere between 500-900 g. So maybe 120-150 Avocados per year, per tree. Then there’s meat - we don’t have to stop eating it, we have to reduce and it would make a HUGE impact, especially considering Beef from Brazil isn’t even that great, but the rainforest get’s destroyed for it.

        And so on. It even goes so far, that if people still want to drive their gas guzzlers, they can, but they need synthetic fuels which are expensive but 100% carbon neutral. So the Lifestyle does not need changing necessarily - it just needs some adjustments and especially more conscious consumption - especially in those countries, where capitalism is in “full effect” and where we “rich people” actually make impacts with our buying decisions. (Even if they are extremely small, if you tell friends you are doing things different, they may do as well)

    • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Politics must hurt them with reforms, taxes, and the rule of law.

      Yeah… that’s how we ended up in this situation. How do you think these giant corporations became so powerful? They “reformed” laws until they could do whatever the hell they please - that’s what “reform” gets you.

        • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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          It’s really simple… the people with money get to dictate how these “reforms” work - that’s it. It doesn’t matter if you get a Bernie Sanders into a position of power - the “vested interests” will dictate all the little loop holes in the small script that allows for “business as usual” to continue, and that’s if they bother to hide it at all. It’s literally how we ended up in this terrible situation.

          • vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 year ago

            Yes, which is why you should hit where you are not expected.

            Which is why statism always works for the stronger side.

            I don’t get why leftists don’t usually understand this. I’m not a leftist, but this should be a very simple conclusion.

            • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              I don’t know what kind of “leftists” you have been talking to… the ones I talk to understand this very well. It’s pretty much been the bedrock of anarchist thought for more than a hundred years now.

              • vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org
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                1 year ago

                I live in Russia so most leftists here are Stalinists in one way or another, or at least Trostkyists, which still means centralism.

                • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  Stalinists are right-wingers with red flags - there’s nothing leftist about them at all. Trots are barely any better. People forget that leftist ideas are popular - that is why there are so many political racketeers in the world pretending to buy into those ideas while actively distorting the same ideas to suit their political agenda. Even old Adolf did it - but no-one is as guilty as the charlatans that ran the USSR and is currently running the PRC. The USSR was about as “socialist” as the US is “democratic” - ie, their (respective) “socialism” and “democracy” only exists in the minds of propagandists.

              • Aesthesiaphilia@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                It’s pretty much been the bedrock of anarchist thought for more than a hundred years now.

                And anarchists are a rounding error, numerically. You’re in a bubble.

                • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  Is that some secret code between you and the aliens that will be coming to fetch you “any day now,” Clyde?

    • Licherally@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Politicians love their bribes more than they love the planet, so that’s probably not going to happen. Dems and cons both

        • Licherally@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          You read a comment from a person criticizing the current government for being self motivated and taking bribes under a story about climate change and how we’re all fucked and you thought this was a centrist comment?

    • Zippy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Ya right. When has prices went over 5 dollars a gallon in the US, people there list their minds. God forbid we should drive a bit less or consume less.

      This is a consumer problem not big oil. The second biggest company in the world by revenue and by far the largest by profit is Saudi Aramco. And why are they so big and countries like Russia are energy giants? Because we are tax and regulated our oil companies significantly more while increasing our consumption. Instead of buying locally, we are now buying from countries like Russia and Saudia Arabia. Look how that is working out.

      • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        What a vague and silly comment, half the world’s top contributors to greenhouse gasses aren’t even capitalist countries. I get the fediverse isn’t a fan of capitalism, but you can’t just blanketly blame everything on it.

        • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          The US military is the single largest polluter organisation on the planet - do tell me how we can’t blame capitalism again?

          And just for your information - that other gigantic capitalist country you falsely believe isn’t capitalist? Guess what? It’s capitalist.

          • Aesthesiaphilia@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            The US military is the world’s largest socialist organization. Universal health care, pensions, free college and job training, free housing…

            • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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              The US military is the world’s largest socialist organization.

              Oh, do please explain to us how worker ownership of the means of production works in the US military.

              Wait, don’t answer yet… I quickly have to get some popcorn. This is going to be good.

                • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  Taxes

                  Taxes? That’s how the working class owns the means of production in the US military?

                  Am I talking to a damn chatbot here? It sure as hell sounds like it.

          • Aesthesiaphilia@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Also, non-capitalist countries tend to be low emitters because they are failed countries whose people live in miserable poverty.

          • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            China is the number one greenhouse gas contributor, Russia is near the top of the list as well. Fuck off tankies.

            • boonhet@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              If you think those 2 are communist countries, you’re stuck in the last century. Let me give you some news. The Soviet Union collapsed and gave way to a capitalist oligarchy. China realized that capitalism is profitable and brings them tons of money from the west. I have no idea why tankies still simp those countries as communist (wait, I do actually - because tankies never had any principles of their own, they just wanted to be anti-west).

              There is one country that needs to kickstart change for it to have any effect, it’s the US. Not only does it pollute the most per capita, it’s a huge market. My tiny ass country with fuel prices already being twice as much in the US, can raise fuel prices even more, but that won’t affect global demand. Americans no longer getting fuel for essentially free, would actually affect global demand.

              • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                Yes, of course, because political systems are binary and there’s only capitalism and communism lmao

                • boonhet@lemm.ee
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                  There’s plenty of systems that mix both, but Russia and China aren’t actually good examples. They’re pretty capitalist.

                  If you want a better example of mixing capitalism with socialism, you can take a look at something like the Nordic countries, where there are tons of social services and safety nets, but there’s still a very strong (just regulated) free market.

            • FluffyPotato@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Those 2 are literally capitalist countries. Also tankies are the ones who commonly say China is not capitalist.

            • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              China is the number one

              Sooo… a capitalist state?

              Russia is near the top

              Sooo… another capitalist state?

              Fuck off tankies.

              You don’t know what a tankie is, do you?

              I knew it was a bad day when we allowed liberals access to that word.

                • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  You walked blindly into this argument with absolutely zero understanding of the subject matter at hand, didn’t you?

                • ghost_laptop@lemmy.ml
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                  Do you think a tankie would say China is a capitalist nation? Liberalism really is worse than brain cancer. They are either an anarchist or some other shit, you just see the names of the enemies of the empire and scream, you poor ignorant Gringo.

        • Aesthesiaphilia@kbin.social
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          Just as there are hordes of idiots on the right who call anything they don’t like “socialism”, there are a few idiots - primarily teenagers - on the left who call anything they don’t like “capitalism”.

          After the supreme court invalidated Roe v Wade, I attended a rally. I walked away when one of the speakers started shouting “We know what the real problem is…capitalism!” and all the university kids started cheering.

          I love the enthusiasm and your heart’s in the right place but y’all are dumber than a bag of bowling balls.

    • u_tamtam@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      You can have industrialized production and consumerism without capitalism. Not that I’m defending capitalism, I just think our problem is deeper than what you make it, and human nature combined with unchecked technological ability to remodel out planet would yield the same outcome, no matter the dominant flavor of our economical structure.

      • albigu@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        I’d recommend looking into how indigenous people have historically dealt and wish to deal with climate change before claiming much about “human nature”. A lot of so-called “human nature” is just the universalisation of European capitalist values. I suggest starting by reading about the Red Deal, specially if you’re from the USA.

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          1 year ago

          Although interesting, I don’t think your link is the gotcha counterexample you think it is. Previous civilizations caused environmental collapses without having capitalism to blame for it. We could switch overnight to soviet style communism and that would not solve anything if our expectation is to provide everyone on earth with their today’s living standards. We could blame greed, selfishness and that would take us closer to the truth, but even that would be very shortsighted. We would need all humans on earth to be united around a same goal and same path forward, and share the same willingness to sacrifice. No sect or religion has ever achieved that and never will (we are just so many, and spread that wide).

          Looking at the world from the lens of an economic ideology alone only gets you so far. Wrong tool for the job.

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      It’s not a full solution, but I’d love to see more use of compostable single-use plastics coupled with municipal biochar facilities.

      It’s an excellent cycle that harnesses capitalism and materialism. People buy single use plastics, then throw them away. Municipal garbage (a utility company paid for by ratepayers), picks it up, and brings it to a biochar facility. The facility pyrolizes it, making syngas (which they burn for energy which is then purchased by consumers) and biochar, which is sold as a soil amendment and happens to be carbon-negative. Excess biochar can be buried.

      It’s a typical capitalist create-consume economy except it’s carbon-negative (when paired with decarbonized transportation like electric trains and delivery vans, and hydrogen powered garbage trucks). The more you consume, the more carbon you actually suck out of the air.

      There’s a few proposed loops like this which instead of fighting consumerism actually harness it to make carbon negative actions. Another one that I’m very interested in is making HVAC filters that also passively absorb carbon from the atmosphere. With electric heat pumps we already have an HVAC technology that is minimally emitting. Pair that with carbon negative filters and you’re golden.

      Or concrete using injected co2. It’s a real thing that exists, it just doesn’t have price parity with traditional carbon-intensive concrete. Imagine if just by building a building you could be carbon negative.

      Again, it’s not a total solution but I wish I could see more use cases like this instead of the “consume less” narrative. People are not going to consume less, that’s not how people work. The only way to get people to consume less is by raising prices (which is a necessary part of the solution of course).

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        Why do you think pyrolyzing random plastic waste generates biochar?

        It would also never be carbon negative, since it is from oil. Best case is neutral, but some carbon is burned off in the process.

        Same for concrete, it is not suddenly carbon negative.

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    Oh, the capitalists didn’t do what their public relations exercises pretended they were going to do? Golly gee… no one could have seen that coming at all.

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    The only thing big corporations care about is next quarter’s profits. The world can quite literally burn next year if they get their big profits this quarter.

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        They believe that they won’t be effected, or at least effected last and the least. These people are parasites on society and need to be treated as such.

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        You see capitalism is lime a virus. It grows, takes over its host (us) and causes painful symptoms. And naturally if the disease is not treated we will die. Right now the world is akin to having a bad flu. The world is even getting hotter to try to kill us.

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        If it’s ALL on fire, then my percentage of the money supply remains unchanged!

        “That’ll be $20. I mean $15. $10? You know what, just half of whatever is in that flame retardant wallet.”

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    These companies will not change unless they are forced to do so and our government isn’t going to do shit since most of congress is in the pocket of big oil. So what are our other options?

    Everyone likes to blame individuals for not using renewables or buying an electric car, when it reality their options were limited in the first place by big oil. Most people can barely afford to put food on the table and green or renewable products are usually significantly more expensive and not really an option. Besides that, IIRC ordinary citizens only account for roughly 20% of all greenhouse gas emissions. So the onus lies on big oil to make changes and offer affordable renewable options instead of the same gas guzzling/polluting bullshit we’ve been using up to this point. But like I said, they won’t do something like that unless they are forced to do so, they will always pursue profit over people, unless those people get in their faces and force them to pursue other options.

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      most of congress is in the pocket of big oil. So what are our other options?

      Vote only for candidates against FPTP. When that’s gone, we can just vote for candidates who are against big oil.

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          Their unwillingness to act on climate change is a major (if not the biggest) reason we need representation. The Democrats hand power back to Republicans who undo this session’s climate action.

          Destroying the world more slowly by slightly impacting one election at a time brought us here.

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            I understand and support the sentiment: something needs to change. I just don’t think that re-framing electoral politics will work unless it’s backed by a mass movement of organised workers. If that happens, the question becomes, why bother with the middlemen? They can legislate for themselves without having to beg the ruling class for mild compromises.

            Destroying the world more slowly by slightly impacting one election at a time brought us here.

            That’s kinda what I was driving it. How many elections would it take to abolish FPTP? We’d have to wait for that and only then could we think about voting in politicians who might do something and the system would still be dominated by capital. That makes a three-step process out of a two-step process.

            Seems like a request to wait for an indefinite number of election cycles—the same request of those who say to vote for this or that faction of the capitalist party and one day, just maybe, conditions will be just right for one of those parties to effect any change. Too many African, Latin American, and Asian homes and lives would be destroyed while they wait patiently for the US to get its act together.

            It would take too long to work unless you know of a massive campaign across the western world to implement FPTP. If it doesn’t exist already, it must be built within the next year or so or the west will be locked into another four-ish years of no progress. And that’s just for a shot at electing politicians who might vote to abolish FPTP. Before they even come within hearing distance of, never mind face-to-face with, the contradictions of imperialism.

            Currently, almost all I see in the west is how to do business as usual but in green. That means denying progress to the subjugated masses so that USians can maintain their standard of living. Oppressed people shouldn’t have to wait for the US to figure out how to tactically solve the world’s ills through an electoral technicality. Round and round we’d go with electoralism.

            At this point, there is one, single option: revolution. Anything else will take too long. Luckily for humanity, whatever the US thinks or wants is largely irrelevant. The world is revolving anyway. The only question for the world is what form the revolution takes. And the additional question for USians is whether they want to be part of the change or to ruin everything out of spite and self-interest.

            The Red Deal may be of interest (click drop-down menu under ‘articles’): https://therednation.org/environmental-justice/

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              At this point, there is one, single option: revolution

              You’re the world’s biggest sucker if you think that’s even a possibility.

              Or more likely, a russian/right wing shill

              “Voting is useless” is right wing propaganda.

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                I have to admit, I did not expect this response. I’m struggling to see how an anti-capitalist argument in favour of socialist revolution is right wing.

                A possibility? It’s happening as we speak. Time will tell.

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                  It’s a spoiler, a red herring. “Don’t bother doing the thing that could actually threaten our power. Instead, focus on this other thing that has no shot of happening.”

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        We don’t have time for that. Just vote Democrat, and vote in the primary.

        Undoing FPTP will take a generation. I agree it should be done, but it’s not the priority.

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            No, I’m saying we can get climate change fixed without undoing fptp. Just give democrats a permanent supermajority. Much like in California.

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              How would you respond to GP’s point that most Democrats are corrupt too? Nobody here is arguing that they’re as bad as Republicans. But just electing them with no regard to their policy positions will produce right wing Democrats who will ultimately hold the same positions as Republicans, and then they’ll split into two FPTP-supporting parties like the Democratic-Republican party did. We will have won a name and nothing more.

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                How would you respond to GP’s point that most Democrats are corrupt too?

                Sorry, skipped this. I would say a) it’s an order of magnitude less than Republicans, and b) democratic voters are more willing to hold their candidates to task.

                Still a no brainer.

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                  What does “holding them to task” look like if we’ll ultimately vote for anyone with a (D) next to their name? Like, yell at them or something?

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                Nobody here is arguing that they’re as bad as Republicans.

                You may not be, but plenty of people do make this argument, at which point I start calling them irredeemably stupid.

                But just electing them with no regard to their policy positions

                Every Democrat is better than every Republican, period. Given the choice between the two, it’s an obvious choice.

                The time to care about policy positions is in the primaries, in local elections in safe Democrat districts, and in internal democratic party elections (which you may not even know happen, but I attend all of them and it’s an excellent way to meet face to face with the people who in 10 years will be running your state).

                And then, yes, when you get a place that’s safely Democratic, you have the democrats split into a more left and a more right wing. But the new right wing of the democrats is the old left wing.

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                  Why are you arguing with (and name calling) people who aren’t even here?

                  That’s not a given.

                  Internal elections that most working class people can’t attend is one of our problems; they’re taking advantage of voter fatigue.

                  What you’re describing already happened. Every Democratic-Republican was better than every Whig. And then the Democrats were bribed further and further right. If we don’t demand that they make themselves easy to replace, then it will happen again.

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      It’s time for radical action and violent resistance.

      We’re staring into the face of human extinction and people are still quibbling about consumer choice.

      it’s going to take much, much more direct and violent action to force change.

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      If current green companies can’t make affordable options, why in God’s earth would you think it would be cheaper if conventional energy companies join the mix?

      Your entire statement is conflicting. Angry about high costs being unaffordable then suggesting oil companies to not produce low cost energy that keeps prices down while acknowledging the high cost of green energy.

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    No govt will hold them accountable, so energy firms can walk forwards/ backwards/ play hopscotch on their pledges and it’ll be ignored.

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        Are there other options on the ballet that aren’t pro-oil/pro-economy? May want to start considering other boxes.

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            Oh, I’m not suggesting not voting. Just point out that the left wing vote in the US is a decrepit old Catholic who’s issued a huge amount of oil drilling permits and picked a cop for his vp position.

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    I have low expectation but damn…didn’t think that they’d be that low.

    We all are trying to do our parts you know, I used to like cars when I was in HS, now I don’t even consider having one. I’ll stick to public transport and will get an electric last mile transport.

    These people sucks ass. They have the monetary power to make real change but decided to double down. Nowadays investments in renewables have good returns and will be viable for the next couple decades, but they care too much for their previously invested monies and want to milk the people to the last drop.

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      Man, you are so right. The weirdest part is, that your behavior isn’t even socially very accepted.

      I, too, love engines. I admire the technology and how genius they are put together. My dream is to own a cruiser motorbike and go drive through the countryside. I don’t think this will happen, as I would hate myself to burn fuel for pleasure.

      I own a very old, tiny scooter, that I only use to carry heavy stuff. I used to carry on my shoulders, but mom in law felt sorry for me and gave me her oldest, broken, rusty scooter, that nobody used for months, because she bought a new one again. I repaired it. My wife gets upset, when I don’t drive her around. For example to the market 500 meters down the road to buy a can of soda or so. I only use it for hard work.

      People surrounding me think I don’t like progress. No, man, I would love to have a more convenient life! Driving to me is fun, I enjoy it! I just can’t stand myself to do something bad to environment for my pleasure, so I try not to. And people think I’m weird.

      I know people like you and me don’t even make a difference. Whatever amount we save and not emit in our whole lifetime - some ignorant wealthy will blow out within 5 minutes.

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        I don’t think this will happen, as I would hate myself to burn fuel for pleasure.

        Modify one to run off biofuel? You can even make the fuel yourself

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    Wait! Some of you really believed in and trusted your politician’s and your corporation’s PR ad campaigns? LOL I remember few years ago, when everybody on Reddit posted pictures of themselves cleaning beaches and streets and stuff, all proud of how they made some kind of difference. KEKW

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        Well… I hate to break it to you, but it seems we’re left without any alternative. I alone can’t do shit about it. Groups of people have tried, and we do see the results. In last few years I’ve seen people making fun of the one Swedish girl that also tried… I’m not saying we should give up, but I think our politicians and corporations and governments are rather preparing for a war (you need a lot o oil for it), and I see far more people and celebrities on Internet and the news cheering for this war then fighting for their own future. Idk I’m no expert…

        • redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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          There is an alternative. And it’s proving to be effective. But you’re not allowed to know about it. And if you do know, you’re not allowed to think about it objectively. The evidence will be framed in such a way that makes you think that tackling climate change and corporate power is the most dangerous thing on earth: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009152655

            • redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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              Haha. It does look dodgy. I used it for transparency, though, as doi links tend to be trusted. If you have a look at almost any recent academic article, it’ll have one. Look up doi’s before clicking that link if you like. Academic publishers use them to make sure that links to research always work. From doi.org:

              A DOI is a digital identifier of an object, any object — physical, digital, or abstract. DOIs solve a common problem: keeping track of things. Things can be matter, material, content, or activities. A DOI is a unique number made up of a prefix and a suffix separated by a forward slash. This is an example of one: 10.1000/182. It is resolvable using our proxy server by displaying it as a link: https://doi.org/10.1000/182.

              Designed to be used by humans as well as machines, DOIs identify objects persistently. They allow things to be uniquely identified and accessed reliably. You know what you have, where it is, and others can track it too.

              The link I posted, https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009152655, takes you to Cambridge University Press website for an academic book called, Clean Air at What Cost? The Rise of Blunt Force Regulation in China by Denise Sienli van der Kamp. A few chapters are accessible. Otherwise, you’ll have to search online for a full PDF. Here’s a more usual form of link to the introduction: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/clean-air-at-what-cost/introduction/2A72A1AACE376312BDD4B005439AAC41.

              From the summary of the introduction (emphasis added):

              In the past decade, the Chinese government has resorted to forcibly shuttering entire industries or industrial areas to clean up the air. These “blunt force” measures are often taken as a sign of authoritarian efficiency; the state uses its coercive powers to swiftly eliminate polluting industries and then silence social dissent. This chapter introduces an alternate perspective: that blunt force regulation is a sign of ineffective bureaucratic control. When institutions are too weak to hold bureaucrats accountable, central leaders increase oversight by drastically reducing the number of steps and resources required to produce a regulatory outcome – resulting in blunt force measures. Through an overview of the causes and consequences of China’s blunt force pollution regulation, this chapter challenges the tenets of authoritarian environmentalism, forcing us to rethink what it means to be a “high-capacity” state.

              The book is rather clever, as you can see from this excerpt. It reframes the narrative to support the argument that although China has been successful in ‘swiftly eliminating[ing] polluting industries’, it did not do so efficiently and it had to ‘silence social dissent’. Hard to imagine how someone can present the evidence that China’s methods worked in the same breath as trying to convince you that such success means that it failed. That’s western academics for you. Just wait till you look at chapter 2, which explains that if the author is right, there are:

              two underlying logics [to] regulatory enforcement, namely, “rules-based” regulation (which prioritizes effectiveness) and “risk-based” regulation (which prioritizes efficiency). … [But] blunt force regulation fits into neither category, offering neither efficient nor effective regulation in the long-term.’

              As if China, with one of the most advanced technologically advanced infrastructures in the world, is going to instal a hodgepodge, disconnected network of tiny, polluting, inefficient coal power stations because it chose the wrong (effective-but-ineffective) regulatory model.

              Don’t get me wrong. China could very probably improve its efficiency re: meeting environmental goals. Perhaps it could take seriously some of the analysis in this book when doing so; some if it is very good. But although the author argues for readers to disbelieve the evidence presented in the same book, it outlines an effective alternative to the capitalist mock sigh of despair. The question is, should society listen to the social dissent or do what’s best for life on earth?

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                I need to read up more on dois, since I don’t understand why not just use a url, they’re already unique.

                The sketchiness actually came from that as well as the “you’re not allowed to talk about it” comment which to me screams crypto scam or cult or both.

                Here’s my issue with your general argument

                As if China, with one of the most advanced technologically advanced infrastructures in the world,

                You seem to be taking it a given that what China is doing is more or less correct, and then deducing how you should interpret the world from that. Of course China wouldn’t do anything stupid, at best they might just need minor improvements to the process.

                This book criticizing China isn’t right, it’s just Western indoctrination.

                To me that makes it likely that you’re someone who’s drank the kool aid, and you’re emotionally invested in defending China, which makes a fruitful conversation with you unlikely.

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                  It’s because websites go down. If a journal website goes down, for example, the doi can be redirected so that people searching old links can still find the article.

                  The book argues that China’s ‘blunt force regulation’ will not work in the long term, suggesting that China may have clean air today but that its air will become dirty again because its regulatory model is defective. I’m saying that is a weak argument as it presupposes that the factories and inefficient (greenhouse gas-wise) infrastructure, etc, that were shut down will be re-used, which is baffling. Those factories are gone. And as it has one of the most technologically advanced infrastructures in the world, it is highly unlikely that anyone would re-install the technologically backward infrastructure. It wouldn’t be very competitive in the world market, would it?

                  China will face myriad problems in the future. Dirty air from inefficient processing and usage of fossil fuels is unlikely to be one of them. If that’s right, and if I’ve interpreted the author’s argument right, then the thesis fails for being reduced to an absurdity. That’s not to throw the baby out with the bath water. There’s some great analysis in the book. The evidence and analysis just do not lead to the author’s conclusion unless one accepts two essential premises: the primacy of private property and the basic principles of liberalism.

                  I’m emotionally invested in evidence and conclusions that can be drawn on its basis. You say I’ve drunk the Kool Aid while dismissing the maturity of 80+ million members of the CPC and millions more supporters in the rest of the population.

                  When I said, you’re not allowed to talk about it, this is exactly what I was referencing. Any presentation of a counter argument is treated with derision. As if there’s only one permissible narrative—which happens to be mainstream only in the west. Such that academics will write a book detailing the successes of Chinese environmental policy and conclude that it’s failed because one day it might fail. Again, there is very likely room to improve efficiency and there is some good analysis in the book. Insisting on nuance does not a cult make.

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            I’m not trying to fix the climate. I’m unable to do so. War with anyone is good? (Btw. learn to spell Russia) I’m shilling for peace 100%