• TheBlue22
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    5511 months ago

    How about instead this “personal responsibility” bullshit we focus on the actual causes of global warming, I.e. massive corporations that create the majority of greenhouse gasses

    • @[email protected]
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      2311 months ago

      Why has it to be either, or? We need both. Systemic and behavioural changes on all levels. And we need it now. We no longer have any time left to shift the blame back and forth! I’m getting so sick of this blame game!

      • @[email protected]
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        811 months ago

        It’s 100% personal responsibility, it’s just that part of that responsibility is to vote/convince others for more systemic change. All the kids just blaming the “biggest 100 companies” while not voting and making no lifestyle changes are just as bad as the people they critizise.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          If you put it this way: sure. And those famous “biggest 100 companies”, which are constantly used as a cheap excuse to not do anything on a personal level, are run by maybe 1,000 or so individuals. And employ a few 100,000 individuals.

          All decisions are 100% personal responsibility, because entities like corporations or nations can’t decide anything. It’s always individual people.

          • @[email protected]
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            211 months ago

            You didn’t. My point was more that voting isn’t enough. Just because there are worse people, that doesn’t mean that we are free of blame. The entire west is living very unsustainable lifestyles. So we both need to stop the big polluters by voting and we also need to do our own part to strive towards reaching sustainability.

            • TheBlue22
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              -111 months ago

              If everyone suddenly changed their lifestyle to be more sustainable, world would still go to shit. Because again, individuals combined contribute minimally compared to corporations individually.

              Not to mention, “carbon footprint” is a myth made by british petroleum and spread by big oil. It is made exactly to scare people like you, making them think responsible for problems not caused by individuals.

              Only way to combat climate change is systematic, not individual. You can do you and be more sustainable if you want, but don’t spread lies made by the ones actually responsible.

              • @[email protected]
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                411 months ago

                If everyone changed their lifestyle the we would solve the climate crisis. It’s not like the big corporations release co2e because it’s fun, they do it because the people want the products (and they want them at a cheap price). Corporations are no angels by any means but they are directly downstream from the people.

                It’s obviously more complicated than that but the idea that big corporations have the sole responsibility is just shifting the blame. You are still responsible for the portion that you put into the atmosphere.

                • johnhowson
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                  -111 months ago

                  @Anemia @TheBlue22
                  It’s not quite as simple as that. There are the carbon emissions we actively produce such as fuel in motor vehicles. Then there are passive emissions from transporting items such as foodstuffs which we are not directly responsible for. So changing lifestyle can only achieve so much. Feedback mechanisms such as carbon sequestation through planting trees needs balancing against additional gasses from melting permafrost etc. A global government level effort is what is needed

        • @[email protected]
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          -711 months ago

          What does voting for Capitalism have to do with helping the environment? They are 100% orthogonal to each other.

          • @[email protected]
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            311 months ago

            I didn’t even mention capitalism? Are you responding to the wrong person? My argument is that people ought to vote for the more environmental option.

            • @[email protected]
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              -711 months ago

              The fact that you don’t even realize that capitalism is the problem and then you think voting for one of the two capitalist parties will fix anything, shows you don’t care about the problem enough to think deeply about it at all.

              • @[email protected]
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                111 months ago

                Even if I agreed with you, voting is still important. We need to do what we can in the current situation even if you don’t think it is the full solution.

                What type of action do you propose instead?

      • TheBlue22
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        011 months ago

        The majority of the shit they sell us doesn’t ever get bought.

  • AnonTwo
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    11 months ago

    The goalpost for individuals is pushed further to make up for what corporations are doing, which is…(reads notes)…nothing.

    • @[email protected]
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      1411 months ago

      I keep reading that. But it’s not that simple. Corporations provide what individuals want. Their exploitation of the world’s resources and the damage to the climate is a side product of that. They aren’t a completely separate entity that do what they do just to be evil.

      Governments need to heavily restrict corps and how they operate. Which will come with increased prices and limitations to the people. Which is unpopular and will mean that those politicians won’t get back into office…

      Which is why nothing will happen and we are all fucked

    • catarina
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      711 months ago

      Yeah, but all the people taking multiple flights a year for weekend getaways aren’t solely the responsibility of the “corporations”, are they?

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      That’s not true. Corporations concede nothing until forced. And many countries are foceing corporations to do things.

      For example, it’s illegal in many countries for corporations to have short-distance flights where a train route is available.

      We need more laws like this and corporations will do better.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      Came here to essentially say this. Our individual contributions are meaningless in the face of the abuses by corporations and wealthy individuals.

      • @[email protected]
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        1311 months ago

        Do you vote? Because it’s the same principle - how one person votes might be irrelevant, but millions of people voting is powerful. This is true even though corporations have outsized influence on the political process.

        Likewise, a single person deciding to not eat meat one day a week or replace one car journey with cycling is nothing in the global scheme of things, but a billion people all doing it will have more impact on the environment than any corporation ever could.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          I see your point, though I think the comparison isn’t quite accurate. My one vote doesn’t get canceled out many times over by the vote of a billionaire (though I suppose you could argue that lobbying by that billionaire could indeed cancel it out.

          I guess I’m just growing pessimistic. For as much as I personally do, I feel its a drop in the water that is negated 1000 times over by corporations and wealthy individuals. I’m also tired of the narrative being focused on individual effort instead of pressuring corporations etc. to take more responsibility. But both individual and corporate/government action are needed, I suppose, if we’re going to save ourselves…

  • Herr Woland
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    11 months ago

    If you want people to give up flying you need to give them alternatives. I always choose train if it’s available. And for meat we don’t have to collectively give up meat, eating less meat (once or twice a week) would be totally efficient in limiting the CO2 emissions

    • Hot Saucerman
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      911 months ago

      eating less meat (once or twice a week)

      I’ve been doing this a few years now. Trying to slowly introduce more and more new vegetarian/vegan recipes into my life. Worth it, in my opinion.

      • @[email protected]
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        711 months ago

        It’s really not hard. I think the extreme emphasis on going veg/vegan is actually harmful. Just eat less, find good veg recipes, then eat a little less, etc. You can get 90% of the way there and not even miss it much if you do it gradually.

  • HotDogFingies
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    2011 months ago

    How about you redirect this question to the people actually responsible for setting the planet on fire and inevitably turning my children’s futures to smoldering ash? I can only just barely afford to eat meat, certainly not every day, and any form of travel is a distant, impossible pipedream.

    This is not my fault or responsibility. Life under capitalism hasn’t afforded me that luxury. I do not get to make decisions, they are too expensive.

  • @[email protected]
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    1611 months ago

    Just make private jets illegal or tax the fk out of each trip

    Ban bunker oil. It’s used in shipping container boats. It’s the most polluting fuel out there.

  • @[email protected]
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    1511 months ago

    Can I keep both and instead hold corporations responsible since they’re responsible for like 90% of climate change causes.

    • @[email protected]
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      -511 months ago

      No you can’t. How do you think those corporations pollute? Do they do it for fun or because they have customers that feed their businesses? The idea that “heading corporations responsible” as if that won’t change anything in your lifestyle is beyond naive. Shell pollutes because people buy and burn their fuel, they’re not burning it in their headquarters.

      • @[email protected]
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        611 months ago

        In fairness, I once worked at a brewery, and the ridiculous and immense water wasting that went on there, as a result of procedures and policies that were simply lazy, were enough to more than overcome all of my water savings in a year, every single day.

        They’re not doing that because their customers like beer and keep buying it. They’re doing that because water is cheap enough that the company doesn’t see it as an issue to crack down on, and the workers doing various procedures that use the water can’t be bothered to shut it off when they’re not using it.

        I’m talking even simple applications like a hose used to rinse off some equipment occasionally through a day. Rather than only turn it on when needed, install a shutoff valve closer to where it’s being used, or installing a nozzle at the end, they just let the hose run the entire shift, with water running from the hose straight to the drain for the majority of an 8 hour shift, every single day.

        Not gonna lie, while I still do lots of little things to save water around my apartment, that experience made me chill out about most measures to save water that were any sort of inconvenience to me at all. I still don’t actively and intentionally waste it, but I’m far less strict with myself about it since learning that, as I said, all the water I save in a year is more than undone in a day at that brewery.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          Businesses do lots of waste, I agree. But again, businesses exist because they have customers. Some people seem to believe that the climate crisis can be solved with taxes alone, but that’s not how it works. Huge changes on all levels are required.

        • @[email protected]
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          -811 months ago

          Water is basically free, and should be basically free, because you can’t really “waste” it. It stays regional and assuming you live somewhere that is sustainable, i.e. not a desert, that particular anecdote isn’t really a problem. I absolutely have no problem with a brewery, or any industry using “too much” water. Assuming of course that the water they are using and flushing down the drain isn’t polluted.

          • @[email protected]
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            111 months ago

            It really depends on where you live. In Australia, fresh water is relatively scarce, and desalination is a difficult and expensive process. Any water used ends up in the ocean or another unusable location.
            .

            • @[email protected]
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              -311 months ago

              Seems like in a sustainable world, people shouldn’t be living there. and the fact that it is Australia tells me people only live there because of some kind of subsidized extraction economy, which shouldn’t be happening at all.

      • @[email protected]
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        -311 months ago

        How about we nationalize the energy industries and incorporate the social/environmental costs of them into our long-term planning so that we can have our cake and eat it to?

  • @[email protected]
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    1311 months ago

    Haven’t eaten meat for over 10 years. Other than having to manage my feelings of superiority nothing much has changed.

    Change needs to be a lot more radical than reducing global CO2 by… maybe 20%?

    If we live plant-based we’ll need a lot of less land. We’d need some serious land to free up this land for the wild and rebuild eco systems. And it would still not be enough, because the rising heat will just destroy it anyway.

    So expensive sequestering technology at source needs to be made mandatory globally and everybody will feel the hit of that. Producing (and sequestering) CO2 will be so expensive that the market will find viable, cheaper alternatives.

  • theodewere
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    1011 months ago

    man we need to start being a little more creative, and end all this binary thinking about everything… THIS OR THAT: CHOOSE there has to be some hybrid solution here… flying meat of some kind, i don’t know, i’m not an architect of meat solutions… but we have to find creative solutions, that ease transitions for economical reasons and shit… maybe highly mobile buns…

      • theodewere
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        111 months ago

        okay, okay, get those creative juices flowing… i’m sure we can come up with something a little more androcentric maybe than that, but let’s keep that energy… Kobyashi Maru, people… Kobyashi Maru… you’re all James T. Kirk, let’s go…

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    I know it’s not your question, but we probably don’t have to give up either one. Just do a lot less of it. It’s a lot easier to convince people to do less or seek viable alternatives than to give it up.

    There’s also a good chance that both will become greener with better, greener tech.

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      I’ve taken one trip in the last 15 years where I flew, so it’s pretty rare for me anyway, but hopefully, improvements to train infrastructure in the US will lead to more people taking that route. Idk if battery tech will get to the point where jets can be run off them, but I could see them moving over to renewably-generated hydrogen. Use solar/wind to generate hydrogen and use that hydrogen in jets, large construction equipment, farming machinery, etc.

      And while I still eat meat, I’ve been moving towards more plant-based foods whenever I can.

  • @[email protected]
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    811 months ago

    Flying easy. Flying fucking sucks. Yeah I’d love to get a leg clot for $300 and 6 hours in your packed fart tube. As long as every private jet gets grounded too.

  • @[email protected]
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    711 months ago

    I’d give up both. Remember the week of global lockdown and people in India realized they could see the mountain range from their home? Fucking pollution, everywhere had amazing air quality for that week