• DreamButt
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    512 years ago

    Weird how this equates the blame equally across all parties when it’s pretty clear who needs to force who to not pollute

  • @electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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    272 years ago

    Ask yourself “where is the greatest leverage to solve this problem?”. If you think the fastest way to turn the climate ship around is to convince 7ish billion individuals to go vegan, and ride bikes… Good luck!

      • @electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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        72 years ago

        Hmm. I’m not really banking on anything. I’m just surviving. Hoping for the best but expecting something less optimal. I’m not a doomer because believe too much in love. Not that it will save us, but that it’s the only thing that truly makes life worth living. Whatever it is, we’re all in it together.

        • @raginghummus@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          “I’m not really banking on anything. I’m just surviving.” Sorry if I misunderstood but that sounds like you’re not helping?

          • @electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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            22 years ago

            I’m not banking on anything, as in “I don’t have strong faith in any proposed solutions”. I’m just surviving in the sense that, like so many of us, I’m doing my best to maintain my physical and mental health during these difficult times. For me, like so many of us, “doing something” me to maintain my physical and mental health.

            I don’t blame you for misunderstanding me. I can see how my previous comment could have come off that way. I do also want to say though, that “not helping” is okay too. If you don’t have the capacity right now to do anything but exist, I understand. It’s fuckin tough out there for a lot of people.

    • @Rediphile@lemmy.ca
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      -42 years ago

      We all ought to focus on that whole 7 billion thing…or wait, isn’t it 8 now? Will be 9 soon.

      Infinite population growth in a world of finite resources is not, and never will be, possible. Less people = more resources per person and higher quality of life.

      • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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        62 years ago

        How? All we do is work just to afford an existence. I’m not jetting around the globe, living in a 20 room mansion, buying every product in existence, etc. All I can afford to do is eat, have a roof and food.

        • @Rediphile@lemmy.ca
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          02 years ago

          So you believe that if all 8 billion people lived like you, and there were no rich people, climate change would no longer be an issue?

          What if there were 10 billion. Or 20?

          • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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            12 years ago

            Why are you so insistent on blaming the poor while defending and sucking the dick of billionaires and corporations? Class traitor

            • @Rediphile@lemmy.ca
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              12 years ago

              Should I take the complete lack of response as a no then?

              And fyi I’m about as far left as it gets and never once voiced any support for the rich. Ever. No idea where you got that idea.

  • @CryptoRoberto@sh.itjust.works
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    2 years ago

    If only we had a society where I could actually buy from companies that were green or vote for politicians that gave a fuck about anything but money. We’re fucked. I’m just glad I’ll be dead before the world melts.

  • Image Transcription:

    Above a set of three images is the title “CLIMATE CHANGE?” A photo of Broderick Stephen “Steve” Harvey Sr. with his hands raised, palms out and text above and below. The text above reads “Consumers:” and the text below reads ‘"Not my fault’". The second photo is a Capuchin monkey with its paws raised as if shrugging, and text above and below. The text above reads “Companies:” and the text below reads ‘“Not my fault”’. The last image is that of an otter half underwater with its fore-paws in the air as if at gunpoint, and text above and below. The text above reads “Politicians:” and the text below reads ‘“Not my fault”’

    [I am a human, if I’ve made a mistake please let me know. Please consider providing alt-text for ease of use. Thank you. 💜]

  • @Jumper775@lemmy.world
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    22 years ago

    I think the most practical thing to do about it is to find a way to warn the societies after us of the danger, and then ride out what’s left of modern society. It’s proven it won’t change.

  • ArxCyberwolf
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    22 years ago

    "Would you be upset if I told you we were dying? And every cure they gave us was a lie? Oh! They mean it when they say we’re dead and doomed, and every single symptom brings us closer to the tomb, and who will take the credit for our swift impending fall? Because it’s not my fault!

    Would you be impressed if I said that the dead would help us counting every single moment that we waste our time? All the time we’re spending vaccinating this disease, I just get dizzy when I think of all the ways we try to hide our maladies. We wine, we dine, and everything is fine, because it’s not my fault"

    “Would You Be Impressed?” by Streetlight Manifesto

    • @redempt@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I am sick of the people being blamed for what has been propagandized into them. Companies have spent enormous amounts of money framing and controlling the narrative in public discourse. They have also spent enormous amounts of money bribing politicians and gaining influence in government. There is no sense blaming the people. The people must create change, but let’s not act like it was their fault to begin with.

        • @SolarMech@slrpnk.net
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          12 years ago

          The part of the equation that can change, is the consumer variable.

          No. I mean yeah, but we can change in so many more ways. that matter more. I think we need a multitude of approaches.

          You can get active politically. Call your representative. Help get a better one elected if you can help out (and keep an eye out for a better one next time). You can learn to have those difficult conversations with friends, neighbor and family if you are good at that. Not all of those work for everyone. Some will swear up and down that direct action is better than getting involved in local or provincial/state elections. Then do that which you think will work.

          As far as consumption goes, I tend to think withholding your consumption won’t do much (there are plenty of people who don’t care who will keep consuming, and we will look like a rounding error). However, I think support for alternatives matter more (whether they be habits which we spread in the population, or alternate products, like legumes instead of meat. Which I guess is also kind of promoting a habit. By forming communities that live our values, we can cause other people to be exposed to them and see how it can work out in practice. Hence eating more vegan foods bring those out. My hope is that such movements (and sometimes, as for vegan foods, markets) will grow exponentially at some point if it catches on.

      • htrayl
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        -12 years ago

        You are wrong. Yes, companies have spent billions to manipulate the public, but the actions of consumption and the willingness to tolerate even small change is on the people. We don’t get to pretend that just because there are corporate involvement, that we are morally immune for it - especially when we still tolerate little change and take little action and little sacrifice even after we know it.

        • Dodecahedron December
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          32 years ago

          How were you able to post this comment? Did you use any technology to do so? Any devices or equipment? Did you or someone else buy those devices or equipment? Are you, right now, in the process of consuming this content via your consumption of this technology and these devices?

    • @MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I agree, we are all part of this problem. Lets fix it. What each of us can do to affect the change. Average consumer, recycle and keep their phones few years longer. Perhaps not eat bananas. Travel by train. Things like that. Many already do, but more don’t.

      Could an average consumer decide that frequently used products come in glass bottles. Say you go and buy Coca-Cola in big 1l glass bottles. Return the old bottle, get a new one. Or for example liquid soap or washing detergent to come in a metal box or glass bottle. Or anything else for that matter. No, everything comes in plastic and if you don’t recycle you are to blame. Can you make the change? No. Because every single manufacturer is doing it. Your only choice is not to buy it, which good luck doing in a modern world. You as a consumer have an option of not buying, buying more expensive alternative which claims to be better but often isn’t and is just charging you premium or just buying whatever is available.

      We all know consumption creates demand and demands need to be filled. That’s all great and logical. Then could you buy a TV whose materials have been ethically sourced? Made locally so there’s no pollution for shipping and delivery? No you can not. Your option is not have a TV or have a TV. But you are to blame for wanting a TV.

      My point here is, corporations don’t give a fuck about climate. They will happily sacrifice current and future generation’s entire heritage if they can earn 0.1$ on their next sale. That’s all they care about, that next quarter they have more numbers on their account. Want proof of that? Just look at what CocaCola did. Their drinks use to come in glass bottles, switched to plastic. It’s cheaper and if you don’t recycle it’s your fault. What’s that there’s no where to recycle and majority of plastics can’t be recycled. Well that’s governments problem. In fact CocaCola has spend a significant amount of money advertising exactly this. Source. And even when they get pushed for a change, they claim it’s what people wants. It’s never their fault, always yours.

      In reality it’s not only CocaCola, but all of them. You could go now, live in wild like an animal wearing nothing but skirt woven from grass and you could not offset for your entire life what they pollute in an hour. If you were born in the 90s, your expected lifetime CO₂ footprint is 150t. That’s it. Flying round-trip London to New York… 986 kg CO₂. More than 2 years of your existence, including breathing, is negated by Elon flying to Paris for a lunch and then got back the same day. You think he recycles 100x more than you?

      Want to save the planet, force corporations to use glass instead of plastic. To use paper instead of plastic. To pay for recycling themselves. Prevent the rich for polluting and hold them accountable. Kill coal based everything.

      But that’s not happening. Ever. You want clean air, someone is lobbying for “clean coal” even though there’s no such a thing. You want climate change to be stopped but super rich shitheads takes 10 minute flights because traffic was annoying that day.

      You can do nothing. It is what it is and it will all go to hell pretty soon. Worrying about it pointless. You claim people are to blame, but people have given up. People need to worry what they will do tomorrow to survive because majority now lives from salary to salary. From an armchair it’s all doable and plans can be made for a better future. But reality is cruel.

      For closure. Here’s Doug Stanhope

      • @joonazan@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2 years ago

        Plastic packaging has issues but climate change is not one of them. Shipping also isn’t impactful at all. Most shipping emissions happen when the product moves to the store, not when it sails in a container ship.

        Based on your post, the main evil of the corporations is manipulating the media, confusing people with things like abolishing plastic straws (which are very efficient at what they do).

        Eating beef, owning a car and buying unnecessary stuff (for example those bottled drinks) are huge. They easily make up half of a persons emissions. An accurate measure is hard because of secondary effects like needing less road with fewer cars.

        • @MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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          02 years ago

          Consumption of everything is the problem. More people means more pollution. Plastic is a side product of oil. Cement is one of the big players and it’s used everywhere.

          Eating meat on the other hand is not as bad of a reason as you’d think. People often think that cattle feed comes from same fields as out food, but that’s simply not true. For the most part it’s leftovers from food we consume, plant matter from corn and wheat for example, and from fields that would otherwise be unused due to low fertility. If you remove meat from the diet only thing you are left with is excess plant matter.

        • Dodecahedron December
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          12 years ago

          Hypothetically, if everyone decided right now to stop buying as much as possible, it would take years of companies continuing to manufacture and try to push these items on us. that’s also a lot to consider that everyone could drastically change their lifestyle like this. What would an in-between look like? If we are currently buying phones as they come out, and on the other extreme, we could just all use ham radio to talk to one another using a station that we maintained over our lifetime, I imagine an in-between might be buying a phone and using it well past it’s planned lifetime if possible via rooting and trying to install a light-weight OS.

          People need to eat and live in shelter to survive. Living off the land requires owned land to live off of. Some of the things we want to buy and use are the things that make life easier or worth living.