But he's rich! What's even the point of being fantastically wealthy if you can't make the rest of the world bow to your every whim?!Maybe just don't take your superyacht down a waterway that's not designed for it, like everyone else?
But he's rich! What's even the point of being fantastically wealthy if you can't make the rest of the world bow to your every whim?!Maybe just don't take your superyacht down a waterway that's not designed for it, like everyone else?
That's.. not really true.It's because the majority of African dictatorships were set up by the West.
That is indeed my point.While most of the political problems in Africa have their roots in Western colonialism, and in many cases have continued to be exploited by Western governments up to the present day, Western governments do not control everything that happens in Africa. They don't need to, they are the beneficiaries of a global hegemony wherein all governments rely on their approval for economic prosperity and political legitimacy. In that sense, China's newfound ambitions could present an opportunity,
And that is indeed nothing I have argued.but it is not a benevolent gesture. It is not about freeing Africans from the cruel oppression of the West. What China is doing is just the same old neo-colonialism, and if African states aren't careful they're just going to find Western hegemony replaced with Chinese hegemony.
Yeah, I've had to deal with Koreans at work cranky about the Chinese trying to monopolise LNY...It's not like EA is unique in calling it Lunar New Year instead of Chinese New Year. But sure, let's call them "woke" for it.
Do you know where the term "carbon footprint" comes from?
Because corporations produce all the things consumers buy, it's not the fault of the consumer for consuming, it's the corporation's fault for meeting demand.
Cool, I guess I can eat grass-fed steak 7 days a week, drive a pickup truck, fly multiple times a day, buy from amazon daily with prime shipping. This communist says my carbon footprint doesn't matter unless I am rich.
It wouldn't be corporations fault for meeting demands... if all they were doing was meeting demands. But if you really think all corporations do is only produce what the public wants or asks for, maybe grow up.Because corporations produce all the things consumers buy, it's not the fault of the consumer for consuming, it's the corporation's fault for meeting demand.
Cool, I guess I can eat grass-fed steak 7 days a week, drive a pickup truck, fly multiple times a day, buy from amazon daily with prime shipping. This communist says my carbon footprint doesn't matter unless I am rich.
I'm guessing it's not from the effect when chimney sweeps had finished their job and walked across the carpet.Do you know where the term "carbon footprint" comes from?
You sure about that, 'cause I have my doubts.I'm guessing it's not from the effect when chimney sweeps had finished their job and walked across the carpet.
It doesn't.Cool, I guess I can eat grass-fed steak 7 days a week, drive a pickup truck, fly multiple times a day, buy from amazon daily with prime shipping. This communist says my carbon footprint doesn't matter unless I am rich.
I agree to some extent that the argument for regulation and policy at the top is strong, and all too often the rhetoric about individual choice is an attempt to weaken such things. But on the other hand, the need to exercise some personal morality and power over one's own actions has persuasive value (to not be seen as a hypocrite or an example to others), and furthermore even a modest number of people doing a modest amount is better than nothing - never mind that enough people doing something gives producers of goods and services motivation to cater to it and also improve their ways. Thus it might not be as good as some collective action from the top, but nor should it be neglected.It doesn't.
Your decision whether or not to eat steak will not change the number of cows being reared. If you fly multiple times a day, you'll be booking flights on aircraft that would be flying anyway. As for driving a pickup truck or buying from Amazon prime delivery, those are so insignificant that even giving them thought is an insult to the severity of the issue. Nothing you do to change your economic impact on the world will ever really matter because you have almost no influence within the economic system you live in. You can choose to spend your extremely limited money on things that you think are less bad for the environment, but that money won't magically disappear once it leaves your hands. Jeff Bezos will get his grubby reptilian claws on it sooner or later.
The rhetoric of the "climate footprint" is an intentional derailment because it deludes people into thinking that the solution to climate change lies in individual changes in behaviour rather than in collective political action or, god forbid, regulation, and that's simply not true. It preys on the need people have to see themselves as moral. Morality is not going to save anyone. Noone is going to get to climate heaven as a reward for flipping their underpants and only using one sheet of toilet paper. We're all going straight to hell together.
Ah, yes, individual action.I agree to some extent that the argument for regulation and policy at the top is strong, and all too often the rhetoric about individual choice is an attempt to weaken such things. But on the other hand, the need to exercise some personal morality and power over one's own actions has persuasive value (to not be seen as a hypocrite or an example to others), and furthermore even a modest number of people doing a modest amount is better than nothing - never mind that enough people doing something gives producers of goods and services motivation to cater to it and also improve their ways. Thus it might not be as good as some collective action from the top, but nor should it be neglected.
We honestly need both to solve climate change, people have to be willing to radically change their life before, and after the collective political, and economic change that occurs. A lot of Americans don't vote for example, and many don't care about politics. Also, polling indicates people have a different view of a policy depending on the wording, so the republicans will word it one way, and the democrats another, and we will most likely get gridlock in implementing the Green New Deal. By the time we move the Overton window, it will be too late.It doesn't.
Your decision whether or not to eat steak will not change the number of cows being reared. If you fly multiple times a day, you'll be booking flights on aircraft that would be flying anyway. As for driving a pickup truck or buying from Amazon prime delivery, those are so insignificant that even giving them thought is an insult to the severity of the issue. Nothing you do to change your economic impact on the world will ever really matter because you have almost no influence within the economic system you live in. You can choose to spend your extremely limited money on things that you think are less bad for the environment, but that money won't magically disappear once it leaves your hands. Jeff Bezos will get his grubby reptilian claws on it sooner or later.
The rhetoric of the "climate footprint" is an intentional derailment because it deludes people into thinking that the solution to climate change lies in individual changes in behaviour rather than in collective political action or, god forbid, regulation, and that's simply not true. It preys on the need people have to see themselves as moral. Morality is not going to save anyone. Noone is going to get to climate heaven as a reward for flipping their underpants and only using one sheet of toilet paper. We're all going straight to hell together.
We're at the point now where "better than nothing" isn't good enough.But on the other hand, the need to exercise some personal morality and power over one's own actions has persuasive value (to not be seen as a hypocrite or an example to others), and furthermore even a modest number of people doing a modest amount is better than nothing - never mind that enough people doing something gives producers of goods and services motivation to cater to it and also improve their ways.
You've actually got this backwards. "Investing in nuclear power" means buying parts and technical expertise from China. China has pledged to make nuclear power the core of its energy policy, although the Fukushima accident kind of put a damper on that and lead to a lot of reviews of safety policy. Regardless, China has a willingness and proven experience in exporting and building nuclear reactors in other countries. The infrastructure to build nuclear power stations cheaply and quickly no longer exists in most developed countries because we have not been building them. Compare this to China, which has a completely self-sufficient supply chain.My solution is it is simple, instead of the Green New deal which is a giveaway to solar panel companies in China, we should be doing more remote work. A lot of transportation should have an electric motor, and we should heavily invest in all forms of nuclear power.
Actually not entirely true.
Because corporations produce all the things consumers buy, it's not the fault of the consumer for consuming, it's the corporation's fault for meeting demand.
Cool, I guess I can eat grass-fed steak 7 days a week, drive a pickup truck, fly multiple times a day, buy from amazon daily with prime shipping. This communist says my carbon footprint doesn't matter unless I am rich.
For anyone (though I doubt it) who doesn't get that comic.
"touch grass" becomes official state policy?
Ah, yes, individual action.
I'll always remember one lecture I had from a professor of environmental science at one of the UKs leading research hubs about this. On about how companies putting solar panels on their roof was hilarious to watch it went something like this "The company is based in Northern Scotland in a very hilly region where even when it is sunny it's pretty weak and it rains so much there they'd get more power putting a bloody water wheel coming off their gutters and they were boasting about their green credentials because they'd put Solar panels on their roof, on the side the sun barely ever hit because it was the front of the building and they wanted it to show off their Solar panels to visitors."Sure, maybe they signal to companies that their customers are concerned about their climate impact, but they also signal that you can be deceived very, very easily into believing that small, insignificant changes are a way of helping. I'm sure it's creating work for some PR consultant somewhere, but in terms of actually delivering meaningful change.. I don't think so. You'd be better off showing up at a protest (even if you drove there in your SUV). I get that people won't see it that way, and I get the argument about perceived hypocrisy, but at this point engaging with that argument is irresponsible. It is not our job as individuals to fix the problems of the broken economic system we live in. Very, very few of us have anything approaching the power to do that.
I think if you want to uncouple individual action and collective action organised by the state, you're close to asking for a dictatorship.We're at the point now where "better than nothing" isn't good enough.
Painting the roof of your house white is better than nothing, and yet most people I think would find taking any kind of moral satisfaction in painting the roof of your house white to be laughable and out of touch, and that's really the problem. At this point, any individual action you could take is just laughable and out of touch. There are things you can do which are relatively big, avoiding unnecessary flying is actually a good idea, switching to a plant based diet is actually a good idea (and will also typically improve your health and life expectancy). The problem is that even these things don't really matter and yet they trick people into thinking they've made a difference when they haven't.