• bioemerl@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      What will you do when the rich are gone, emissions are still high, and your realize the scope of the problem is way bigger than any stupid obvious fix?

      • VieuxQueb@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Donyou realize that the top 1% is creating around 25% of the pollution with their Jets and yacht etc… and they horde moat of the houses to profit from the fact you need housing. And they create food scarcity to rise the prices etc… so yeah keep thinking you’ll become one of them some day. Even if you made 1 million a year you would still need to live a thousand years to make a billion.

        • bioemerl@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          the top 1% is creating around 25% of the pollution with their Jets and yacht etc

          This is assinine and doesn’t even slightly pass the smell test. 25 percent is a LOT and private jets and such would have to be absolutely nutty to be accounting for that much.

          In reality this number is based on a shitty study that counts workplace and investments as your emissions instead of consumption. This is basically saying:

          You own a company that produces X, you’re responsible for those emissions, not the people who buy them.

          At that point your emissions figures aren’t a measure of emissions, there a measure of stock ownership. Ending the emissions of the wealthy would also end your access to everything their investments produce, which is like… everything you buy.

          • IHeartBadCode@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I am just randomly tossing this into y’all’s conversation, use it as you wish. Aviation in general contributes 2.5% of the global emissions, (3.5% if you would like to read the fine print). That is ALL aviation, not just a selection of jets held by a few people. The 25% value is a real thing too but I think @VieuxQueb is misquoting it. A single private jet round trip from coast-to-coast of the United States with a party of four aboard (not counting pilots) is 25% the CO₂ value the average American will emit. There’s actually a quora that talked about this when whatever news agency said this same thing.

            I distinctly remember some news organization saying this, but it was worded so confusingly, I had a feeling someone would put it back together incorrectly. I cannot blame VieuxQueb, some of this stuff that’s talked about is metrics that are hard to digest.

            So. I just wanted to put that out there for you two. Thank you for your time. Hopefully that helps you all out.

            • bioemerl@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              So. I just wanted to put that out there for you two. Thank you for your time. Hopefully that helps you all out.

              No. You have offended me and I am now very angry at you.

              • IHeartBadCode@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                Well now I shall drink my coffee knowing that I have angered some random person on the Internet. Not because that I have completed my task of finding someone randomly to anger, because I had no such task, but because my coffee is getting cold and it is solely what is keeping me alert enough to work and post things that anger people at the same time.

                In seriousness, LOL. That does seem to be some people’s reaction to people just interjecting randomness into conversations. I think those people just need a good cup of coffee.

          • Rocket@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            You own a company that produces X, you’re responsible for those emissions, not the people who buy them.

            Why is the company that produces X responsible and not the company that produces Y, an input to X? That is very arbitrary.

        • bioemerl@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, they “convinced us” to want to buy things.

          Dumbest Marxist conspiracy theory out there. People like having stuff. You can convince them to get different stuff but people aren’t going to go all hobbit and live a simple life if given the choice 9 of ten times

            • bioemerl@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              We all understanding that department stores and companies sold us all kinds of things we didn’t need

              The vast majority of this isn’t what makes up the economy or fossil fuel emissions and generally the people engaged in random department store shopping are doing it well under their own motivation.

              Life pre department store era , we’re talking pre 50s, you’d be considered insane to have the stuff we do

              Fantastically wealthy you mean. People in the 50s wanted to have all this crap too. They just couldn’t have it because the economy was tiny.

                • bioemerl@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  When you start out with such a massively misleading statement like:

                  Industry is responsible for more than 20% of all emissions

                  When industry is literally stuff like cars, industrial equipment, oil production, basically all chemical production, and so on and so forth.

                  Cheap disposable plastic mall trinkets are not a major industrial sector. The vast majority of industrial spend is stuff that actually improves people’s lives.

                  If you’re going to start criticizing “products” then again you’re talking about stuff that for the most part people just want. And stuff for the most part that people would want regardless of advertisements.

                  This:

                  You have never been under your own motivation

                  Is what I’m talking about when I say it’s conspiracy thinking.

                  Maybe.

                  Just maybe.

                  People are able to think for themselves.

                  It’s extra hilarious that you link a study on subliminal messaging, which is one of the fields in psychology that have been embroiled in reproducibility issues and fraud.

      • IHeartBadCode@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        way bigger than any stupid obvious fix

        Yes, we have a societal shift that’s required in order to address this issue. It’s going to have to be as massive if not larger in scope than the entire industrial revolution and on a timescale more accelerated than the industrial revolution. I would posit, that the rich have the most incentive to maintain the current societal paradigm and have the most access to institute policy that maintains such. And thus, in general, in order to effect such a social shift that is required to address the issues, the rich must either begin supporting policies that put their vast wealth at risk or that the rich must be eliminated.

        The latter of that I would draw a parallel to a blocked river to farm fields. Removing the blockage doesn’t instantly irrigate the fields. There’s still lots of work to be done once the flow of the river is restored. BUT digging all those irrigation ditches does nothing unless flow is returned to the river. In my parallel, the rich are our blockage to the river and removing them doesn’t technically fix everything, but it’s a step required in order to get flow back.

        • bioemerl@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          You greatly underestimate the incentives at play here. In France it wasn’t the wealthy who rioted over the gas tax. It was the average person.

          The rich for the most part can afford and handle a transition, but the guy who is just barely making it now with the supercharged fossil fuel economy? They will not give up what they have in a million years. Not willingly.

          There’s some issue with like big companies wanting to keep their business model and lobbying for it, which is a real concern, but that’s going to be a concern even with public companies with no “one percent” making the decisions.

          • IHeartBadCode@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            In France it wasn’t the wealthy who rioted over the gas tax. It was the average person

            Oh absolutely. Changes in society are going to affect the marginal the most. No disagreement there.

            but the guy who is just barely making it now with the supercharged fossil fuel economy?

            But I would indicate that we must look at the core issue on why the guy who is just barely making it now is in such a position. The monetary resources of this planet are finite and there is a group who is holding onto the vast majority of it. If that bulk of wealth was better distributed the guy who is just barely making it would have more at their disposal to absorb the impact of the change. That isn’t to say that the change would not still be felt, but they would be better to navigate such change.

            but that’s going to be a concern even with public companies with no “one percent” making the decisions.

            I would say that this undervalues the amount of consolidation that has happened in most industries. Where many industries are reduced to say a few players who dictate the direction the industry goes into. We need to diversify the mixture of players in many core industries in order to find those who take risks that could benefit solutions to climate change. That or we mitigate the risks at a governmental level in order to foster those changes.

            It’s no one fix and done kind of issue for sure. But the rich do hold an outsize grasp on the levers of change in government policy and industry direction. But I think we cannot just simply dismiss that they have such a position that is adverse to risk that comes with new initiatives that seek to reduce climate changing emissions and that they have incentive to be adverse to those risks. Removing them completely would absolve governments from implementing policies that cost taxpayers to mitigate those risks and free up capital locked into the hands of a few who would be adverse to take those risks.

            There’s also ways we can do all of the above without removing any players from any given industry, but there (at least to me so do understand this is solely my take on the matter) seems to be too many bad faith actors within these various industries that would be so affable to such changes and would seek to shift the winds more in their favor.

            The rich for the most part can afford and handle a transition

            And that, I think, is the point I’m trying to make here. While they would absolutely be the ones better at handling the change, they are also the group that would seek to prevent the change in the first place. Because why have the change and potentially receive less when they can have no change and continue to receive their current amount? The road that they are on is proven to yield a known value and changing that brings about risks that can modify that yield in unknown ways. Why change to something unknown, when what is currently working has known values? It’s a kind of profit inertia that grips a lot of industries.

            The general public is just mostly struggling to get by, that profit inertia is less a factor in their day-to-day life. If there is a change, that via the liquidation of one who held large amounts of locked capital, we can mitigate the impact on those struggling; there is still an impact but by an avenue that does not require taxpayer dollars we can minimize it.

            It’s much like how in third world nations we were resource dumping onto these countries and preventing small players from gaining footholds. And by basically removing the ability for these rich companies to dump resources heavily subsidized onto the people of these nations we allowed smaller players to gain some traction. Yes, the cheap resources are gone and people are struggling, but allowing domestic production of these goods eventually allows for products that can be afforded by all, because the domestic production grants more liquidity to those who work the jobs, increases demand, and in turn requires expansion of those domestic industries to include even more workers. We, rich first world nations with industries that are outsized, just needed to stop dumping onto these countries to allow that to foster. A parallel of that to the rich, I believe can be made and is the point of my argument.

            But that’s not to detract from what you have here as well, in that the solution is much more complex than just a single issue. Eating the rich isn’t the panacea folks believe it to be. Once those rich companies dumping on the poorer nations was gone, there still needed to be development of domestic production, that’s a non-zero cost and risk.

          • AlmightyTritan@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Yeah, but I will say we have seen a move away from fossil fuels for home heating by the common person all across Canada the past few years. So it’s also not impossible, there just needs to be some sort of program or incentive to push those to move or aid the cost burden of those who can’t.

            We did it with heat pumps and shit, might as well put more of that carbon tax money into other sectors affected by it.

        • bioemerl@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Basically eat everyone more wealthy than an income of like 2 dollars a day.

          Or invest heavily in nuclear power, implement work from home like in the COVID days for all workers that can do it and force companies to adapt to reduce car use, continue to incentivize solar and other green energy, and institute a hefty carbon tax.

          Invest heavily in insulation for old homes and apartments, require landlords pay half of tenant electricity use.

          We could cut emotions like in half if we were sufficiently motivated.

          • Rocket@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            We could cut emotions like in half if we were sufficiently motivated.

            Could we really? The entire purpose of public education is to remove emotions so that one can reason about the world logically. I am not sure it has proven to be all that successful. At best in limited circumstances, but not without frequent regression.