• TheBlue22@lemmy.world
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    1 year 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

    • ebikefolder@feddit.de
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      1 year 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!

      • Anemia@lemmy.world
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        1 year 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.

        • ebikefolder@feddit.de
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          1 year 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.

          • Anemia@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yeah I mean I agree with you. Most people who won’t even take basic personal actions like not flying on vacation twice a yeah and not buying a stupid oversized car. If those people were put in the same position as these CEOs you can bet your left buttcheek that they would maximize profits in the exact same way. We need to both take individual action and also hold each other accountable by changing the law and applying social pressure.

          • Anemia@lemmy.world
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            1 year 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@lemmy.world
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              1 year 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.

              • Anemia@lemmy.world
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                1 year 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@mastodon.social
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                  1 year 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

        • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

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

          • Anemia@lemmy.world
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            1 year 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.

            • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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              1 year 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.

              • Anemia@lemmy.world
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                1 year 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?

    • bossito@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      How do you think those companies pollute? Are they burning fuel at Shell’s headquarters? Or do they have lots of customers who think their personal behavior doesn’t matter?

  • AnonTwo@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

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

    • uwe@lemmy.world
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      1 year 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@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

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

    • kilgore@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

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

      • lightstream@lemmy.ml
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        1 year 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.

        • kilgore@feddit.de
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          1 year 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…

          • TheBurlapBandit@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            That billionaire doing the right thing is going to force the same lifestyle changes anyway. Meat tycoon shuts down operations. Now no meat is available for purchase- vegan is the only option. Coal plants shut down. Blackout hours are enforced while battery infrastructure catches up. Auto makers shut down operations. Public transit is clogged until capacity increases, more people start biking. Airlines drastically cut available flights. No long distance travel for you until high speed rail can be built. Shipping magnates vessels are decommissioned. Many goods are either more expensive or entirely unavailable.

            • kilgore@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              I agree! And I think that’s the only way we’ll actually get a critical mass of people to change their ways.

    • itchy_lizard@feddit.it
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      1 year 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.

  • Herr Woland@lemmy.world
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    1 year 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@lemmy.ml
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      1 year 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.

      • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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        1 year 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.

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    1 year 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.

  • MisterD@lemmy.ca
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    1 year 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.

  • Madison420@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

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

    • bossito@lemmy.world
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      1 year 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” will magically solve all problems and that it doesn’t imply any change in your lifestyle is beyond naive. Shell pollutes because people buy and burn their fuel, they’re not burning it in their headquarters.

      • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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        1 year 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.

        • bossito@lemmy.world
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          1 year 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.

        • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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          1 year 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.

          • 18107@aussie.zone
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            1 year 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.
            .

            • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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              1 year 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.

      • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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        1 year 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?

  • argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Why are we asking this question, and not asking where all the electrically powered planes and synthetic burgers are?

    You don’t advance as a civilization by throwing your hands in the air, giving up, and going back to the bad old days. You do it by finding a better way to do what you want to do.

    • adderaline@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      many of the advancements to our civilization are directly powering our current apocalypse, and are leading to the collapse of ecosystems right now, not whenever we figure out how do things better.

      i’m not a luddite, technology has made our lives easier in so many fucking ways, but right now we are catastrophically overburdening our planet with our consumption of resources, and we need to stop doing that also right now, and the very recent phenomenon of eating meat for every meal and moving through space faster than any human before the modern era ever traveled happen to both be luxuries we can live without, with disproportionate impacts on the viability of life on Earth.

      we don’t advance as a civilization by throwing our hands up in the air and going back to the bad old days, but we also don’t advance as a civilization by being utterly unconcerned with the consequences of our actions. some technologies are fundamentally not worth the cost. especially industrial animal agriculture. if we can find better ways of doing things, sure, lets put them into action, but an attitude of unchecked growth will and currently is running up against the hard ceiling of the resources the Earth can produce, and every step we take over that energy budget makes life harder for everybody. unless you have your solution ready now, and you can be sure that whatever tech it is won’t expand to consume as much energy as possible just like our current tech, slowing down and scaling back industries that contribute to ecological collapse and aren’t necessary for human thriving is the solution.

      • argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        We would already have technological solutions to our problems in hand if not for the rich blocking them from being developed and deployed. Electric vehicles, for example, were a thing in the '90s, and then the manufacturer recalled and destroyed them all, over the protests of their drivers. Synthetic meat was a thing a decade ago, and then disappeared without a word, no doubt shut down by influence from the agricultural industry.

        The rich are the problem, not the lifestyles of the rest of us. Restraining the rich is the solution, not demanding devastating sacrifices of people who did not choose to make things this way, while those who did choose this path continue to live in luxury and impunity.

        • adderaline@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          that’s absolutely conspiratorial thinking. cultured meat has not been economically viable until very recently, and still isn’t that widespread in application. electric “vehicles” are not electric planes, and while electric planes are a viable technology, its still not a scalable solution. electric cars are also not going to pull us out of this mess, because cars as a transportation tech are like, one of the least efficient ways to move people around in high density population centers.

          the reality is, the majority of the emissions created by the rich are for things that people use, eat, or require, and using less or different resources is something we need to do to address this crisis. most of the world doesn’t have access to commercial planes and meat for every meal, the only reason we can eat as much as we do is because meat production is a massively subsidized industry, and we need to spend the money we’re spending on that on more sustainable ways of living instead. if cultured meat is part of that? good! but in the world as it currently exists, relying on animal agriculture to provide our food is profoundly inefficient, environmentally disastrous, and unnecessary.

          genuinely, if we all lived in a world where the workers owned the means of production and just went on living the lifestyle we currently have? we would still be fucked, because the scale at which we manufacture, transport, and process resources is unsustainable. changes to how we live are going to be necessary, even if we stopped spewing carbon into the atmosphere tomorrow. the climate has changed, biodiversity has been irrevocably lost, and if we don’t adapt ourselves to what our environment can handle, then lots people will die.

          • argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            that’s absolutely conspiratorial thinking.

            “Conspiratorial” is not a synonym for “wrong”. After watching what GM did with the EV1, it became inescapably clear that a conspiracy exists.

            cultured meat has not been economically viable until very recently

            And why is that, I wonder? Why is it taking so long?

            Who, more to the point, is standing in the way?

            electric cars are also not going to pull us out of this mess, because cars as a transportation tech are like, one of the least efficient ways to move people around in high density population centers.

            High-density population centers are bleak, crowded, expensive, and dangerous. Most people are neither willing nor financially able to live in one, and must therefore commute to work in a personal vehicle of some kind. Public transportation is intolerably slow in suburban and rural areas.

            Furthermore, depriving people of their own means of transportation confines them to the limits of the public transportation system in their area. Freedom of movement is most people’s only hope of protecting themselves from all manner of tyranny and exploitation, such as the anti-trans and anti-abortion laws now in effect in portions of the United States. Limiting freedom of movement is dystopian. What good is solving the climate crisis only to replace it with something equally horrible?

            the reality is, the majority of the emissions created by the rich are for things that people use, eat, or require

            All manner of products used to be manufactured in the United States. Then that manufacturing was all moved to overseas countries with lax labor laws and very low standards of living. Then the western working class was systematically impoverished to the point that they cannot afford domestically-made products any more, forcing them to consume these foreign-made products and live with the fact that those products are sent to America on ships that burn bunker fuel.

            Normal American people used to be able to afford domestically-made products. And a house. And children. Now, they can’t.

            So no, the majority of the emissions created by the rich are for making the rich richer.

            genuinely, if we all lived in a world where the workers owned the means of production and just went on living the lifestyle we currently have? we would still be fucked, because the scale at which we manufacture, transport, and process resources is unsustainable.

            The change we need to make is to move technology forward and stop obstructionists from holding it back. Solar panels should be standard equipment on house rooftops. Wind turbines should dot every windy hill. Batteries, preferably one of the more environmentally friendly types like LFP, should be in every building.

            Instead, solar panels and wind turbines are deemed an eyesore, and the LFP battery was withheld from the world for years by patent encumbrance.

            Our world is bathed in the energy of a giant fusion reactor, and instead of using this abundant resource to its fullest, we dig up fossil fuels out of the ground because moneyed interests want it that way, and they use every dirty trick in the book to hinder alternatives as much and as long as they can. The climate crisis is the artificial creation of those moneyed interests. If not for their greed, it never would have happened.

            • adderaline@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              High-density population centers are bleak, crowded, expensive, and dangerous. Most people are neither willing nor financially able to live in one, and must therefore commute to work in a >personal vehicle of some kind. Public transportation is intolerably slow in suburban and rural areas.

              Furthermore, depriving people of their own means of transportation confines them to the limits of the public transportation system in their area. Freedom of movement is most people’s >only hope of protecting themselves from all manner of tyranny and exploitation, such as the anti-trans and anti-abortion laws now in effect in portions of the United States. Limiting >freedom of movement is dystopian. What good is solving the climate crisis only to replace it with something equally horrible?

              okay, i’m gonna infodump here. this is just something i really care about, and i want you to understand why its important. genuinely i don’t even care that much about whatever other point i made here, if you are for using technology to mitigate climate change, being against expanding public transportation can really only come from ignorance of the harms done by car infrastructure in urban environments, or some sort of bias against city dwelling people.

              like 80% of all people in the US live in urban areas, at least according to US Census data. you are in the minority if you aren’t living in a relatively dense urban population. they can be dirty and expensive (though that isn’t an inherent property of urban areas, just a failure of policy), but the thing about them being dangerous, or at least significantly more dangerous than rural areas, is just not factual. there are a number of studies examining the exact conditions, but if you live out in a rural area you’re significantly more likely to die from injury according to some sources, and urban population centers tend to have much greater access to medical services. i’m not saying that there aren’t specific health risks that come with living in cities, but there is by no means a consensus that urban areas are more substantively more dangerous than rural areas by any metric.

              you’re just kinda wrong about this one, people aren’t just willing to live in urban areas, most of them already do. could be a confirmation bias thing if you live rural, but yeah, urbanization has already had its way with us, you are firmly in the minority if you’re rural, and you’ve been a shrinking minority for decades. now, maybe that explains why you don’t see the use in public transit, but for the majority of americans this is an important climate justice and civil rights issue, no matter how much you think we’re all dirty icky city dwellers whose lifelong homes are “bleak” and “dangerous”. i don’t mean to be hostile, just check yourself a little bit. so what if our homes are bad places to live? i mean, i strongly disagree, cities can be awesome especially if you’re queer, but we still live here, and we want a good quality of life too. ignoring that urban areas exist is not a solution to the climate related problems facing urban areas, and public transportation, even as shitty as it can be, is so fucking important to the wellbeing of people across urban america, myself included. as somebody who lives in a city, i’m telling you straight up that any kind of equitable urban living environment needs to have access to robust public transportation, and the harms done by car infrastructure historically and in the present day cannot be overstated. imminent domain fuckery, building highways over marginalized communities, the immense burdens placed on urban working class people by the ownership of cars, it goes on and on and on.

              you seem to like conspiracies, so how’s this for one. the state of public transportation in the US is abysmal compared to many other nations, including nations which are far less prosperous than ours supposedly is, and that is more a consequence of lobbying than some inherent positive quality cars have over other modes of transport, especially in dense urban population centers. our current legislation about who can build what where has led to suburban sprawl, vast, “”bleak”” wastelands of energy-sucking McMansions connected by acres upon acres of heat-absorbing asphalt road (i’m joking, kind of), miles from the nearest grocery store, many of which were built specifically for the purposes of generating mortgages leading up to the 2008 financial crisis rather than building houses people actually want to live in. the realities of needing a car in the US are a consequence of laws which prevent us from making infrastructure catered towards walkable communities with plenty of green space, and were implemented with help from lobbyists to make everybody dependent on private corporations selling us expensive vehicles that require fossil fuels, rather than publicly owned, reliable, safer, and faster modes of transport. so many cities had robust networks of electric cable cars and other forms of public transit back before the car was a thing, and in so many places it was fucking gutted, torn out to make way for more cars so the robber barons of the era could make us buy their combustion engines.

              for urban living, the material realities of car ownership are miserable, dangerous, slow, and cause significant financial burden. for those reasons, the idea of car ownership as a tool for freedom of movement is kinda laughable to me. what kind of freedom needs a down payment? why should that freedom be in the hands of auto companies? how in the fuck is rush hour traffic, claustrophobic strips of sidewalk, and barren paved over earth freedom? in an equitable society, freedom of movement should be just that, freedom. it should not be locked behind financial barriers, or behind private ownership, and it shouldn’t come at the cost of our public spaces, especially when space is so valuable inside cities. the lack of plants, trees, and the black asphalt paved over every inch of land in many urban areas can increase temperatures alot compared to the surrounding countryside, and that can mean life or death for people, especially as things continue to get hotter. if you live rural, and you have a lot of wildlife around you, you might not experience the indirect costs of building a place for cars instead of people, but it has a massive influence on the quality of life of people in urban areas, especially in historically black and brown urban areas. that isn’t even mentioning the ways in which high density areas are disproportionately impacted by car ownership. when you’re out in a rural area, storing cars is not a big issue, because there is an abundance of land to put cars on. but as the population density gets higher, and people start living in apartments or other closer living arrangements, the management of personal vehicles can get tricky. in highly urbanized regions, owning a car might even be impossible, because unless you have the money to rent out a spot for it, there just isn’t any room. and if that’s all true, and there isn’t good public transport in that area, then people can get stuck in places, especially poor people, and especially people of color.

              part of the reason why state level anti-trans and anti-abortion rules will negatively impact so many people when access is just a state away is exactly because the US as it exists currently has a pretty big problem with freedom of movement. especially in impoverished urban areas, many people cannot afford to leave work, cannot afford the price of gas, cannot afford to migrate to another state, and have maybe never even left their city for those reasons and more. federal and local public transportation policy allows everybody to access transportation, rather than just those who are wealthy enough or rural enough to benefit despite the costs imposed by car-centered infrastructure on urban environments.

              we currently live in a dystopian state of affairs, and making public transportation better will almost certainly improve the freedom of movement for millions of people who are not afforded the privilege of a privately owned vehicle, alongside reducing the energy costs of transportation and reducing the need for massive parking structures dug under every building, reducing the permeability of the soil so rainwater doesn’t seep into the watertable, spreading everything out so everybody is dependent on cars to get around, and leading to traffic, noise pollution, high rates of accidents, and other problems specific to urban environments. not to mention that that many cars driving on roads produces enough heat energy on its own to raise temperatures in cities, and if any of that heat generation makes city dwellers turn on their AC, then the heat will get worse. look up heat islands, its a real phenomenon, and its extremely relevant to how we make the homes of most american people habitable now and into the future. if even a fraction of the space taken up by cars and their roads was allocated for green space and public transit systems, cities would get cooler, and be more robustly protected against the dangers of climate change.

              to be clear, i never said anything about making cars illegal, or otherwise preventing the ownership of electric vehicles. they almost certainly will play a role in the transportation solutions of the future, especially in rural areas. but the overabundance of cars in the US and specifically in US urban areas is not a natural state of affairs, was historically shaped by racism and oppression, and must be reformed. its a consequence of deliberate choices influenced by large, highly profitable industry giants, whose aim was and is to make us dependent on their product to go anywhere at all. hostility and distrust of public transportation is in and of itself an aim of car companies and, by extension, the fossil fuel industry that powers their dominance over american transportation infrastructure.

              • argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                > if you are for using technology to mitigate climate change, being against expanding public transportation can really only come from ignorance of the harms done by car infrastructure in urban environments, or some sort of bias against city dwelling people.

                Or an awareness that public transportation is too slow to be useful. Life is short these days, and sleep is scarce.

                >like 80% of all people in the US live in urban areas, at least according to US Census data.

                And not in suburbs? I find that difficult to believe.

                >they can be dirty and expensive (though that isn’t an inherent property of urban areas, just a failure of policy)

                I’ll believe that when there are urban areas that aren’t dirty and expensive, and no sooner.

                >the thing about them being dangerous, or at least significantly more dangerous than rural areas, is just not factual.

                They are significantly more dangerous than suburban areas. I cannot speak for rural.

                >i don’t mean to be hostile, just check yourself a little bit.

                …says the one who’s advocating for something that would ruin my entire family’s lives.

                >for the majority of americans [access to public transportation] is an important climate justice and civil rights issue

                For those who have cars, it is equally important to not lose them, because losing them means losing a significant fraction of their lives and incomes to time spent in transit. The boss doesn’t pay you to sit on a bus; he pays you to work, so the faster you can get to and from work, the less impoverished and sleep-deprived you are.

                >the immense burdens placed on urban working class people by the ownership of cars

                Nonsense. Most car owners are working-class, and if car ownership were more burden than benefit to them, it wouldn’t exist.

                >our current legislation about who can build what where has led to suburban sprawl, vast, “”bleak”” wastelands of energy-sucking McMansions

                At least they have enough space to keep their possessions, and their pets can freely wander around outside. A McMansion would be a major improvement over the tiny apartment I live in.

                >connected by acres upon acres of heat-absorbing asphalt road (i’m joking, kind of), miles from the nearest grocery store

                My parents live in a house 3 miles from a grocery store. They never walk there, because they’re old and groceries are heavy. Your expecting them to walk or ride a bus with a full grocery load is ableist as hell.

                I live next door to a grocery store. I walk there for small purchases, but drive to a more distant grocery store for most shopping, because the nearby store is overpriced, groceries are heavy even for me, and there isn’t enough space in my tiny apartment to store a cart capable of carrying larger loads.

                Keep in mind that, thanks to America’s famously unhealthy tap water, bottled water is part of a typical grocery run. That stuff is heavy—10 gallons of water weigh 83 pounds. You’re not going to carry that on a bus and you’ll be hard-pressed to carry that on foot even with a cart, especially if the walk home involves climbing any hills.

                Mixed zoning does absolutely nothing to make it faster to commute to work. You still have to take a bus and it’s still glacially slow and life is still far too short for that.

                Even with mixed zoning, cars are still necessary. That is why car infrastructure is a thing, not some conspiracy.

                >so many cities had robust networks of electric cable cars and other forms of public transit back before the car was a thing

                And people stopped using them because they’re slow and impractical, and cars aren’t.

                >for urban living, the material realities of car ownership are miserable, dangerous, slow, and cause significant financial burden.

                Urban living in general is miserable, dangerous, slow, and significantly financially burdensome.

                >in an equitable society, freedom of movement should be just that, freedom. it should not be locked behind financial barriers, or behind private ownership

                Public transportation does not give you freedom of movement. You can only move to places along a public-transportation route. If you need to leave the city, you’re going to be riding a privately-owned vehicle—either your own car or someone else’s privately-owned vehicle (airplane, Greyhound bus, passenger train, etc)—not public transportation.

                >for those reasons, the idea of car ownership as a tool for freedom of movement is kinda laughable to me. what kind of freedom needs a down payment? why should that freedom be in the hands of auto companies?

                Why should it be in the hands of Uber, Lyft, Greyhound, Amtrak, and the airlines? At least the car is yours to keep, and doesn’t take you on a sub-optimal route to artificially cost you more money.

                >how in the fuck is rush hour traffic, claustrophobic strips of sidewalk, and barren paved over earth freedom?

                Crowded buses and trains are not an improvement. Especially not when somebody picks your pockets and disappears into the crowd before you even realize your wallet, keys, and phone are gone. Doubly especially not when there’s a deadly airborne plague going around.

                Public transportation is dangerous. People just don’t think about dangers that don’t immediately and spectacularly kill you like a car crash does.

                >federal and local public transportation policy allows everybody to access transportation, rather than just those who are wealthy enough or rural enough to benefit despite the costs imposed by car-centered infrastructure on urban environments.

                The buses around here are mostly empty most of the time, and you want to send them on interstate routes at my expense? No thanks. Oregon already spends more than enough tax money on stuff nobody uses.

                >in an equitable society, freedom of movement should be just that, freedom. it should not be locked behind financial barriers, or behind private ownership

                Then you’d best hurry and invent practical fusion power, because as long as energy remains scarce, so will transportation.

                >when you’re out in a rural area, storing cars is not a big issue, because there is an abundance of land to put cars on.

                Precisely. City living creates artificial land scarcity. This is an extremely bad idea, especially during a housing crisis, because it robs the common people of both money and space.

                >part of the reason why state level anti-trans and anti-abortion rules will negatively impact so many people when access is just a state away is exactly because the US as it exists currently has a pretty big problem with freedom of movement.

                Indeed. Those people need cars too, with which to escape from their oppressors and find someplace safe to live.

                You realize that no tyrannical regime in its right mind is going to just give its own victims an easy and affordable way to leave, right? Hitler did not put the Jews on trains out of Germany; he put them on trains to concentration camps. If you’re in a state where they’re rounding up and executing trans people, and you’re trans, then trying to leave the state on a publicly-owned vehicle is suicide.

                >we currently live in a dystopian state of affairs

                Yes, and depriving people of their cars and houses would make it even worse.

                Your proposal is an example of crab mentality: you don’t have a car or a house, and instead of demanding those things for yourself so that your life can be as good as those who do have those things, you demand that those things be taken away from others so that their lives will be just as miserable as yours.

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                  1 year ago

                  if you’re gonna make bad faith arguments about me wanting to take cars away or whatever, even when i explicitly talked about the inclusion of car based transportation in equitable future transport solutions for non-urban areas, don’t bother to respond at all. if you want to continue to insist that cities are yucky and bad, and intimate that not having cities is somehow a more equitable and realistic solution to the problems cities face than actually ameliorating the issues real people have right now, you can do that i guess.

                  >And not in suburbs? I find that difficult to believe.

                  i looked at the breakdown. suburbs do constitute around half of the population, with urban at 31%. the census includes suburban populations as extensions of densely populated urban cores. so i was wrong about that. it still leaves like a third of all people in urban areas, which are still people who deserve equitable transport.

                  >…says the one who’s advocating for something that would ruin my entire family’s lives.

                  what the fuck? like, forreal, under what circumstances is improving public transit supposed to impact your life negatively at all? again, never once advocated for the removal of all cars forever in perpetuity. i, and basically everybody else who wants better public transit, wants a larger diversity of transport solutions, to mitigate the energy costs and provide more people with more options for getting around. having strong public transit just by consequence of its utility makes less people need cars. you may genuinely believe public transit is slow, useless, and inferior to cars in some objective way. as somebody who has lived in cities for my whole life, i’m telling you that these sorts of resources are extremely valuable for people, especially people living with disabilities, people who cannot drive, people who are poor, and people who are unhoused. given that you’ve accused me of ableism for pointing out in passing that food deserts exist, i’ll just throw it back at you. what if you can’t drive? what if you don’t have a car? paratransit is public transit, and allows disabled people to live more full, independent lives. making public transit more accessible to more people can do nothing but improve the standards of living for people who need it or can benefit from it, and will do basically nothing if you decide you’re too good for it, as you obviously have.

                  >Why should it be in the hands of Uber, Lyft, Greyhound, Amtrak, and the airlines? At least the car is yours to keep, and doesn’t take you on a sub-optimal route to artificially cost you more money.

                  public transit isn’t those things? like, how am i supposed to take this as a serious argument? i’m not advocating for private services, i’m advocating for public transportation resources. there are actually pilot programs for public services like Uber and Lyft, fleets of cars that can transport people cheaply from place to place if they don’t have a vehicle in the city. as for Amtrak or airlines, well, the initial thrust of my whole deal was that commercial airlines are kinda shit, and i agree with the stance of a number of railway unions, which is that railway services should be made public, rather than held by irresponsible, exploitative corporate middlemen.

                  >Public transportation is dangerous. People just don’t think about dangers that don’t immediately and spectacularly kill you like a car crash does.

                  i’ve lived in cities all my life. never ever been pickpocketed. legit don’t know anybody who’s had an experience like that, don’t know where you got the idea that that’s some sort of common city living experience, other than by watching movies or something? and pandemic notwithstanding (busses kept going during the pandemic because people needed them), cars are just more dangerous overall, and are extra more dangerous when lots of people are driving all at once, and where people walking on the street are common casualties of vehicle accidents. now, you could take that as an argument that everybody should drive everywhere to protect themselves against the constant threat of fast moving metal boxes, but i think its frankly an unacceptable state of affairs. if people want to walk, or cycle, or whatever else, the infrastructure of their community should make that a viable option for them. right now, with the exclusive focus on car-based infrastructure? it isn’t.

                  >Then you’d best hurry and invent practical fusion power, because as long as energy remains scarce, so will transportation.

                  this one’s just obtuse. we can take incremental steps towards our ideals. public transportation objectively costs less energy to transport more people than cars do. that’s one of the reasons why a lot of climate policy groups advocate for its expansion. scarcity should not stop us from attempting to provide the most resources we can to the most people possible, especially people in disadvantaged circumstances. like, you seem at least vaguely left leaning, why is this a point of contention? are you just quipping or something?

                  >Yes, and depriving people of their cars and houses would make it even worse. >Your proposal is an example of crab mentality: you don’t have a car or a house, and instead of demanding those things for yourself so that your life can be as good as those who do have those things, you demand that those things be taken away from others so that their lives will be just as miserable as yours.

                  full stop, never fucking said that. never said anything about taking people’s cars away, and never said anything about taking people’s houses away. i even made explicit mentions of car based infrastructure as part of future transport solutions in rural areas (or i guess suburban areas), but our current infrastructure is inefficient for the way that people in cities live. and great job assuming my current living conditions because i find advocacy for transportation rights important.

                  i can’t take the rest of your obvious disdain for urban communities seriously. people live in cities. lots of people. lots of them love it there, and do not want to leave the communities in which they have built their lives. given that there are obvious problems with transportation in these places, problems i think i’ve enumerated clearly, including a number of ecological consequences which will worsen with climate change (that you basically didn’t mention at all in your response, other than to continue dunking on how icky and gross and morally unscrupulous our homes apparently are), your unwillingness to support a pretty important solution to at least some of these problems is disappointing to me. i’m sorry, but when your only response to the problems facing urban communities is “well that’s true but urban communities are bad”, i really don’t know what to say to that. yes? these are problems? better public transportation could fix some of them? we should use the technology we have to improve public transit significantly, as has been successfully implemented in a great number of other countries, and as you have advocated for plane travel? a modern high speed rail system could make interstate travel cheaper than a car or a plane and way faster than a car.

                  and finally, because this one really pissed me off:

                  >You realize that no tyrannical regime in its right mind is going to just give its own victims an easy and affordable way to leave, right? Hitler did not put the Jews on trains out of Germany; he put them on trains to concentration camps. If you’re in a state where they’re rounding up and executing trans people, and you’re trans, then trying to leave the state on a publicly-owned vehicle is suicide.

                  I am a Jew. I am also trans. Expulsion was a big part of the Jewish experience in the ramp up to the Holocaust, and over half of all Jews in Germany fled their homes to escape what they saw as escalating rhetoric before the start of the war, and before the Holocaust began in earnest. Many were forced to leave their belongings behind. Eventually, as part of the escalating laws restricting the lives and livelihoods of Jewish people, in September 1941, the remaining Jews inside Germany were prohibited from using Germany’s public transportation. That same month, they started putting the Star of David on their clothes. They were forced to live in designated regions of German cities called Judenhäuser. We can talk all we want about the utility and value of public transit, but the Nazis didn’t want their victims to have it for whatever reason.

        • adderaline@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          and lets be honest, nobody is “demanding devastating sacrifices” here, especially when referring to commercial air travel and eating meat. most people can’t afford to travel by air very frequently at all, both in the US and especially worldwide, and for most people eating less meat is almost certainly a positive health benefit, even disregarding the many reasons animal farming is unsustainable. nothing about that trade off is devastating.

  • NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Given I haven’t eaten meat in 19 years, how many airmiles does that buy me?

  • P1r4nha@feddit.de
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    1 year 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.

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    1 year 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…

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        1 year 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…

  • MrsEaves@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Definitely meat - I’ve been vegetarian for a very long time and vegan since COVID, and no plans of stopping anytime soon! Flying is a bit more difficult, but I work from home and when my work requires me to travel, I’m lucky that I have the ability to take a train, so I do that. I do like traveling occasionally, and for some of the places I want to go, I can’t realistically avoid flying.

    If anyone here is interested in giving up or reducing meat intake but needs a little advice or extra support to get started, please let me know. I’m happy to share any knowledge and tips I can!

    • lobut@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I live with my folks and I can’t say no to them serving me meat. I tell them I’d love to reduce my meat intake and they agree … only to put meat on everything l the time. When I order or cook alone I try going vegetarian if I can.

      What are some good vegetarian inspiring websites/cookbooks that you’d recommend for the next time I’m out grocery shopping?

      I used to go veggie before and I found the meat cravings pretty crazy. Do you do impossible or beyond? Or do you stay away from those entirely?

      • lightstream@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        can’t say no to them serving me meat.

        Offer to cook one meal a week for the family, and take it as an opportunity to showcase meat-free meals. If they’re dyed-in-the-wool carnivores, you’ll have to start with typical meat dishes using substitutes e.g. lasagne made with soya mince.

  • half_built_pyramids@lemmy.world
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    1 year 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.