Of course most folks love to blame our government, but positive environmental action has to start at HOME. The amount of energy resources we consume, the amount of pollution we produce, plastics we use, and goods we consume is up to US, not the government. The ball is in OUR court. WE must deal with it... or not.
I have a brilliant and personable friend - a retired Special Education professor - who listed all the local environmental boards he is on in Colorado, preserving the environment around his 3 million dollar home in a gated community. But he and his family are constantly traveling all over the globe, literally using a supertanker of oil and producing the same pollution as a small city for their personal pleasures. When I pointed that out to him he got REALLY pissed off and would not talk to me for a while!
And THAT inane response to a very reasonable observation was from an "environmentally active" college professor! We are fucking DOOMED!!!
World Airline Traffic - 24 -Hour Timelapse... DEPRESSING! Modifying a famous Jimmy Buffett song here: Why Don't We Stay Home and Screw?
Not sure what “3 million dollar home in a gated community” has to do with anything?
Think about it: Excess consumerism and consumption is the very problem under discussion here. Resources, fuel, energy... Everything we own takes energy to make and maintain. What is more eco friendly for a retired couple. who call themselves environmentalists... a 5,000 square foot home or a 1,500 foot home? How much energy was required to earn $3. million to pay for it?
A self-proclaimed ‘environmentalist’ living amid such extravagance? Divide 327.2 million by 2.6 then multiply by $3 million … and you might understand his concerns (for the US)..
@MoonTigerII perhaps he should get an end terrace in Darlington then to keep everyone happy!
@Varn [agnostic.com]
He must be a very clever professor to be living such a rock n roll lifestyle. More importantly, the people he professed to must be in the same echelon. Ideas don’t give you credence in a monied world, money does. How can he profess to the influencers living in a cave off North Cornwall.
Sound as though he is being very savvy with regard his influence. Do yeah, as you say,”think about it!
@Varn I agree with some of what you said, but in the end, laws do not change things that much, really. There are very probably ten times as many laws on the books in America than there were in 1945. Are we ten times better as a society because of them? Example, Civil Rights laws protecting minorities: 1 in 3 or 4 black men are imprisoned here and they are given longer sentences than whites. Since we lock up more people than any other nation and all prisons are work camps, slavery has certainly not disappeared, now has it?
The environmental issue is complex and in a capitalist society who the fuck is gonna regulate consumption, which is the core issue here? If WE don't buy shit, THEY won't PRODUCE it. Remember when middle class American families had only one car? Did someone put a gun to our heads and force us to buy cars for everyone over age 16 in family...ATV's, powerboats, 8 miles per gallon RV's, leaf blowers, lawn tractors, etc. ad infinitum? If we don't buy airline tickets, planes will stay on the ground instead of causing lung cancer in millions of people living in near airports. Veggies and fruits grown anywhere near a highway are growing in soil that is polluted 3 feet deep.
I well remember my college days of ‘law enforcement & criminal justice’ ...when it struck me (while studying case law), there’s no such thing as ‘a law,’ only it’s final interpretation… If the wealthy can appeal up the ladder ..to the supreme court, and that court decides in favor of those who placed them there (now Republicans), the best intended laws can & will be ignored.
Then there’s enforcement… We’ve a long festering mess regarding illegal immigration; we don’t need more, or new laws … we only need the ones on the books enforced. But it’s up to society to fund that enforcement.
And there’s the ‘feel good’ element of having ‘enacted a law.’ “We’ve just passed & signed the _____ law,” “Now the problem’s solved!”
We can regulate with Taxes - carbon tax, fuel tax, luxury (low mpg) vehicle tax, air-travel tax…. But we don’t, because the think-tank guided industrial funded full-time media campaigns coercing ..just enough of our pitifully few voters to vote against their best interests keep ‘winning.’ That needs to end.
Most appear scattered with regard to knowing ‘where to start.’ We must start by voting - and encouraging those either complacent or defeatist to do the same.. Sounds simple, and impossible at the same time
Since our governments represent us, and are put in place by us, maybe blaming it is an indirect way of appropriately ‘blaming ourselves?’ We do regulate consumption as a society, and government's our only legitimate tool.
Gravitating toward good people, I know a lot of them. But as they deprive themselves of the conveniences of wreckless consumption, someone like the ‘professor’ you describe will deplete everything a dozen actively concerned citizens will forgo… He (and family) live ‘the high life,’ while a dozen of humanities best purposely avoid such adventures, pleasures and daily opportunities of gross consumption.. Makes me sick.
Yet you can’t ‘regulate freedom!’ … we’ll hear from ‘koch (actually rhymes with crotch) industries’ PR campaign! The hell we can’t! ..but we need our Government back to do it ~
Self change can control climate change. Vote for climate change, and grow and sequester algae in plastic bottles. Build things with bottles containing algae, from bookshelves to buildings. Growing algae takes CO2 from the water it grows in, which comes from the air. Bubble air through a bottle of fertilized water, or open the bottle frequently, blow CO2 into it a as you exhale, screw the cap on, shake it, and set in the sun. When it is full of algae, save it as long as possible, hopefully centuries.
We can lobby local governments to provide local landfills to sequester algae filled bottles. Algae grows faster than anything else in the world. It can double it's mass in hours. Planting trees is good, but they grow slowly. Billions of people growing and sequestering algae can clean the Earth of plastic bottles and reduce atmospheric CO2. Industrial projects to clean the air of CO2 will cost trillions of dollars.
Wow... very cool!
@MoonTigerII TY repeat the message, everyone on Earth needs to know.