This is also implying that common everyday people actually have control or can influence the situation.
While a wealthy few in the world are the ones that can actually drive change for the better but refuse to because it would affect their wealth and power.
90% of the population wants to do something
10% of the population owns everything
The 10% who have all the control don't mind watching the world burn as long as they keep their mansion.
90% of the population can't do anything because they don't have the wealth to influence anything
100% of the world is completely fine with this situation.
I think most of us are resigned to this situation.
We're not good at popular organizing. We're very good at finding ways of othering factions, which the elite are glad to utilize.
We're good at consolidating power. We're not good at utilizing that power to serve the public. Hence billionaires don't even think of charity work except as a means to preserve power.
The human species may be doomed to extinction or a cap on technological progress. We may just be tribal hunters too attached to dominance hierarchy to reach into space and colonize other worlds.
Or we may be stuck in a perpetual cycle where we just form feudal empires that poison the world for another epoch.
The solution — if there is one — is sociological. We figure out a way to diffuse political power so it can't be consolidated. We fix dominance hierarchy and tragedy of the commons. We figure out a way to teach people that everybody (even the ones that disgust us) are part of the community and deserve regard.
Until we find it, we'll continue to let elites hold all the resources and poison the earth with impunity.
The solution — if there is one — is sociological. We figure out a way to diffuse political power so it can't be consolidated
This is the final jeopardy question...
We need to focus on how to shape society to be resistant to power consolidation.
Otherwise any progress is temporary at best
We fix dominance hierarchy and tragedy of the commons.
Addressing fundamental flaws in the human psyche is absolutely a worthwhile endeavor.
I get the impression that, millennia from now, it might be possible for a person to look back on what humanity was before such technology was discovered. But, I'm a product of my time. I cannot fathom how that would be practical and ethical to achieve. That said, I am absolutely open to the discussion.
I always thought a significant majority wanted change, but I recently learned that a surpassingly large amount of people are against it outside of my social bubble. Even young people (about 20yo).
A lot of people seem to make up their minds about these topics with very little information. They blindly repeat the things some politicians spout, even though it’s complete BS. And when I question them about it they seem to actually know very little about it. They get uncomfortable and try to avoid the discussion, but their opinions still mostly stay the same.
It’s frustrating, and it has given me a lot less hope that we will be able to deal with it.
To me the saddest part is that it’s more like 99.99% of us want and know how to fix things, but 0.01% control everything. There are something like around 3000 billionaires worldwide…
Remember to show people biking and windmills, radical capping of corporate polluting that makes up the majority of emissions. Nobody serious is saying it's too late so we shouldn't change anything, they're saying it's too late to stave off devastating effects of climate change.
People are also realizing that it's not going to be the literal end of civilization though either.
Climate change and the crisis is happening as we speak. Tornados in February in Wisconsin. Temperatures rising. Jet streams changing.
But that doesn't mean everyone dies. It mostly means huge impacts on mostly impoverished nations creating a larger refugee a crisis others don't even want to handle.
People joke constantly that Earth will be fine, humans won't be.
The reality is that humans and anything we absolutely need will be fine. Almost every other thing we can't or don't want to conserve will die.
Nothing will take us out short of a stray meteor large enough to make the globe molten or enough nukes regularly to send us into winter for decades. Even average nuclear winter humanity will get around.
The point though isn't just survival. It's striving to be as good as a shepherd as possible to our home planet and others we share it with.
That's hard when 1% destroys it for profits to keep peoples retirements going because they refuse to pay a decent wage.
Not everything we need. As sea levels rise and inundate aquifers with salt, and as drought followed by flood becomes the norm, the places people live will run out of water for everyday use. Causing waves of refugees, spawning wars.
We are not going to be okay. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't act. Pretending it's going to be okay is just a foolish as pretending it isn't real.
But, some people are saying that it won’t take a milita but only a small amount of brave individuals acting separately and willing to sacrifice their own freedom to agressively disempower a tiny set of billionaires. One at a time and as a surprise.
No, this is not the way. Lone sacrificial actors hurting wealthy people wouldn't work - they've got a whole system lined up to keep their generational wealth and power and it is extremely robust and every time you got rid of a billionaire you would get a handful more billionaires popping up where they were. Not only that, it would embolden reaction. You thought the BLM protests caused a violent police reaction? Assassinate one billionaire and just watch what happens. The reactionary machine would go ballistic. Maybe you want that, but that's called accelerationism and it has never once worked to achieve anything good. Similarly the act of lashing out as a lone wolf has a name: revolutionary adventurism. It also doesn't work.
The actual method that can work is prefiguration, building the new society in the shell of the old. We make the world better for ourselves and our neighbours right here and now and we don't wait for permission from conservative and reactionary systems. We make them irrelevant to our projects.
When the CNT-FAI dispossessed the wealthy of their private property, they didn't purge them. They offered them a place in their new society. Many took them up on the offer and admitted it was a good life. That's a much more profound victory than just ganking someone.
Hope at this point is moronic, we're talking about mitigating disasters, not eliminating them. So right now we need panic. Panic is a very powerful tool. It gets a fire lit under our asses.
I'd say a big part of the problem is that not enough people are panicked right now.
I'm in the United States. Conservatives are currently pivoting to their new "climate change is inevitable, and therefore we must seal our borders to protect America from climate migrants and give more subsidies to big corporations and fossil fuel companies whose technology will maintain our standard of living" talking point.
The more people panic about climate change, the more persuasive that argument becomes.
Human rights are one of the first things to vanish in disasters. When people are scared, they agree to give up their rights. When people are scared, they close their eyes as the government violates other people's rights.
And the more frightened people are about climate change, the more they'll turn to authoritarian demagogues who promise them safety.
Hope is vital. Because once people give up hope of saving the planet, all that's left is an ever more vicious scramble for ever fewer resources. And once you decide that's an inevitability, the only logical thing to do is get vicious as fast as possible.
human population growth is the biggest driver by far
I argue that the biggest driver for CO2 emissions at the moment is not population growth, but rather the rise of the quality of living in high population low income regions such as China, India, etc.
preserving quality of life should be the stated objectives
Does that mean you also want the many inequalities to remain? CO2 emissions per person are spread as unequal as wealth. Demanding that people are allowed to continue living far above the carrying capacity of the Earth while others live far below is not a solution to the problem.
People argue something along the lines of "spending a lot of energy gives a good quality of life" and to some extend this is true. Though when people spend an hour or two to drive to work in a private car 5 days a week that doesn't seem like a good quality of living to me.
To fight climate change without having to miss out on a good quality of living it's important that people get the most "bang for their buck" as far as CO2 emmissions are concerned. I argue that things like watching Formula 1 drivers, owning private jets or even just doing long communes to work by car are among the WORST bang for your CO2-buck anybody can get. Riding a bike, having a picnic in a local park or commuting via public transportation (which lets you do other things like playing on your phone, reading a book or chatting with people while waiting) seem to be way better options.
In that case, why are Chinas emissions hoing up, when its population is shrinking?
Population growth matters, but the real issue is consumption. Intresstingly people have fewer children in urbaized socitied, when they have all basic material needs meet and womens rights are improved. So we just have to meet everybodies needs to a reasonable level and have to reduce emissions. Population is solving itsrlf at that point. If we did that global population would peak before 2050 and fall to about 6billion by the end of the century.
This text implies that both sides are equally wrong, which is not true. This type of message only serves to make people feel better about doing too little while corporations keep fucking the environment without any control or oversight.
We'll be fine: we're good, Earth will be fine, burn petrol as you need.
Essentially saying it's 'too late' tends to make someone care less about the climate, which is actually worse in practice than straight up denial because of the behavior it encourages.
While this seems like a sarcastic comment and quote we've been fooled too many times and lured with false hope and illusions of having an impact while being just held as slaves, more or less.
Edit: feel free to elaborate on down vote. I am just sick and tired of trying my best for the environment and getting my ass handed to me by mega corporations and additionally being blamed, too.
You're giving people hope while Joe Biden is forcing federal workers to get into their car and drive into the office. Hope they can fight for something better makes people think "Well I'm not going to vote for someone who does that."
If you turn around and say "No, no. You have to." Now you've given someone hope and then just ripped it right back.
My counter is: I don't think you necessarily do. A historian might have some insight on this.
I find false hope to be more damaging than not hoping but still trying.
And as to the why: because there are logical reasons to do so. It's the right thing. I think we might get into religious understanding here, which is a fascinating thing, you see.
It is VERY important to get the size of Themis problem. We've been dumping CO2 by extracting energy since the start of the industrial revolution, and without going into details, if you want to extract that CO2, it will take about the same amount of energy we've spent for the last ~250 years. Converting and storing and losses might double that.
We'll be able to generate more and more energy in the future (yay fusion, hopefully!) but basically, we can spend 50% of the world's energy budget on this and it will still take one or more centuries to get CO2 levels restored back to pre industrial levels.
And ALL that energy must be carbon free, or you're doing it for nothing.
This is an absolutely enormous problem that will be fixed, but none of us will see it 100% fixed in our lifetimes
That's worrysome, and is indeed an enormous problem - probably the biggest problem humanity has ever faced.
What bothers me about this situation is that it makes easy measures that "buy time" look like a good idea. Like dimming the sky with particulates, or increasing sulfur emissions. Both of which will cause environmental damage on their own, and screw with renewable solar and wind, but it'll keep the global solar gain down. I'm not a fan of these kinds of approaches either and would love to see everyone do a hard pivot to dramatically less fossil fuel and more renewable, fission, and (eventually) fusion power.
Meanwhile, short of converting CO2 into carbonates, graphite, and diamond, I don't know of any sequestration methods that seem anywhere near as permanent. What's kind of sad is that even gaseous sequestration would probably work okay-ish in old gas wells that aren't fracked, but there's probably not nearly enough such storage to make the difference.
I think the "buying time" solutions do work, and will be needed, but indeed will be abused as cheap end-all solutions by idiots, as always.
Storing CO2 directly in the ground, I think, is a really bad idea. if it escapes you lose all the energy invested in harvesting it. You'll need to convert it into Graphite or plastics. The problem though is again that were talking truly ginormous amounts. Think a square kilometer cube of graphite, we'd need hundreds of those. If that were to catch fire, we're all effed, so your still need to store it safely somewhere.