- cross-posted to:
- anarcho_hackers
- green
- cross-posted to:
- anarcho_hackers
- green
It may well be the case that fighting climate change will require middle-class and even working-class people in wealthy countries to change their lifestyles in the decades ahead. Given, however, the extent to which the rich are disproportionately responsible for global emissions, and the widespread public consensus around raising their taxes, it would be both politically popular and sound policy-wise to emphasize redistributive solutions to the climate crisis.
Adding some fuel to the fire:
It’s not even funny how high american emissions are
Car culture. Disposal culture. Convenience culture. It all has a price.
Interesting side note. Compare the emissions for “poor” Americans and “rich” Indians.
Almost like rich Indians are poorer than poor Americans.
I’ve been doing that comparison for ages now. The bottom 50% of Americans are more wasteful than the top 10% of five nations. The American average is more wasteful than the top 10% of ten nations. The USA is almost repulsive in how much it emits … doubly so because Americans tend, too, to be the preachiest about emissions to other nations.
you could post this as an individual post!