A fixation on system change alone opens the door to a kind of cynical self-absolution that divorces personal commitment from political belief. This is its own kind of false consciousness, one that threatens to create a cheapened climate politics incommensurate with this urgent moment.
[...]
Because here’s the thing: When you choose to eat less meat or take the bus instead of driving or have fewer children, you are making a statement that your actions matter, that it’s not too late to avert climate catastrophe, that you have power. To take a measure of personal responsibility for climate change doesn’t have to distract from your political activism—if anything, it amplifies it.
The issue is, the "wisdom" isn't "don't worry about personal emissions", it's "take voting extremely seriously. Become a single issue voter, that issue should be climate"
But there's a psychological thing where people take the discount today and the payment later.
Voting isn't going to do shit.
Get involved. Protest. Refuse to work for terrible companies. Convince the people around you to protest and vote.
Which is it?
Voting by itself doesn't do shit. Organizing and convincing people to vote based on an issue does.