this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2023
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[–] neanderthal 9 points 1 year ago (9 children)

I think some of this is defeatism and blaming the corporations. Corporations are about half the problem IMO. The stuff we all buy is made by these corporations. Buy less stuff. Buy quality. Repair stuff. Buy used stuff. Drive less. Don't buy a canyonero or monster truck to drive in a suburb. Rent a truck if you need one, you'll save $$$$ and emissions. Beef is a huge culprit. Eat less beef. Other meats tend to be cheaper anyway. Replace meat in a meal with rice and beans or lentils. You will also save money.

Vote for ending car dependency in cities and suburbs.

Talk to people. Mention saving money to retire early. Most people think work sucks.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (5 children)

Without commenting any of your other points, saying that "our stuff is made by corporations so it's the individuals fault for buying it" is in my opinion extremely shortsighted.
You don't have any influence on the supply chain. Even with exceptions like Fairphone, harmful ways to produce are mostly cheaper than less harmful ways. On one end, those who produce cheaper have the competitive advantage, on the other you have low, non-increasing wages.
This also applies to the "buy quality" thing. Even if the word "quality" had an objective definition, it's incredibly hard to decide that. Expensive items could be made out if cheap materials, which feel valuable but aren't. The hardware could be good, but software updates are only supplied in the short-term.
And after all, people have work in the morning and I don't think it's reasonable to expect them to sacrifice what little free time they have into researching all of their consumption. It's a systematic issue, and these tips floating around feel like bikeshedding. Yes they're nice, good on you for doing it, but does it really fix any of the pressing issues?
it's late so please apologize if this text doesn't make any sense.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There are also situations where there is no good option but you still need it. I live in Victoria. Most of our power comes from brown coal.
I have solar panels but that only covers part of it. I can't afford the $5-10k for batteries so I have no choice but to keep using grid power. Even if I did spend that, there is no guarantee that it will be better.

[–] neanderthal 3 points 1 year ago

You are why individual action matters. Replacing your power source will take years. I can eat 5 less cheeseburgers a year right now and start slowing demand for beef production almost immediately. If the whole world does this, we start slowing things down a bit and buy time for things like your grid situation to be fixed.

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