136
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2024
136 points (96.6% liked)
Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics.
5244 readers
208 users here now
Discussion of climate, how it is changing, activism around that, the politics, and the energy systems change we need in order to stabilize things.
As a starting point, the burning of fossil fuels, and to a lesser extent deforestation and release of methane are responsible for the warming in recent decades:
How much each change to the atmosphere has warmed the world:
Recommended actions to cut greenhouse gas emissions in the near future:
Anti-science, inactivism, and unsupported conspiracy theories are not ok here.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
I don't think pissing of stressed travelers is the way to do this.
Ports would get alot more govt attention and leave the public alone
There is no way to do this without inconveniencing someone.
There isn't. But why attack the voting public instead of the unvoting industry?
Airlines produce considerable carbon per individual mile but are also one of the industries improving efficiency and fuel usage (because it's so expensive). Meanwhile ocean liners and cruise ships burn the cheapest, most polluting fuel outside of national borders.
If you're calling for a ban on shipping, you deserve a special prize - but you'll never get it.
Not a ban, a better way of doing things.
Don't hold one section of society responsible for overhauling the entire global system, but they can absolutely do better in their sphere of influence.
I prefer not to distract myself with incrementalist "solutions".
Don't let perfection get in the way of progress.
Expecting everything to overhaul at the same time and uproot embedded systems and culture overnight isn't being driven, its foolish. Unless you plan on nuking most of the planet its just not going to happen.
Don't let the illusion of progress stand in the way of meaningful change.
I would say protesting at a port would be less likely to garner international attention, and probably would be easier to shutdown quickly and relatively quietly.
Shutting down an airport is much more public, therefore probably safer in the long run. Also more likely to be reported on because it affects the public in a more direct way. Yes, it inconveniences some people, but it gets the message out.
Either way, I doubt it will do much to change anything soon enough.
I hate how accurate the last part is - im being a bit pedantic as something is always better than not doing something perfect.
Depending on how you did it ports/chokepoints would be much harder to stop as you can't just send in the cops - boats are much harder to board and stop safely. Some rope, floats, a few fast boats and the right placement would hold a ship up for hours, especially done outside a major city or in a shipping lane.
I hadn't thought of a boat barricade like that. It would definitely be effective in the short term. Unfortunately, in the US at least, the coast guard would end it real quick for national security reasons. That would certainly make international news though.
You would be surprised how difficult it would be to stop a boat with a rope trailing from each quarter or midships on a boom. Get an iron cable around a prop that ship isn't going anywhere for days, or longer if an alignment is needed.
Massive damage that only harms the shipping company, and be sure to mention that ships and companies with environmentally friendly policies won't be touched.
Flying is one of the most emitting activities in the world. For many Europeans it will be 20% of their carbon footprint for a single vacation.
Large transportation ships abs cruise ships are enormous polluters and would be low hanging fruit here
Most emitting per mile.
If you want to get people on board with your cause you don't do it by pissing them all off.
Blockadeing ports attacks the organization responsible, doesn't inconvenience the public and creates industrial pressure for change.
Im not telling them not to do it - only think wider and to be strategic with it. They may delay or divert a few flights, at the expense of the wider public having a considerably lower view of their actions.
- you if they had blocked the ports
Look, I can do conservative handwringing too!
Why, the point is that you need the public on your side.
They won't be anyways. The entire conservative movement is against clinate protests regardless of how few people are inconvenienced. So why bother about what they think?
So what you are saying us they need all the public support they can get?
What I am saying is that there won't be any significant difference in public support, regardless of how few people are inconvenienced. The people who complain now are the same who complained when the same group targeted luxury private jets.
Empirically, the public loves radicals who engage in violence and disruption. It both moves the overton window in those people's direction and gets support from people frustrated with society but no place to vent it.
Whether it's Black Lives Matter, Donald Trump, the Gilets Jaunes, violent farmer protests in the Netherlands, Black Panthers, Suffragette terrorists, labor riots and lynchings of factory owners, the assassination of Shinzo Abe, hell, even Al Qaeda and Hamas. The pattern is always the same: radical and often violent disruptors get a massive amount of sympathy, attention and support while centrists wring their hands about how inappropriate it all is.
If you want to win public support, set something on fire. But if you're offended and scared off by something being set on fire, you're not the target audience yet. They'll get around to winning you over when the movement has grown. Eventually, bringing up that it was bad that things were set on fire will make your friends and family uncomfortable, if they don't outright confront you by saying that it was necessary to overthrow the old ideas. At which point you can re-examine it or retract that part of your politics from the world, forming a seed of conservative confusion and dismay that lies dormant outside the Overton window waiting until someone starts a fire in its name.
No you don't lol
Fuck them. If they didn’t want to be stressed maybe they should’ve chosen a different mode of transport
Well I tried taking the teleporter but apparently they haven't been invented yet.
You're typing this on an item that used up 10-80% of the average annual carbon for 1 person.
Does that give me the right to inconvenience you as much as I can?
10-80%? That's a huge range. Typo maybe?
Sorry, was incorrect maths.
1-8%, off by a factor of 10.
I see. Thanks for the clarification.
Surprisingly not.
Newest iPhone are around 0.16 T in production, vs computers and monitors sit much higher once logistics and manufacturing, along with lifetime use and disposal costs are factored in.