• @WhatAmLemmy
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    611 months ago

    Consumers definitely share some of the blame for the demand, but the fools errand is expecting millions/billions of individuals to act in everyone else’s best interest at detriment to their own immediate finances, quality of life, and standard of living.

    Climate change is a tragedy of the commons that corporations have continuously exploited for financial gain (e.g. offshoring their most dangerous and pollutant processes to developing countries; out of reach of developed world democracies/regulations/voters).

    Corporations will always bear most of the blame, as they have used their capital to engage in immoral, unethical, and downright criminal anti-democratic and psychological warfare tactics to maximize profit; the same as they have done for labour laws and everything else that benefits the collective (impacts profitability).

    • @neanderthal
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      311 months ago

      immediate finances, quality of life, and standard of living.

      That is the problem. The immediate finances isn’t true. A small car for commuting to work is cheaper than a giant SUV. Poultry is cheaper than beef. Having more money means less stress and an increased quality of life.

      As far as quality of life goes, how are these heat waves, wildfires, and extreme weather events treating everyone? Soon enough, we will start seeing shortages of various things due to crop failures and shipping issues like we are seeing currently with the Panama canal.

      Blaming corporations is exactly what corporations want. It means consumers can feel ok with more consumption, which is good for their bottom line.

      Suburbia, one of the biggest culprits just isn’t sustainable in its current form. It will take years to fix, but in the meantime let’s all replace a few steaks with anything else. And stop buying monster trucks and canyoneros to commute to an office job.