Fixes definitely exist. The question is whether they will be implemented at scale or in time to mitigate the worst effects. The problem of climate change is not that we don't know how to avoid it -- we do, and have for decades now. The problem is getting the politicians to mandate it, and making sure the mandates stick. That doesn't get …
Fixes definitely exist. The question is whether they will be implemented at scale or in time to mitigate the worst effects. The problem of climate change is not that we don't know how to avoid it -- we do, and have for decades now. The problem is getting the politicians to mandate it, and making sure the mandates stick. That doesn't get the individual off the hook or deprive them of all agency -- esp. in a democracy -- but it can feel like a pretty impossible task in the face of the powerful forces who would prefer to deny or ignore the problem.
So I try to do my part, as a teacher, writer, consumer, voter. But I admit that I am not particularly optimistic. It is a particularly thorny political problem, and would be even if there were not well-funded bad actors working full-time to poison the well.
The well-poisoning is definitely a huge issue, but even there we've seen a strange form of progress. I'm told that outright denial is much less common these days, and has been replaced by statements of helplessness and despair as an excuse for more foot-dragging. The parallels between attitudes on climate and major depression are pretty interesting...
Have you read Robinson Meyer's articles in The Atlantic about what he calls the "Green Vortex"? That's where I've gotten most of my hope from in the last few years, when it comes to policy.
Fixes definitely exist. The question is whether they will be implemented at scale or in time to mitigate the worst effects. The problem of climate change is not that we don't know how to avoid it -- we do, and have for decades now. The problem is getting the politicians to mandate it, and making sure the mandates stick. That doesn't get the individual off the hook or deprive them of all agency -- esp. in a democracy -- but it can feel like a pretty impossible task in the face of the powerful forces who would prefer to deny or ignore the problem.
So I try to do my part, as a teacher, writer, consumer, voter. But I admit that I am not particularly optimistic. It is a particularly thorny political problem, and would be even if there were not well-funded bad actors working full-time to poison the well.
The well-poisoning is definitely a huge issue, but even there we've seen a strange form of progress. I'm told that outright denial is much less common these days, and has been replaced by statements of helplessness and despair as an excuse for more foot-dragging. The parallels between attitudes on climate and major depression are pretty interesting...
Have you read Robinson Meyer's articles in The Atlantic about what he calls the "Green Vortex"? That's where I've gotten most of my hope from in the last few years, when it comes to policy.