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by hasbroslasher
2803 days ago
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I completely agree. It's not tech's fault at all - tech companies prey on our basic neural hardware as much as fast-food companies do, as much as predatory banks do, and all for the same reason: to generate capital. Luckily, I think I'm starting to see more people waking up to smell the societal rot that tech has helped foster, and people are becoming more motivated to fight it. I'm just waiting to see if tech folks can mobilize to push for causes like socialism during my lifetime. That would be the ultimate "Revenge of the Nerds" story line at this point. |
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The context was the unlikely event of the WTO calling fouls if America and a few other regions levied carbon tariffs on imported goods.
Of course, The article was written in 2013, and it’s cyncisim would be considered wildly optimistic in today’s climate.
But perhaps his point is wrong.
Perhaps for humans, it is free trade that is more important than the planet.
Free trade is effectively our distributed human brain. Our ability to make choices and distributing those choices down information trees encompassed by entire industries.
Society is one big exercise in managing complexity - obfuscating or dispersing away decisions and information.
And maybe for human beings, that is just more important than saving the coral reefs or the elephants.
The insects may die, so we lose almonds and other flowering trees. That just means almonds and other precious species disappear.
But most human beings don’t even get almonds, Or meat, or fruit, as part of their diet anyways.
It would be nice to save other species, but if the whole planet was just covered in bio crop species 1-299, and a few aesthetics, humanity would be alive and ok.
Perhaps the awful truth is that for humanity as a species, free trade and economic growth is more important than saving the planet.