| I agree with the "we won't do all the things" thesis, and that it's probably wise to acknowledge that and plan accordingly around that self-knowledge. Almost everything else in the comment after that seems a bit off-kilter to me: > The Green New Deal has turned into a jobs program "turned into"? Are you familiar with the "New Deal" of historical note that it's deriving the very name from? It's always been a jobs program. That's part of the point. > Soviet Union As sibling commenters have already pointed out, I don't see how this comparison was particularly well-connected or topical. > Increasing middle class prosperity is inherently incompatible with reducing carbon output. No? > The Green New Deal, together with the climate strikes have become vehicles for socialist ideology. I don't disagree with that; what's your point, though? Are you trying to run with the association that "socialism=bad"? I'm writing you from fairly-darn-Socialist (and fairly-darn-functional) Norway, so I'm not picking up. > despite experts broadly agreeing that we need things like carbon taxes, the Global Climate Strike platform categorically rejects market mechanisms to address climate change. Almost every single person I've talked to who has participated in or associated with the climate strikes has been an advocate for carbon taxes. So, no. Those people and platforms do not categorically reject market mechanisms. In fact those that I've talked to seem to be essentially _on your side_. > we can do it without world government I'm sure that's true, but also, I'm not sure where there's been a suggestion of "world government" that you seem to be responding negatively to. Everything you've mentioned in your own comment is single-government internal proposals, or, groups of people advocating for general directions within their own local governments. So in total: while I think you and I would agree in many many details about how to plan reactions to climate change, can I council you to polish your message to _focus on that_ and skip the world-socialist-government-conspiracy tinge? It's just not necessary. It seems to be making you believe you disagree with a bunch of people who... by and large agree with you, and are in fact interested in (and pursuing) market-oriented solution paths. |
> I'm writing you from fairly-darn-Socialist (and fairly-darn-functional) Norway, so I'm not picking up.
Socialism is bad, but Norway is not socialist. Norway is a market economy with a large welfare state. https://www.heritage.org/index/country/norway. The two things are completely different.
Nearly all the countries that call themselves "democratic socialist" are in fact capitalist, with strong welfare states. Some, like Denmark and Sweden, and to a lesser extent Norway, are among the freest markets in the world. The lynchpin of the "Nordic model" is not socialism, but free markets that generate a large surplus, which is then taxed to provide a strong welfare system. Countries like Sweden have high taxes on individuals, even as they aggressively pursue deregulation and cut corporate taxes.
The Nordic model is a strong contrast from the "New Deal" which was strongly anti-market. It was built on government regulation of the economy, price controls, nationalization of industries, etc. It was an economy where the government decided how much it should cost for a flight from New York to LA. The ends might have been similar to Nordic social democracy (higher social welfare), but the means were wholly different.
Climate justice folks are advocating a return to the New Deal, not a turn to Nordic market-oriented welfare states.
The "Green New Deal" is by its terms about a government takeover of the economy: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/aocs-top-aide-admits-green-...
> It goes on to say that “a new national social, industrial and economic mobilization on a scale not seen since World War II and the New Deal”
See also: https://demandclimatejustice.org
> In mitigation and adaptation (“maladaptation”) such as offsets and carbon trading, marketbased approaches to forests (REDD) and agriculture (“Climate Smart”), soil and water, large-scale geo-engineering, and techno-fixes, nuclear energy, mega hydro dams, agro-fuels, “clean” coal, GMOs, the waste to energy incineration industry, large-scale “re-modeling”;
Also: https://www.peoplesdemands.org (referenced from the Global Climate Strike website)
> 5. Facilitate and support non-market approaches to climate action.
> we must take immediate action, including policies for stopping all new fossil fuel projects, drastically scaling up finance and technology transfer from rich countries to the global South, and eliminating dangerous distractions like carbon market schemes.
> to reject false solutions like carbon markets, bioenergy and techno-fixes