| - The US cruise business is a bigger polluter than more than 100 countries combined. - The US churches are a bigger polluter than more than 100 countries combined. - The US Airline industry is a bigger polluter than more than 100 countries combined. I'm not a proponent of the bloated Military Industrial Complex, but comparisons like this are not helping any discussions. They are just click bait for people to click on and get a warm feeling thinking "That's right, screw xyz". And then they go home in an SUV, eat a meat heavy diet for dinner, run the AC on full blast, water their lawn, eat fruit from around the globe, produce a gallon of waste that wont decompose in 10k years or gets burned. It's a political mechanism to funnel activism for one cause into activism against another cause. I believe whenever you do that, you end up hurting your own cause. If you want to advocate for fighting climate change, it's not a good tactic to alienate the military community. |
Can individuals impact the environmental crisis? Sure, in aggregate. But the biggest gains come from focusing on the largest groups. They have the biggest proportional impact on the environment.
Did the steak I ate last night contribute to global warming? Sure did.
Did that steak contribute more pollution than the entire fleets of naval ships we keep deployed across the globe to 'project power'? Hardly.
Did my steak contribute more pollution than the tanks and next generation fighters the US keeps ordering and building (and which have little place in today's environment of asymmetric warfare)? Nope.
We can talk about personal responsibility and organizational responsibility for pollution at the same time. And solving the issue of organizational pollution will have a much quicker and longer-lasting effect on the environment than pushing people to stop eating so much meat.
[1] https://www.chicagotribune.com/opinion/commentary/ct-perspec...