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by makx
2107 days ago
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People who have money and a stake in green energy have the motivation and means to actively fight against the movie, while part-time volunteer activists don't. That doesn't make the content of the film any more accurate [1], nor does it mean that the technologies put forward by profiteers of green energy less valid. This article too seems to cherry-pick problems without comparing the size to alternatives (which it doesn't offer). It's ironic that the solution would lie in the hands of common people (change their consumption, become active), but prefer to blame rich people, left and right.
Billionaires don't drive billions of cars or eat billions of beef steaks, the "average Joe's" do. [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmNjLHRAP2U |
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If consumers had to pay an unsubsidized price for beef and other products that gut-punch the environment, that would be a step towards making things better.
I don't want to take away anyone's right to eat beef, I just want them to pay for the externalities.