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by annexrichmond
1658 days ago
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That will disproportionately affect lower income households who can't as easily withstand these rising costs, which further drives income inequality. > Rising oil prices makes the market naturally move away This is trivialization of the transition as the worlds depends oil in many ways: development of cars (electric or otherwise), airplanes, solar panels, vaccines, acetaminophen, etc. -- these are all petroleum-derived products. I recommend this article on the difficulty of the transition
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2021/11/en... Given this dependence, axing our production just means we have to rely more on other countries and given that climate change is a global problem -- what's the difference? If we do it here, perhaps we innovate on making its extraction more eco friendly (which has been the case for the last 20 years) |
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I see your compassion, but income inequality isn't driven by prices, it's driven by the employers not paying enough to their employees. Prices can't fix that.
> This is trivialization of the transition
Is it? I read it more as this being an important step toward addressing the climate crisis.
> as the worlds depends oil in many ways
How much oil is used in making acetaminophen? Why even bring it up? Nobody is saying "no oil," they're saying "stop polluting so much".
> perhaps we innovate on making its extraction more eco friendly
The extraction is a small problem. The global warming it causes is the large problem. Less pumped oil means less burned oil which means fewer greenhouse gases.