@rich@kolektiva.social
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

rich

@rich@kolektiva.social

I write books

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CosmicTrigger, to random
@CosmicTrigger@kolektiva.social avatar

Wut

rich,
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

@CosmicTrigger yeah, cringe.

Edit

LMAO, all the women are wearing denim. Like it's the uniform now. The denim Army is coming for you

beka_valentine, to random
@beka_valentine@kolektiva.social avatar

liberals love to justify war crimes by saying that they were uwu smolbeans who were just following orders and had no choice and now they're sad :(((

rich,
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

@beka_valentine I think that when liberals justify war crimes, it's often to protect their own egos. And their sense that they play for the good team.

Oh! I just noticed your handle! Can I be Trance Gemini? (She was my favourite)

rich,
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

@beka_valentine Good choice! That was a fun show though less enjoyable in retrospect after Sorbo became a vocal fundamentalist.

MikeDunnAuthor, to random
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar
rich,
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

@MikeDunnAuthor Modern man suffers from a poverty of the spirit. We have learned to fly through the air like birds; we have learned to swim in the seas like fish, but we have not learned to walk the earth as brothers and sisters. - MLK.

LeftistLawyer, (edited ) to climate
@LeftistLawyer@kolektiva.social avatar

Can someone please explain why, on a planet with 5 billion too many people and , declining birthrates are a problem?

I'm at a loss.

rich,
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

@LeftistLawyer I think we should be careful with the phrase "too many people." We're still well within the Earth's carrying capacity. I agree that a drop in population would be good as it would make the intelligent management of natural resources easier. That said, we want to avoid any associations with the "Thanos school of environmentalism" that the mainstream media drills into people's heads. (The one that says the only way to live sustainably is for a significant portion of the population to be eliminated) That kind of thinking has no basis in scientific fact.

rich,
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

@LiberalEd @LeftistLawyer we produce enough food for nearly 11 billion people with a population of nearly 8. (For reference, check the UN FAO statistical yearbook for pretty much any year in the 2010s)

With synergized systems, we can produce many times the energy that we do right now using only clean, renewable sources. Look at a study from MIT called the future of geothermal (2006). Look at the work of Mark Jacobson and his road maps to 100% renewables. Look at a study called the future of solar. And if you're still not convinced, nuclear power is actually a lot safer than most of us were led to believe. Elina Charatsidou (who has a Msc in nuclear physics) has some great talks on the subject.

Which is not to say that anything I suggest here is THE answer. But we have options for living sustainably on this planet. What we need is the political will to begin implementing those options at a wide scale.

On top of that it turns out that population growth naturally diminishes as people become more educated and life opportunities expand. If we can maintain a good quality of life for people, the population will go down on its own without any kind of direct intervention from governments.

So, let's steer well clear of eco-fascism.

The problem isn't population. The problem is the unequitable distribution of the world's resources imposed by the capitalist system.

rich,
@rich@kolektiva.social avatar

@LeftistLawyer because capitalism is an inherently wasteful and inefficient system that simply consumes resources with no regard for future sustainability. The problem isn't the number of people on the planet. It's the economic system by which our products are produced.

LeftistLawyer, to random
@LeftistLawyer@kolektiva.social avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • rich,
    @rich@kolektiva.social avatar

    @LeftistLawyer One thing that I find helpful is just asking why someone believes their nonsense over and over.

    rich,
    @rich@kolektiva.social avatar

    @LeftistLawyer I usually do it in one-on-one settings. And I think that has a different effect because there's no audience. My one friend would just spout off a bunch of anti-trans nonsense. And every time I asked him why he believed that, it would take about 5 minutes for his entire argument to fall apart. That said, it did not change his mind. So, maybe you're right.

    rich, to random
    @rich@kolektiva.social avatar

    I find it hard to classify Peter Coffin politically. On the one hand, I think their critiques of capitalism are spot on. But they'll be chugging along, making a cogent point, when all of a sudden, they say something that is not only wrong but sounds like corporate propaganda.

    Here's their documentary on #overpopulation and #degrowth

    https://youtu.be/OW8vkUY93i8

    At one point, in this very long documentary, they say, that renewables do not provide consistent energy, and therefore, if we were to rely on them as our only source of power, people would die. (It's at about 90 minutes)

    But here's the thing...That's wrong.

    To the best of my knowledge, that's not true. When I was developing my own political outlook about ten years ago, I read dozens of studies which indicate that a 100% renewable energy infrastructure (across all industries) would not only meet but exceed global energy demand.

    Here's one

    http://energywatchgroup.org/wp-content/uploads/EWG_LUT_100RE_All_Sectors_Global_Report_2019.pdf

    Here's another

    https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9837910

    Here's a meta-analysis of 180 peer-reviewed papers, most of which insist that it is both technologically and economically feasible to meet global energy demand with 100% renewables.

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0360544219304967?via%3Dihub

    There are dissenting opinions, yes. I would be remiss if I didn't mention them. But if you look deeper, you'll find that a lot of these dissenters have ties to other energy industries.

    And I'm not suggesting that we simply turn off all the nuclear plants tomorrow.

    This is not some anti nuclear energy rant. I think there's a lot of potential in #thorium technology. At least as an interim power source. Possibly as a long-term option.

    https://youtu.be/tHO1ebNxhVI

    But any nuclear technology inevitably generates radioactive waste, which can be devastating if not stored properly.

    Renewables will generate waste too. Just about every human endeavour does. But that waste is far more manageable.

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0360544219304967?via%3Dihub

    So if 100% #renewables is feasible (and the evidence suggests that it is), we should keep that option on the table and develop synergistic strategies. Now, what does that mean? Well, when most people think of renewables, they think wind and solar. And those would definitely be part of the equation. But people rarely mention the other options: wave, tidal, hydro and geothermal. The latter offers enormous energy potential.

    A synergistic strategy means that you use all of these options together and you tailor the energy grid for each geographic region. You don't make solar panels your primary method of energy generation in the Yukon (which gets very little sunlight in the winter months). But in Arizona? That's a great place for solar.

    Now, of course, there are obstacles. I'm not trying to make this sound like we can just snap our fingers and make clean energy infrastructure. But the key here is that our best scientific minds agree that these obstacles are surmountable.

    Throughout the video, Peter equates "reducing consumption" with "killing poor/disabled people." The argument they make pretty much verbatim goes like this.

    Humans need energy to survive. So, if we reduce energy consumption, people are going to die.

    Except no one is advocating for that. Maybe Jason Hickel is. I haven't read his book. (He wrote Less is More). And Peter did include some cringy quotes from Hickel.

    But when serious people talk about a reduction in consumption, we're not talking about leaving poor people to die.

    Overconsumption is caused by the inefficiencies that are baked into #capitalism. Capitalism is an engine for turning natural resources into crap that sits in a landfill. Why? Because of cost efficiency and profit maximization.

    Cost efficiency is not true efficiency. Real efficiency is getting the most productive output for the least energy input. Cost efficiency is making the most profit for the least cost. These two things are not the same.

    Take phones, for instance. Phones could be modular and durable. In other words, if a single part breaks down - like one chip on the circuit board - the one part is repaired or replaced while the rest of the phone remains untouched. But creating phones like that costs more. And reduces repeat purchases.

    Apple, Samsung and Motorola go out of the way to squash the repair market. They want to make it easiest to just replace the entire phone when a single part breaks down. That's why phones no longer have removeable batteries. Because if you have to pay for a new battery (which will be harder to find if your phone is a few years old) and for the maintenance of taking the phone apart and installing the new battery, you'll probably just buy a new phone.

    That's what maximizes Apple's profits. Companies have to generate cyclical consumption to stay in business. That's the overconsumption we're talking about. Not basic living essentials like water and power and food.

    Speaking of living essentials, let's look at housing. In 2019 - the last time I checked - the US Census Bureau reported 545 000 homeless Americans. Quite a bit, right?

    In the same year, the Department of Housing and Urban Development reported 13 million permanently unoccupied houses. Permanently unoccupied means nobody lives in them. They aren't being used as somebody's summer home. They are literally just sitting there untouched, functioning solely as an asset on someone's balance sheet.

    That's the overconsumption we're talking about. Not only do we have way more houses than we actually need, the people who do need them can't live in them.

    Why are we, as a society, making so many unused houses? Because that's how developers make a profit! Profit is the problem.

    Profit = overconsumption.

    That's what we're talking about: harvesting natural resources that go into unused products, many of which find their way into landfills. Throwing out perfectly usable products that could repaired. Tossing used parts into landfills even though their components (gold, copper, cobalt, tin) are still perfectly usable and could be extracted.

    No serious person is talking about "getting back to nature" or "shutting off the power and going primitive" or "leaving disabled people to die."

    Anyone who advocates the latter is someone you should absolutely stop listening to.

    #NLRBE #NaturalLaw #ResourceBasedEconomy

    rich,
    @rich@kolektiva.social avatar

    @ophiocephalic @quietmarc @DoomsdaysCW Yeah, I suspect you're right. I find that most of left tube has either stopped making videos (I used to make them but don't anymore) Or has mutated into something that really can't be called left wing anymore.

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