Said the one who always dodge any unconfortable question...
Said the one who always dodge any unconfortable question...
fully agree AndresThe funny thing about this "why should we be the first" debate
Just after my little rant here I see in the news that France and Germany treathen to cancel the talks for a trade deal with Brazil.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑23 Aug 2019, 12:39In my opinion countries who screw up the environment must be sanctioned, ór must be given a new perspective if they stop it. Same as countries who violate human rights or who have a violent regime. Just don't do business with these countries. Brazils apparent approach to the Amazon forest as a leading example, this is not an internal affair only as the government there believes.
living a lavish life with no regard to the future.
"we" are pushing to plant millions of new trees, the only problem is that the livestock industry is taking trees down faster then anybody can plant them (at a rate of around 7000-8000 square kilometres of rainforest a year).strad wrote: ↑23 Aug 2019, 19:18living a lavish life with no regard to the future.
You know like Al Gore flying around the world on his private G2B jet or Gov. Inslee flying all over the country to campaign. All the while preaching to us.
I have often wondered why all you that want to get rid of ICE cars and all sorts of other costly changes aren't pushing just as hard to plant millions of trees. You know those things that take the CO2 out and convert it to Oxygen.
So what do you want them to do? Hold all their rallies via skype? Spend their limited campaign funds on a voluntary climate tax while their opponents don't, thus handing them an advantage? Or maybe they do realize that sometimes you have to make offers to get things done. Necessity, not lavishness.strad wrote: ↑23 Aug 2019, 19:18living a lavish life with no regard to the future.
You know like Al Gore flying around the world on his private G2B jet or Gov. Inslee flying all over the country to campaign. All the while preaching to us.
I have often wondered why all you that want to get rid of ICE cars and all sorts of other costly changes aren't pushing just as hard to plant millions of trees. You know those things that take the CO2 out and convert it to Oxygen.
Brazil is burning millions of trees, putting hundreds of millions of tonnes of CO2 in to the atmosphere. So first you have to stop that. Then you need to persuade farmers to get rid of their cattle / etc and use the land to grow trees. The US doesn't want to lose its cars - I'm betting it won't want to lose its steaks and burgers either. Or is sequestering CO2 something that others should do? You see, this whole thing will affect everyone, one way or another. The "American way of life" will need to change and won't be available to developing countries. Developing countries look at the US (and others) and say "why should we carry the burden of this problem so you can carry on living your way of life?".strad wrote: ↑23 Aug 2019, 19:18living a lavish life with no regard to the future.
You know like Al Gore flying around the world on his private G2B jet or Gov. Inslee flying all over the country to campaign. All the while preaching to us.
I have often wondered why all you that want to get rid of ICE cars and all sorts of other costly changes aren't pushing just as hard to plant millions of trees. You know those things that take the CO2 out and convert it to Oxygen.
Or like that annoying kid who now travels to the US on a racing yacht in order to continue being a PR posterchild for CC hysteria only to have the crew that will sail the boat back to europe fly in to the US and the crew that is currently sailing with her to fly back to europe causing way more emissions than her just taking a normal flightstrad wrote: ↑23 Aug 2019, 19:18living a lavish life with no regard to the future.
You know like Al Gore flying around the world on his private G2B jet or Gov. Inslee flying all over the country to campaign. All the while preaching to us.
I have often wondered why all you that want to get rid of ICE cars and all sorts of other costly changes aren't pushing just as hard to plant millions of trees. You know those things that take the CO2 out and convert it to Oxygen.
I've seen a documentary which (rightfully) criticised various aspects of EVs only to then drift to "essentially we have to get rid of individual transport (car ownership) in favor of public transport and car sharing" - yea ... sureTommy Cookers wrote: ↑22 Aug 2019, 12:34today's news ....
the UK Parliamentary Select Committee says we must give up our cars, to keep our CO2 emissions on target from 2023
ie ban hydrocarbon-only and hybrid cars from 2035 or earlier and ....
ban most personal ownership of all car types (even electric) to reduce emissions from car production
What are your preferred choices of news and opinion?
https://www.freetheslaves.net/our-model ... gK3efD_BwEThere are tens of millions of people trapped in various forms of slavery throughout the world today. Researchers estimate that 40 million are enslaved worldwide, generating $150 billion each year in illicit profits for traffickers.
Labor Slavery. About 50 percent toil in forced labor slavery in industries where manual labor is needed—such as farming, ranching, logging, mining, fishing, and brick making—and in service industries working as dish washers, janitors, gardeners, and maids.
Sex Slavery. About 12.5 percent are trapped in forced prostitution sex slavery.
Forced Marriage Slavery. About 37.5 percent are trapped in forced marriages.
Child Slavery. About 25 percent of today’s slaves are children.
Slavery today is a hidden crime, making it harder for the public to see and for those in slavery to call out for help.
And in the US or EU you could just as well discriminate between demographics such as those driving gas-guzzlers and those driving sparks. Or vegans versus carnivores. You can always find ways to spin statistics in your favor.RZS10 wrote: ↑23 Aug 2019, 19:59Looking at CO2/emissions per capita is extremely skewed, it makes the worst culprits look not as bad in comparison because a large percentage of their population lives in rural areas in 'simple' conditions whilst their industry and urban areas almost make up for it.
It's as silly as arguing with plastics in oceans in order to ban one time use plastics in europe or america when a majority comes from asian or african trash rivers where people seem to think that those are garbage disposals with an extremely dumb "Out of sight, out of mind" mentality ...