this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2023
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The planet's average temperature hit 17.23 degrees Celsius on Thursday, surpassing the 17.18C record set on Tuesday and equalled on Wednesday.

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[–] electriccars@lemmy.world 138 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

I used to worry about this a lot, I still do but I used to too.

Joking aside, it's a shit show that us plebians can't really do anything about but I still try. I've driven a hybrid for the last 6 years, I have a smart thermostat to try to save energy, I try to eat less meat more often. I recycle a lot more than most. I even make my own bread and nut milks and many other things which is not only cheaper and healthier (and WAY more delicious) but requires less transport related greenhouse gas emissions than buying premade breads and nut milks. Nut milk is especially better than dairy milk in that matter.

Oh yeah! And yesterday I picked up 10 large trash bags of litter: yesterday picked up 10 large kitchen trash bags

[–] VaidenKelsier@lemmy.world 61 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Bro you're doing more than most of us, thank you.

But yeah, our carbon footprint is minuscule in comparison to corporate footprints. We need them to fucking play ball.

What's more profitable: Exceptional profits for 30 years until civilization collapses, or sustainable profits forever?

[–] BallsInTheShredder@lemmy.world 19 points 1 year ago (1 children)

All I could think about when reading this post is corporate footprints. It's great for us to all do our part, but sadly the corporations not doing their part is screwing everybody. We need more regulations on them, idc what product they're making or how much profit they'd like or even how many people whine about not receiving that product it needs to stop.

[–] ikiru@lemmy.ml 15 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Honestly, corporate footprints is all that needs to be thought about when thinking about climate change.

The shifting of blame to the individual or even putting it on the individual to "help" is avoiding the real issue. And even if individuals are contributing, which I acknowledge they are but at a much lower rate of impact, then probably the best way to change individual consumption/waste is once again by abolishing capitalism which guides the production of the material reality utilized to create such individual waste in the first place.

[–] DM_ME_SQUIRRELS@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Sure, but it's our fault too, at least in part - we're the one's buying the stuff that the corporations produce. Of course some of it is due to there not being any alternatives (for example decent public transport so you don't have to own a car) but some of it is also because we actively choose cheaper products, buy new things instead of second-hand and so on.

What we need (which we all seem to agree on) is more regulations so that corporations have to their part and then the individuals simply won't have the option to choose the more polluting product.

[–] grue@lemmy.world 18 points 1 year ago

Corporate footprints are done on our behalf, in order to manufacture the goods and services we buy.

The real problem is that "vote with your dollars" fundamentally doesn't work because human nature is selfish and short-sighted, so regulation is necessary.

[–] deaf_fish@lemm.ee 29 points 1 year ago

Amazing work! I would also like to note that the biggest contributors to the problem are corporations. Individuals couldn't out pollute corporations if they tried.

[–] SuperRyn@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago (3 children)

btw note that the carbon footprint of one person's lifetime is equiv to 1 second of worldwide factory emissions (source: kurzgesagt), so it's not a necessity to do some of the things you're doing, but i would recommend that everyone in the world do some farming, even if it's a small garden of radishes or smth, or tomatoes on a windowsill

also this is only tangentially related, but i still drink cow milk, because: -A it tastes good

-B I am allergic to all nut milks

-C soy milk sounds like crap, soy is already in basically everything (rip the few people who are allergic to it), so i wouldn't want to consume more of it

[–] threeduck@aussie.zone 14 points 1 year ago (2 children)

A: if we know cow milk is bad for the planet and bad for the animal, and we use "but I prefer it!" as an excuse, couldn't we apply that to everything? Sexual assault? "It feels good!". Theft? "I like having stuff!"

B: (in order of ease and taste) Oat milk, rice milk, flax milk, hemp milk

C: Soy milk... "sounds like crap"? We might be at the end of carnivore arguments. You know cow milk literally has faeces in it, right? The fact "soy is in everything" being used to not have it is also not logical. Water is in everything.

[–] t0e@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm not going to go point by point because I think it's not productive to act as if this kind of argument has only two sides. When we talk about subjects in a persuasive fashion, where we're trying to win someone over to our side, it frequently has the opposite effect, entrenching is into our already polarized views.

We need to concern ourselves with moral relativism to make appropriate decisions. In an ethical sense, I believe sexual assault of a human is at least an order of magnitude worse than milking a cow. But that opinion comes largely from the fact that I'm a human and I'm not a cow.

If we want to sway someone's opinion, I think we should focus less on absolutes and more on quantities. We should meet people where they are. Maybe instead of driving home all the disturbingly true reasons we should never milk or even breed cattle, we should use those same arguments to highlight the absurdly destructive impact of doing those things at the scale which we are.

If half of society has a burger and a milkshake once a month, there is a significant environmental impact on milking those cows and raising those cattle to be slaughtered, as well as a very real moral cost. There is also some emotional benefit to the human of consuming fats and proteins from those sources. And both positive and negative nutritional effects as well.

It's already difficult to compare costs and benefits from such wildly different categories when it's just one burger a month. Humans are emotional beings and even a well-reasoned argument may not trump the emotional feeling one gets from a hamburger and a shake.

But consider the changing of factors if those same people go from one beef product and one dairy product a month to one every other day. Or even more frequent. How much more land it takes, how much more suffering the livestock go through in conditions designed for maximum profit and minimum concern for moral costs. The additional methane production, the deforestation, the added risk of heart attacks. All the bad parts multiplied wholesale, while the good parts all experience diminishing returns.

If you take one of those semi-daily beef and dairy consumers, and give them a hard line, where any consumption of beef or dairy is unacceptable, is that going to generate a positive or a negative effect on the system as a whole? Some may be convinced to quit consuming, but I feel their difference will be swallowed by those who feel called out in such a way that they would rather consume even more out of principle than face the hard truth that their lifestyle is wrong. It's easy for humans to build walls of cognitive dissonance, where we know what we're doing is harmful, but we make excuses for ourselves to avoid facing that reality.

If you want the masses to face their collective reality, we need to meet people where they are. Maybe burgers and milkshakes will always be part of your life. But there are alternatives that can be a different part of a life rich in variety. If someone currently eats a burger every other day, maybe they can strive for once a week. And if that goes well, once a month. And then, once they have a greater familiarity with the culinary variety that's possible, they may start to forget to eat that meal entirely.

We should remember that we're all just people. We don't need to be on different sides. You don't need to be wrong and neither do I. We're just earthly passengers connecting electronically in a wide cosmos. Our lives are all so different and yet uncannily familiar. So we'll get more mileage out of sharing our experiences than prescribing them to others. Because if we feel we're being talked down to, we'll decide we've already picked a side. But if we're just sharing, then we're all on the same endless side. In that spirit, none of what I'm saying is meant to invalidate anything you've said. Only add to it.

And just to add, I don't mind if there's a bit of feces in my milk. It looks perfectly white, so I imagine it's in low enough quantity that it's not a health risk after pasteurization, and as far as I know, the quantity is also low enough that it doesn't effect taste. But I think cows should have good lives even at the expense of productivity, and milking should be a voluntary behavior, perhaps in exchange for appropriate compensation, rather than something that's forced on them. Just my two cents (plus about a buck fifty).

[–] giantshortfacedbear@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm not going to argue against anything you've said, I'm not going to try to fact check it, & I believe to be largely correct.

I also think its irrelevant.

In the next few years (couple of decades) we are going to see increased wildfire burning of the boreal forests in the global north which is going to release (what I believe is technically called) "a catastrophe fuck-ton" of gasses into the atmosphere. We've tipped over the tipping point.

[–] SuperRyn@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

About the wildfires, they aren't just caused by heatwaves, but also indiscriminate firefighting. If you stop fires in a forest over and over, the amount of flammable material keeps increasing due to new plants growing, and if there's a lot of flammable material, and the same amount of water as before, things are overall drier, and would also create a bigger fire should one ignite.

And no, I don't have a peer-reviewed study/source concerning this; I just used reasoning to construct this argument.

You’re on point. That’s why Reduce is the first of the three R’s. I was educated to the horrors of dairy farming a couple years ago and just stopped buying milk completely, switching to nut milk then finally oat milk. But I still eat cheese and yogurt. I stopped eating steak every other week but I still have one a few times a year. And since it’s so infrequent, I don’t mind buying the really nice cuts. So it became quality over quantity.

It doesn’t have to be a binary choice. You can still enjoy the tasty things. But a reduction in volume and frequency will still have a big impact if enough people do it.

[–] roze_sha@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)
[–] CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

No it does not.

It’s like saying municipal water has shit in it if it is treated water. Yeah it did once…. That’s why we have filtering and sterilizing technologies.

If milk had cow shit in it people would constantly be getting sick from it it.

That said, dairy farming is pretty horrific in many ways. It’s good to cut down on dairy consumption as much as is tolerable for each person.

[–] shottymcb@lemm.ee 5 points 1 year ago

It’s like saying municipal water has shit in it if it is treated water.

Water? Awful stuff, don't drink it. Fish fuck in it.

[–] SuperRyn@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

The poop in cow milk is referring to the bacteria in unpasteurized milk if I'm interpreting it correctly (or it could be waste from cells in the cow's blood, since cow milk starts out as cow blood iirc)

[–] Aux@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

It doesn't. Unless you live in US. US food is full of shit no matter what you eat, lol.

[–] Sightline@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

lemmy.ml/c/gardening

[–] netvor@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

btw note that the carbon footprint of one person’s lifetime is equiv to 1 second of worldwide factory emissions (source: kurzgesagt)

I love kurzgesagt but this comparison is.... it's like two abstractions multiplied.

[–] DrNyaaa@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago

What a chad you are