Jason2357

joined 1 year ago
[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

[ ] Climate change isn't real. [ ] Climate change is part of a natural cycle and not related to humans. [x] Climate change is caused by humans, but we can't do anything about it for whatever reasons. Note how all 3 lead to the same actual behaviour, and that benefits the very same people, but the first one works on conservatives and the third one works on liberals. You've fallen for the same gambit. There's a big-ass sliding scale between "fuck it" and "techno utopia" both on climate mitigation and adaptation. The next 100 years are going to be hard, yeah, but those 3 propoganda tacts are designed to just make some rich twits richer before we all hit the wall.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 2 points 10 months ago (3 children)

This nihilist doomer shit is both highly speculative, and just as bad as denialism for why we can't have nice things. In fact, they are just 2 stages of the exact same mentality. It's not real, it's not human caused, and we can't do anything about it anyway. All the same picture; all the same motivation.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 5 points 10 months ago

And they use a character who's entire fictional persona is making fun of them. It's conservatives agreeing with Steven Colbert all over again.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 8 points 10 months ago (1 children)

"We're not middle and lower class, we're all working class"

Most home owners, if they cash out their home, and either rent or downsize, will still absolutely need to work to eat, and if they don't they will find themselves homeless before long.

For that small portion that could actually live on the equity from downsizing their housing, yeah, they are upper class, but there are a lot fewer of those than you would think. For a single person, a million in equity (50k a year) might get you by, but not luxuriously and not safely, and most houses are owned by couples though (so cut that in half), and many have dependents.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 8 points 10 months ago

She dug her heels in because she's jockying to move up to the provincial legislature. Getting fired is part of building her reputation as a conservative culture warrior. The board really did not want to fire her.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 3 points 10 months ago

The carbon tax is currently 14.31cents per litre, that's about 10%. It's an incentive. To fully wipe out that cost, you don't need to buy an EV, you could drive 10% less, or buy an ICE vehicle that is 10% more efficient (or some combination). That's very easy to do in a country where most of us drive large vehicles, and make too many un-combined trips. Drop one trip in 10, or combine it with one of the other 9 and you get to spend your rebate money on beer instead of gasoline.

Subsidies and special taxes are super in-efficient. Besides requiring a whole slew of bureaucracy to administer it, it never applies to everything fairly. That tax you suggest on new ICE vehicles doesn't dissuade anyone from parking their jacked up f150 one day a week, and it doesn't reward the person who buys a used car for their commute instead of a used SUV. All those little decisions get incentivized, and they allow people to make their own decisions about how to pollute less, instead of doing the 1 thing some government has decided to be the official, subsidized solution.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 4 points 10 months ago (2 children)

We don't generally build houses of concrete in Canada. Almost entirely stick framed with lumber.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 2 points 10 months ago

That list shows why the carbon taxes will be the target. Those first 5 account for basically all of the increased cost of living, but they are HARD problems. Not one of those presents a simple policy change that could even make a meaningful dent, and no one agrees on even the general approach governments could take to chip away at those.

However, for the last one, politicians can promise to scrap it or carve it up like a thanksgiving turkey and, despite that having almost no effect on the overall cost of living for the average Canadian, it seems like an easy solution.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 3 points 10 months ago

I think you mean the advent of car culture.

Our current system relies on the economic externality of relying on private vehicles and private transportation on local infrastructure to artificially lower the transportation costs for grocery logistics. It's much cheaper to run an 18-wheeler to a large grocery store on the edge of suburbia than running box trucks all over town. It doesn't actually lower food costs, because people pay a large fraction of their income to that private transportation so that they can access that super-grocer, and then the grocer seems to jack up the price of food anyway.

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 5 points 10 months ago

They also like to pretend they care about balanced budgets and monetary supply. Guess what? Taxes both balance the budget AND they evaporate money from circulation, reducing actual inflation. They ignore that because taxes are the ONLY lever that is progressive; where we can spread the pain equitably, asking the wealthy individuals and corporations to pay the largest share. That's a terrible idea /s

[–] Jason2357@lemmy.ca 6 points 11 months ago

My job getting a new CEO? Getting a new useless figurehead is supposed to scare me? Why? Youtube is going to block me? Why should I care? They either moderate hateful content, or they lose me and a great many others -voluntarily.

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