• possibly a cat@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    This plea to business-as-usual is the real call for omnicide in the discussion. This is exactly what I was referring to by projection. We both accept the premise that this path is not sustainable - but I am the only one calling for us to hit the breaks before impact, and you are the one attacking me because it invalidates your narrative that we should do nothing.

    To answer your question I have largely given up on activism in recent years because it is too late to save most things - like I said, we needed certain changes, but we failed to enact them. However, the equation has not changed in terms of the problem or the solution. Yet we are still accelerating further and further from the solution.

    But I still do what I asked of others: I reduce my footprint and encourage others to do the same, make lifestyle choices that are in line with my morals of compassion and communal welfare, build local dual power, support workers’ rights and economic equality initiatives, support my community, make myself available as a confidante for antinatalist-oriented conversations, study climate and agricultural science, cultivate a variety of plants to restore the soil health where I live, and teach others to grow/harvest/forage. I do my small part in reducing local overshoot. And although what I do has a very small effect, it would be a very significant effect if more people cared for each other and practiced a similar lifestyle.

    There are other ways to pursue degrowth, including running for office and working towards things like ending harmful subsidies, but I personally am too burnt out to continue on in that capacity.

    Capitalism’s death toll in the next 50 years (likely decades sooner) is going to increase by billions. And we know it, those who study this can see it as clear as day. I understand that not everything is perfect, but the science is pretty clear that capitalism is killing us. Dying for Funko Pops - and pretending it’s the fault of the people trying to point it out!

    • argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      So, you propose that I live in a state of perpetual nausea from eating nothing but horrid-tasting, questionably-nutritious, plant-based “food” instead of actual food, and then die in the apocalypse anyway? No thanks. Civilization is done for, living in it is miserable enough already, and I am not interested in sacrificing what few shreds of happiness remain in order to accomplish basically nothing.

      The only way to avert the coming disaster is decisive, mandatory action from the top of society on down, and that obviously isn’t going to happen, so the best I can realistically hope for is to live it up and be dead before it gets really ugly.

      But I still do what I asked of others: I reduce my footprint

      Not as much as you could. You still live in shelter, use electricity, exhale carbon, eat carbon-absorbing plants, and excrete methane. Humanity’s very existence is driving global warming. There is no escape.

      support workers’ rights

      running for office

      working towards things like ending harmful subsidies

      None of these things are going to happen. The rich will string you up by the toenails before they let you derail their gravy train, and your fellow proles will cheer as they do it. That’s why we’re doomed: powerful people are enforcing our doom, and everyone else worships them.

      • possibly a cat@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        You should realize that you’re preaching to the choir. If you agree with my outlook on collapse, then why did you pop up to attack me? If you realize what is coming then you realize that our trajectory is the omnicide. Again, I can only imagine that you feel obligated to attack the countercultural in order to relieve discomfort from condoning the mainstream through projection. This whole conversation is a bit absurd to be honest.

        You do you, and I’ll do me. I know I’m not making significant change. At best I might save a cactus species for another few decades - hardly a win in the big picture. But I feel fine about my life and that’s all I ask for. I hope you feel the same about yours.