Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amYeah, I didn't exactly think things through. If we truly are at a stage we're going 100% carbon neutral overnight won't even offer much by way of mitigation my plan is obviously terrible. The idea of genocide basically spun off the idea that doing something big now is preferable to a current slow rate of change that probably won't have a large enough effect to avoid megadeaths in the future.
Right. I get the notion that you want to fix stuff - my generation did, too - but going all HULK SMASH! is not going to work.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amThe issue is that a trade doesn't work.
Neither does mass murder but that didn't stop you suggesting it.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amEven if we could get you an 80% less polluting vehicle at a reasonable price, we can't do that for everybody.
I made it quite clear that it doesn't have to be another vehicle - if I had a safe means to bike to work I could, at least a good part of the year. I already have a bike, and I'm healthy enough to do it. Except winter is an issue... hey, I'm open to relocation. Or work-from-home and maybe use a taxi or uber or something when I need to go somewhere. I have
already lived like that - for the fifteen years I lived in Chicago I didn't own a car, didn't drive one, didn't want one.
No, we can't do it for everyone. Murdering everyone isn't a solution, either.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amThe carbon footprint needed to build the factories alone, not to mention the vehicles themselves, would make it untenable as a quick solution.
The carbon footprint for murdering 10 or 12 nations is untenable, too.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amRather than coercing people and getting into situations that require bullets to enforce, try giving people a REASON to go along with your plan. We already had a program in 2009 with the aim of getting people to ditch old, inefficient cars and purchase newer, more efficient models called the
Car Allowance Rebate System, which, while not perfect, was a good first attempt in that direction. Participants got a voucher of $3000-45000 towards purchase of another vehicle, which is enough to be of substantial help, especially if you allow not just the purchase of completely new vehicles but qualifying used ones as well.
Yes, we have a similar thing here too and you know what, it hurts the poor. If you're poor and don't own a car, you basically can't find a car for less than that trade in value unless you get lucky. Most truly impoverished people can't afford a $5,000 vehicle and thus don't get one at all. So you propose a solution that will steal cars from people as well, but since it doesn't take your car you feel that it's fine. I disagree.
Maybe car ownership is much more common here than where you are. No, a trade-a-vehicle-for-something-else scheme isn't going to benefit those with no car - that's why a car is an asset, it has value. That objection is ridiculous - a buy-back scheme for diamond rings "hurts" people who don't own diamond rings. No, it doesn't. It doesn't take anything from people who don't own a particular object. They don't lose anything.
Nations where vehicle ownership among the poor is rare often have jitneys or share taxis to fill that gap. First world nations have taxis and ride share services like Uber. If that would actually work out for me I'd go for it, because saving the expense of owning, maintaining, and insuring a car while still being able to get around would be a net benefit for me.
You, on the other hand, advocate simply taking without compensation and murder.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amThere is NO guarantee it is even possible for us to get off this planet in any meaningful way. So there's no guarantee your sacrifice will have any meaning whatsoever.
There's nothing physically stopping us from diverting resources into space stations and launch platforms. There are a host of technical issues with long term space habitation (the very long term effects of low/no gravity on humans especially human reproduction, the suitability of space rocks as a substrate for growing crops, the radiation issue, etc.) but none feel as if they should be insurmountable with actual resources poured into working on the idea.
That's what you "feel". How warm and fuzzy for you. That's not science and it's not technology. It's a pipe dream.
"Diverting resources" does not automatically make a self-sufficient colony in space.
It's all very well to build dream castles in the clouds but unless there is a real foundation underneath they all fall down.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amI didn't say "Nazi Germany", I said the "Axis Powers", all of which were fine with mass murder to further their polices, give their own people resources and "living space", or for any other reason said not-them people were inconvenient. Rather like you're advocating.
The living space is literally unlimited; conditionally false but objectively true for an infinite universe. That's a difference between stealing land from others
A bare, airless rock in space is not "living space". There is one and only one rock in space that can be said to have living space in this solar system and that's the one you're standing on. There is no guarantee we can make any other rock in this system liveable.\
Sure, I'd love to see independent space colonies but reality is a motherfucker. We don't actually know if that is possible.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amIs that not an issue of current and past policy, both personal and political, which you've had more of a chance to influence than I have? I don't know your exact age, but based on things you've said you were of voting age in the 80's and 90's when it was easy to see these issue coming, did you vote against these changes and support green initiatives when we had the chance to stop them?
Sure did - for all the good it did.
You are mistaking lack of desired results for lack of effort. It's like prosecuting someone for murder because two hours of CPR didn't revive the heart attack victim.
Hell, it's not like I've stopped trying, either - just yesterday instead of throwing 70+ kilos of crap out I took it for recycling. Especially for aluminium, the recycling footprint is smaller than the refining from virgin ore. I replaced the weather-stripping on my new apartment at my own expense to reduce the energy costs of heating it in the winter. And so on.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amRegardless of your answer I never had that choice.
Oh, like having your best efforts fail is such a fucking good time, right?
Wa-wa-wa - my generation said the
exact same thing, blaming our parents for the "hell" our life was. Fact is, you're a First Worlder, too. Tough shit. When my parents were your age WWII was raging and there was no guarantee how that would turn out. It's that reality thing again - you have to play the hand you're dealt, fair or unfair, because there isn't any hand to play.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amI have very little sympathy for your generation and the future you've stolen from me. I'm sorry for that, but I didn't cause this mess.
No, but you're proposing making it a hell of a lot worse.
And there's that collective guilt thing again - wa-wa-wa - your generation is so mean! You all conspired against me! I'm going to hurt you all back! Stop acting like a toddler.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amThose 238 people would be utterly and completely dependent on shipment from Earth to survive. That's not colonization. That's not a start. That's basically what we have in McMurdo Base in Antarctica and there's no pretensions that that is in any way self-supporting or a self-sustaining coloniy.
But it could be if we wanted and/or needed it to be. Obviously it would support fewer people, but if the budget was that massive and the mandate was get 100 people living on the moon sustainably I believe that we would have done so by now with room to spare. I understand that you may think otherwise.
No, it couldn't. Just
wanting hard enough won't make it work. It won't work any more than clicking your heels three times and saying "There's no place like home" is going to take you to Kansas.
Space is
hard. It's also far more hazardous than any environment on Earth other than, say, trying to swim in lava. We can't "want" McMurdo base into being self-sufficient at this point, even with free air and gravity and potentially a source of water via melting ice much less make anything in space self-sufficient.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00am[The carbon footprint of space launches, even massively upscaled is literally a drop in the bucket and costs would come down with an economy of scale and increased competition to get costs down. We could downrate safety standards to an 80% launch success rate if we grew properly desperate if the cost was a huge issue.
Blowing up 20% of the highly-trained people you need to make anything in space work is not exactly getting the job done.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amYou might not care about your life, but I very much care about mine. I want to stay alive. I want food and shelter. These are not extravagant desires. You are talking about depriving me, and billions of other people of that at a minimum, if not actually taking our lives. You are a monster.
I'd love to live forever but we're all going to die and outside of a handful of lives we won't be missed.
I want as much life as I can get, and I don't give a fuck if I'd be "missed" or not - I want to be here. You're sacrificing the good in search of the perfect, which is stupid because you'll never get that perfect and you'll meanwhile miss out on the good.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amYour nation, by its pollution and policy, has already killed, maimed, and doomed more people than I'm suggesting killing and you seem fine with it because you live there.
But you ignore China, which is currently doing more to kill the planet than anyone else.
And there's that collective guilt thing again, which is almost as bad a religion for causing death and misery. Or, another word for it: bigotry. You were born into X group so you need to suffer for it regardless of your own personal actions. Wow, you're a mass-murdering bigot, why the hell should anyone listen to you?
No, I'm not fine with what bad things my country has done but there you go again - I was born here so I must be guilty. And I
can not leave - no other country on the planet is interested in taking me. So... you're guilty if you don't move somewhere else, but we won't let you move somewhere else! bwa-ha-HA!
Rather like the droves of people fleeing war in the Middle East are bad for "starting" the war, bad for not staying home and fighting to end the war, bad for trying to go elsewhere where war isn't happening - basically, they're intrinsicly bad and deserve whatever horrible fate Europe helps facilitate for them, right?

Likewise, Americans are bad, they're bad if they stay there, and we won't let them go anywhere else so they deserve for us to advocate murdering them all, right?
I know it sucks Broomstick, but some percentage of that butcher's bill is on all of us. We're not innocent so why should the punishment spare us?
If you kill everyone there will be no one left to fix anything, and leave the planet even worse off than it is.
I reject your notion of inherited guilt and collective guilt - it's nothing more than Christian original sin with a new coat of paint. We are NOT all equally guilty.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amI'm sick of people denying reality and facts.
T3h US is t3h special. The solutions that work for the rest of t3h west can't work here. Muh liberty trumps all social contracts cuz consititution!
No, I'm taking about your ridiculous fan-boy wanking about space colonies. It's bullshit at this point, and might well always be bullshit. "Space will save us!" is unproven and little more than click-your-heels-and-think-of-home. Not to mention your genocide scheme, as pointed out,
will eliminate all the nations with space travel technology. Your "solution" actually negates your "solution". If you kill off those high-tech players what makes you think that those remaining will have the resources, knowledge, or even desire to try to get into space?
It's not about "America is special", it's about China and Russia and India being the only other space-players around and your plan to murder greenhouse gas producers takes them all off the table.
It's an unrealistic view of how feasible getting to space is.
Grow the fuck up. Stop making wishes and come up with a real plan that doesn't involve (literal) pie in the sky fantasies or murdering half the planet. Or at least crack a textbook on real science.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amI did what I could. Unfortunately, my candidate lost the election, as usually happens. Failure is not the same thing as lack of trying to make a difference, nor is it the same thing as inaction.
If the rest of the world really wanted to they could isolate the US - stop all trade both ways, as a start. But nobody really wants to do that, do they? Or at least most nations don't.
We very likely fear that it would lead to a violent reaction from the US. If we tried that do you honestly believe that it wouldn't end in nuclear war?
Do you think YOUR solution wouldn't?
Truth is, the American Hegemony is fading. Probably not fast enough for you, but it is. Our time as a superpower is winding down. You'll be worrying about China (and possibly others) before you hit middle age.
Jub wrote: 2019-01-12 02:00amWhat if we can't get there.
Then we all die anyway.
Failing to leave Earth is an unavoidable extinction event. Do you deny this as fact?
Whether we leave Earth or not our species will inevitably go extinct. Judging by other hominid species, we'll get
maybe a million years at most, perhaps as few as half that. Either we all die, or we all evolve into something else. All species end just as all individuals end. So... what can we do to make our time as good as possible?