It’s great to say these things and to hear someone say it. But also I wonder what the expectation is when you tell this to a fossil fuel company. Do you expect the CEOs to make a moral faceturn and close down their company entirely? Because that is in the end what we need. For fossil fuels not to go down, not for some trees to be planted to make up for carbon emissions, not a tax, but for them to literally not exist. And I don’t see how this will work with a free market and some guilty conscience. How this would work without a ruling and strong governments closing them down entirely.
Carbon tax is actually the best way to gradually get rid of fossil fuels without setting the whole economy on fire. That is why it is resisted and lobbied against far more than any other measure, such as electric car subsidies and why it probably will never happen.
The expectation is for other people (voters) to hear these things, realize that there are some (and can potentially be more) politicians who will do what is in their best interest, and change their voting patterns.
Many people do not believe things can change for the better because they have literally not seen anything in society change for the better in their entire lives.
The last time I saw something actually change for the better in a major way was the legalization of gay marriage. Since then it’s been nothing but manufacturing consent to wars, predatory tax laws that favor the rich, dismantling of protections against monopolies, dismantling of consumer protection laws, stagnant wages, failing to meet or entirely dismissing climate change goals, rolling back reproductive rights 50 years, etc. We’ve recently seen Biden’s Dept of Labor fight back a little bit against the economic stuff, but we’ve been backsliding since Reagan - not that we were really on the up-and-up before. And as for the other stuff, it doesn’t look good.
Voter apathy is a big issue because, even though voting is likely not sufficient for significant societal change, it is necessary for it to occur.
It’s great to say these things and to hear someone say it. But also I wonder what the expectation is when you tell this to a fossil fuel company. Do you expect the CEOs to make a moral faceturn and close down their company entirely? Because that is in the end what we need. For fossil fuels not to go down, not for some trees to be planted to make up for carbon emissions, not a tax, but for them to literally not exist. And I don’t see how this will work with a free market and some guilty conscience. How this would work without a ruling and strong governments closing them down entirely.
Carbon tax is actually the best way to gradually get rid of fossil fuels without setting the whole economy on fire. That is why it is resisted and lobbied against far more than any other measure, such as electric car subsidies and why it probably will never happen.
Don’t try and tell the cpc that… along with a frightening amount of Canadians.
The expectation is for other people (voters) to hear these things, realize that there are some (and can potentially be more) politicians who will do what is in their best interest, and change their voting patterns.
Many people do not believe things can change for the better because they have literally not seen anything in society change for the better in their entire lives.
The last time I saw something actually change for the better in a major way was the legalization of gay marriage. Since then it’s been nothing but manufacturing consent to wars, predatory tax laws that favor the rich, dismantling of protections against monopolies, dismantling of consumer protection laws, stagnant wages, failing to meet or entirely dismissing climate change goals, rolling back reproductive rights 50 years, etc. We’ve recently seen Biden’s Dept of Labor fight back a little bit against the economic stuff, but we’ve been backsliding since Reagan - not that we were really on the up-and-up before. And as for the other stuff, it doesn’t look good.
Voter apathy is a big issue because, even though voting is likely not sufficient for significant societal change, it is necessary for it to occur.