I used to but now I do not anymore.

  • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    Hey you show me the meaningful impact, and I’m all for it. For example the reduction of single use plastics in communities near coasts and waterways. It measurably reduces coastal waste. Great, let’s do it and the consumer can help.

    Anything that has no measurable impact is just performative green guilting.

    I just won’t be pressured into carrying the guilt of industry I don’t even profit from while I’m soaping my balls.

    • 5ymm3trY@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 months ago

      That is not the point I was trying to make. As I said, it is not the end of the world just because someone leaves the shower on for a few seconds longer than necessary and there are obviously way more important topics we need to address.

      To be honest when I saw the question I haven’t thought about climate at all. I turn it off for as long as I can remember and was curious how others are doing it. But everytime something comes up that has to do with saving energy/ressources there are people saying: I don’t change because my personal impact doesn’t matter. To exaggerate my point one person changing one tiny thing of course doesn’t make a difference, but if 8 billion people change 10 tiny things it can have an impact. At some point we have to start making a change.

      However, I totally get your point about the industry polluting our planet even though they knew better decades ago. And now everyone has to suffer from their mistakes or rather greed.

      • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        It’s more that yes, of every person on earth turned the water off while soaping, religiously, it STILL wouldn’t even be a drop in the bucket.

        I acknowledge that community improvement requires everyone to chip in in ways that aren’t immediately tangible.

        Unfortunately the magnitude of industrial use and loss is so vast that residental budgeting on this topic doesn’t move the needle.

        That doesn’t mean residential changes aren’t ever possible.

        For example improved insulation and heating and cooling tech can meaningfully reduce grid spike demand.

        Flattening demand into a more consistent, distributed curve means we can transition to green energy sources with greater confidence, and decommission coal and gas power more successfully.

        So that’s a topic I’m all for making changes on, and I have. (Updated south facing windows, with facing window awnings, plus updated attic insulation and a mini split heat pump)

        My home is more comfortable, more resilient and more aligned with future community goals.

        So it isn’t that I’m not willing to try (and spend) to do my part. It’s that I’m very critical of green guilting to shift blame.

        • 5ymm3trY@discuss.tchncs.de
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          4 months ago

          I couldn’t agree more.

          And I can only reiterate, with my initial comment I was not attacking you personally or trying to guilt you into doing something. I also don’t like when people do that. In fact, it wasn’t even that much about saving water in the shower. It is just this blocking attitude of: I don’t do it, others should start first without even thinking about it, that you can often read in these threads which bugged me at first.

          By your comments you showed that you actually thought about it and came to the conclusion that the impact is little and there are more important topics you want to address, which is a totally fair point.

          • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            It’s no worries man. We had an on topic discussion , just seemingly from two sides of the table, but I think we’re pretty aligned. (As these things usually go).

            I think Lemmy is too cautious or something. You talked about your position without attacking me, and you sure shouldn’t have to apologize for that. If anyone here can’t handle that, they should turn their AOL internet CD in and be done with it.