Why more confidence?I have more confidence in their ability to turn it around faster than Western countries. Apparently they tend to underpromise and overshoot on declared reduction-targets, unlike the west. — ChatteringMonkey
Capitalism has made few far more richer than others, but it also has improved our prosperity far more than central planning of socialism ever did. — ssu
It means that they changed their socialism to controlled capitalism, basically fascism, and then they got their take off. The Great Leap or the Cultural Revolution didn't bring more prosperity and economic growth. Even India got it's rapid growth when it left socialist programs out.So the fact that China's kicking our ass in growth means what exactly? — Xtrix
And it also has the ability to decrease it's emissions, which it actually has. And likely can take the example from some states that have been more successful than others. The frightening aspect is WHEN China get more and more wealthier. There's a lot of more potential demand both in China and India than there is in the US, hence those countries are crucial here. — ssu
Again, the most important issue is to deal where the growth is. Not where positive reductions are taking place, even if continuing that trend is important. — ssu
Why more confidence? — ssu
When we do muster the political will, the standard response is that it isn't enough. We sideline positive news. Our critical media is showing us where we fail. In China that critical media isn't tolerated. Needless to say, for example the smog problem is far more difficult in China than in let's say West European large cities or even New York. London doesn't have the famous smog as it had earlier. There is pervasive bias that shows in the ecological reporting from a totalitarian country and a Western democracy.The west on the other hand? Well we all know the story, a lot of political and societal uncertainty... can we still muster the political will to get projects on such scale done? — ChatteringMonkey
Up to 95 per cent of river-borne plastic polluting the world's oceans pours in from just ten rivers, according to new research.
The top 10 rivers - eight of which are in Asia - accounted for so much plastic because of the mismanagement of waste.
About five trillion pounds is floating in the sea, and targeting the major sources - such as the Yangtze and the Ganges - could almost halve it, scientists claim.
Environmental protection isn't at all anywhere in large Asian countries as China (and India) where it is in the West. Just to give an example, think about the large river systems — ssu
Yes, there is something positive about the NIMBY.Anyway I would even agree with the statement that communism isn't any better, or maybe even worse, at dealing with environmental problems. People get antsy very fast if they are confronted with environmental problems in their backyard, there I would agree that democratic societies are more responsive in solving those issues. — ChatteringMonkey
The basic problem is that people are OK with restrictions, limitations or fees when they aren't personally affected. Yet they can and will go with draconian measures if everybody goes with them. The pandemic response has been a good example of this. My best friend died last year (not of Covid) and in his funeral there was only the priest, his mother and father and one uncle. He had more friends than me and more relatives. Now to argue that the government here could decide that more than five people cannot meet would have sounded quite incredible few years ago. But here there were no complaints about it, perhaps in all two or three small demonstrations have happened in the whole country.Usually their response is essentially that they won't do anything about it if it costs them anything. They are waiting for the government to take action, to take some policy-measure to support renewables or some other government incentive that addresses the issue... but the government generally won't do anything if it isn't something that would be supported by a large part of the population, which is only democratic I suppose. — ChatteringMonkey
I think it matters at least to the Democrats. Let's not forget Al Gore and his favorite subject.What is different is that China at least have the capability of a longer term vision because they aren't bound to a 4 or 5 year democratic election cycle... and in a system that allows for longer term vision there is at least the possibility that climate change is something that can be valued. The CCP knows climate change will come back to haunt them because they think they will still be in power when the effects become apparent... A Trump or a Biden on the other hand don't really care because it probably won't matter one iota to them. — ChatteringMonkey
So the fact that China's kicking our ass in growth means what exactly?
— Xtrix
It means that they changed their socialism to controlled capitalism — ssu
Socialist central planning is literally doing away with the market mechanism. — ssu
The official line is that they have 21st Century Marxism and it works just well as they aren't fixated to dogmatic principles or take Marxism as a religion. Others would say that it is government controlled capitalism as they do use the market mechanism and there is private property.The standard line of most people still stuck in capitalist propaganda. So it has to mean that. Why? Because socialism "never works." End of discussion.
They are ruled by the communist party. But magically, the gains they've achieved is "capitalism"? — Xtrix
Yes, there is something positive about the NIMBY.
Now the socialist system did have a lot of committees and so on, yet what was lacking was the huge thing that turns people to behave differently: when they are landowners. Might sound funny, but there's a big truth to this. Let's say a person is working in a student body as a student. He or she has then some incentive as a student on what the body does. Now put him or her to be a landowner and the issue about the use of his or her land. Likely he or she won't take it so lightly. Socialism needed for people to be as devoted to the "common thing", the country, as an individual landowner can be to his or her land. That is a big thing to ask from people and that's why some refer to what the Soviet Union did to it's environment as Ecocide. — ssu
The basic problem is that people are OK with restrictions, limitations or fees when they aren't personally affected. Yet they can and will go with draconian measures if everybody goes with them. The pandemic response has been a good example of this. My best friend died last year (not of Covid) and in his funeral there was only the priest, his mother and father and one uncle. He had more friends than me and more relatives. Now to argue that the government here could decide that more than five people cannot meet would have sounded quite incredible few years ago. But here there were no complaints about it, perhaps in all two or three small demonstrations have happened in the whole country.
Yet for draconian measures, you need a big catastrophy. — ssu
I think it matters at least to the Democrats. Let's not forget Al Gore and his favorite subject. — ssu
Yet notice that a lot in the environmental standards and environmental protection happens in the US in the state level with California having a big role. If California sets some standards, manufacturers apply to them. You could argue that on the federal level there for example hasn't been a true energy policy or industrial policy, yet the US can do a lot even without the White House getting involved. Don't think that one person, the US President, actually can do much. A lot happens without him too. — ssu
In all, we need cooperation, yet as this is a case of "learning-while-doing", it can be also good that countries adapt various policies as then we can see what have been the best ones. There is no silver bullet: our climate is such a complex maze that we will be learning new things and lessons as we go. Many things that we now look to be good ideas might later be showed to have been disasters. — ssu
Of course not!Property works yes, but it's not the only thing that can get people to care about something, and it need not be on the level of the individual either. — ChatteringMonkey
Being a fan of a sports team is something that can bind the rich man and the poor man. These kind of issues that both the poor and the rich can both support are unfortunately quite rare. Yet they are extremely essential. One thing that usually works, is patriotism. Assuming the whole country doesn't work at all and simply sucks. Even Stalin as a shrewd politician understood this an made the fight against the Nazi "the Great Patriotic War" for those who ought to have been globalists at heart.You'd be surprised what sportsfans would do for 'their team', yet there's no property-relation of any kind... there just needs to be some identification. — ChatteringMonkey
A good reference would be then to look at what Texas is doing. If things there change, that is important.But okay maybe we can get there if general culture everywhere shifts along the same lines... it's kind of crossing our fingers though and hoping that we will get there in time. — ChatteringMonkey
That is the real obstacles for the change needed. People that worry that they will become paupers, that everything will stop and die where they live. The fear for example in the rust belt in the US is real and that fear basically gave us Trump. I think this political clash will obviously grow larger in the future.It's like the coal-mines in the seventies or eighties that were struggling to survive in my country. We pumped in tons of money in an effort to preserve the industry and the jobs it provided, only to have to shut them down anyway a decade later. If they had the vision to transition earlier by investing in other industries, it would have been better for everybody involved. — ChatteringMonkey
Carlos Rittl, a Brazilian environmentalist who works at Germany’s Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies, said the numbers were “humiliating, shameful and outrageous” – and a clear sign of the damage being done to the environment since Bolsonaro took office in January 2019.
"This is an area a third the size of Belgium – gigantic areas of forest that are being lost simply because under Bolsonaro those who are doing the destroying feel no fear of being punished,” Rittl said.
“Bolsonaro’s great achievement when it comes to the environment has been this tragic destruction of forests which has turned Brazil into perhaps one of the greatest enemies of the global environment and into an international pariah too.”
The standard line of most people still stuck in capitalist propaganda. So it has to mean that. Why? Because socialism "never works." End of discussion.
They are ruled by the communist party. But magically, the gains they've achieved is "capitalism"?
— Xtrix
The official line is that they have 21st Century Marxism and it works just well as they aren't fixated to dogmatic principles or take Marxism as a religion. Others would say that it is government controlled capitalism as they do use the market mechanism and there is private property. — ssu
Yes, marxism-leninism, stalinism or maoism didn't work so well. — ssu
They really genuinely sucked. — ssu
You have even two countries with similar culture, heritage and history that were divided with one part being capitalist and the other socialist. These examples leave nothing in doubt. — ssu
The government doesn't interfere all the time and everywhere. Housing prices, the prices of taxi cabs and many other prices are usually left alone. The vast majority of companies and corporations are privately owned. The Western Mixed-Capitalism model is really different from China."Government controlled capitalism." That's state-capitalism, which is the only capitalism that exists. It's what exists in the United States as well. Government direction and interference on every level. No "free market" fantasies. — Xtrix
Let's start with the famines in the US. How many have there been thanks to US economic policy been inflicted to the American people?Actually they worked just fine, by many metrics. They also had plenty of problems -- major ones. The United States has plenty of problems, too. — Xtrix
The government doesn't interfere all the time and everywhere. — ssu
Housing prices, the prices of taxi cabs and many other prices are usually left alone. — ssu
The vast majority of companies and corporations are privately owned. The Western Mixed-Capitalism model is really different from China. — ssu
Actually they worked just fine, by many metrics. They also had plenty of problems -- major ones. The United States has plenty of problems, too.
— Xtrix
Let's start with the famines in the US. How many have there been thanks to US economic policy been inflicted to the American people? — ssu
There is a perfect example of this from my own country. The government brought in price controls in the 1970's which basically crushed the rental market and basically made a structural over demand for rental homes. My great aunt remembered being as a land-lord that people were so desperate that they even sent the first monthly payment through mail. In the 1990's if you put an announcement in the paper, you would start getting phone calls right from the morning with 40 to 100 calls daily. The demand was far more than the demand and public housing was only for the most poor or unemployed and basically didn't do anything to counter the demand.Take your housing example. The government doesn't "usually" interfere? What's "usually"? Of course they do -- nearly all the time. How? — Xtrix
Actually, modern Egypt is the perfect example why people are poor and stay poor in Third World countries: when a normal working family cannot get a loan to buy a house, no wealth is created when they have rent all their life a home. And once when people are poor and stay poor, there isn't that important domestic demand that would create jobs and growth.Furthermore, there are some instances of "free markets" throughout the world and throughout history. Maybe Egypt or Greece? Even there it's dubious. — Xtrix
And the US got rid of it in the 19th Century. Obviously not an inherent part of capitalism.Or we could start with slavery in the US. — Xtrix
When you start from far poorer state, naturally growth is far more rapid. Let's remember that the US nominal GDP is larger than China's GDP, even if China has three times more population.As far as economic growth, China beats us by far in GDP. — Xtrix
The big IPCC report— pretty sobering. — Xtrix
The ocean current responsible for western Europe’s temperate climate could be at risk of collapse due to global warming, according to new research.
Scientists at Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research found the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC, could have reached a point of “almost complete loss of stability” over the last century. The AMOC is a system of ocean currents that acts like a conveyor belt carrying warm surface water from the tropics to the North Atlantic where it cools and sinks to the lower depths of the ocean. This colder water gradually moves southward several kilometers deep, before warmer ocean temperatures eventually pull it to the surface and the process begins again.
The Gulf Stream, the current of warm water flowing from the tip of Florida across the Atlantic toward Europe, is part of the AMOC and makes western Europe significantly warmer than it would otherwise be. Research has found the AMOC has “two distinct modes of operation” — strong and weak — and if it were to flip from its current strong mode to weak, it could have huge ramifications for the climate.
Lead author Dr. Niklas Boers said it could trigger “a cascade of further transitions” in other key components of the global climate system, such as the Antarctic ice sheets, tropical monsoon systems and the Amazon rainforest.
Take your housing example. The government doesn't "usually" interfere? What's "usually"? Of course they do -- nearly all the time. How?
— Xtrix
There is a perfect example of this from my own country — ssu
The government brought in price controls in the 1970's which basically crushed the rental market — ssu
Then the government deregulated the market. — ssu
And this is what many don't understand at all from the importance of a market mechanism. — ssu
Furthermore, there are some instances of "free markets" throughout the world and throughout history. Maybe Egypt or Greece? Even there it's dubious.
— Xtrix
Actually, modern Egypt — ssu
is the perfect example why people are poor and stay poor in Third World countries: when a normal working family cannot get a loan to buy a house, no wealth is created when they have rent all their life a home. And once when people are poor and stay poor, there isn't that important domestic demand that would create jobs and growth. — ssu
Or we could start with slavery in the US.
— Xtrix
And the US got rid of it in the 19th Century. Obviously not an inherent part of capitalism. — ssu
What is common to all is the implementation of socialist central planning that really didn't work. — ssu
As far as economic growth, China beats us by far in GDP.
— Xtrix
When you start from far poorer state, naturally growth is far more rapid. — ssu
Hardly. Price fixing simply doesn't work. What else is central planning that replaces the market mechanism?This is completely irrelevant. It's also anecdotal. — Xtrix
If you assume that having rules and legislation is "inteference", then I guess your idea that governments interfere all the time on every level is true.So I'll repeat: government interferes all the time, on every level. There's no denying this. Whether this interference works out well or not is another question. — Xtrix
Communism hasn't simply not worked. Marxism-Leninism didn't work. Maoism didn't work. Juche-ideology still doesn't work.But I see where this is going with you: whatever happens that's good is capitalism, whatever happens that's negative is communism. — Xtrix
This is completely irrelevant. It's also anecdotal.
— Xtrix
Hardly. Price fixing simply doesn't work. What else is central planning that replaces the market mechanism? — ssu
If you assume that having rules and legislation is "inteference", then I guess your idea that governments interfere all the time on every level is true. — ssu
Yet how typically people understand government interference — ssu
Communism hasn't simply not worked. Marxism-Leninism didn't work. Maoism didn't work. Juche-ideology still doesn't work. — ssu
Besides, when you disregard the most successful and most popular branch of leftist thought (which is SO typical nowdays), then this is quite irrefutable. — ssu
I'll bet you can think of something, and it needn't be a Julia Childs' solution.What am I supposed to do with freezer burnt, year old meat that is raw and I don't have a willing human to consume it.... since we have animals as pets. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I'll bet you can think of something, and it needn't be a Julia Childs' solution. — tim wood
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