And guess what … most of the people who ‘did what they could’ just kept driving their cars. ‘What choice did we have?’ None.

    • bizarroland@fedia.io
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      3 days ago

      Nothing. It’s not our individual fault. It’s going to keep going no matter what you or I do (short of terrorism) until the whole thing crashes down around us.

      • MonkRome@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        Corporations might be largely at fault but regular people can keep voting with their dollars. Corporations have to adjust to demand.

        Most of the top polluters in the world are fossil fuel producers. Want to slow them down? Stop driving ice vehicles, take public transit, bike, walk, move closer to work, or unionize and put work from home in your contract. Reduce in home energy waste, if you own a home: improve insulation, check heat loss around the edge of windows, look into solar panels. Most of these things improve you life anyway, lowering your monthly costs makes your life better.

        Lobby, get involved in your community, organize.

        While it’s true that large corporations are major polluters, our continued actions (and inaction) give them the money and power to keep polluting.

      • mesa@piefed.social
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        3 days ago

        Sure but what can one tangably do? Go to areas that are probably going to do well (or just not terrible) in the coming years?

        • Doom@ttrpg.network
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          2 days ago

          To be honest the problem is we built a broken system.

          Part 1, most companies can’t afford to gamble. They can’t afford switching to paper straws, the margins are that tight and we wanna talk about cutting CEOs that will work for some companies but not most.

          Part 2, there’s no help from the government, any of them. they were all ineffective and more interested in flirting with resource wars than collaborating for the benefit of all.

    • NotAnotherLemmyUser@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      If you have a lot of time and enough conviction:

      Lobbying, petitions, run a non-profit organization to do so.

      It takes a lot of time and it’s frustrating, but look at what individuals like Louis Rossmann and Ross Scott have been able to pull off with Right to Repair and the Stop Killing Games Movement.

      If you don’t have as much time:

      Donate some time to projects to help out. For example, take a look at some of the projects listed underneath “Climate” category on Zooniverse: https://www.zooniverse.org/projects?discipline=climate

      Here’s a description of the project, “ClimateViz”:

      Extract information from various climate scientific graphics to combat misinformation and support scientific communication

    • BrightCandle@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Civilisation is ending, probably the whole of humanity and we will likely take much of the other animals with us. Humanity is an extinction event. Its all over but for dying now, just carry on living your life and just know this is it, we failed the great filter. We could have done something about this once we understood the problem from any point from the 19th century onwards but the failure of Kyoto agreement in the 1990s marked the point where we were always going to fail, it was the last moment where correction could save us. The last tipping point will happen in the next year or two and then a whole bunch more of unknown events will occur that we didn’t even predict. The temperature growth will continue to accelerate.

    • kalkulat@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      We can do what we can do to stop making it worse. Work togetther to change our habits. Do what we can to make do with less and feel good about it. “Every dollar is a vote”, definitely. Work with the people who know what’s in store for them, like farmers. Skip a trip now and then. Use mass transit more. Keep improving our home, if we have one, so it’s better-insulated. Use better options for heating (wear more clothes instead of burning more fuel) and cooling. Stop admiring consumption and buy lasting, healthier products. Walk away from wasteful consumption, the investors will turn elsewhere unless companies respond.

      We can keep in mind the world we’re making, and how we will best to live in it. And become living examples of alternatives that are inevitable.