Humans are incredibly bad at envisioning things on a large scale, especially something as (relatively) gradual as climate change.
I have hope that enough people in government are/will be making meaningful inroads with regard to climate change, but I don’t think the public will get it until Florida and Louisiana have sunk into the Gulf.
I don’t think it’s climate scientists’ fault; I think it’s incredibly difficult for average people to grasp the big picture, mixed with contrarians and oil industry lobbying/propaganda working against those efforts.
until Florida and Louisiana have sunk into the Gulf.
To be more clear about what this looks like in the medium term, consider Katrina level events in Florida happening more and more often. It’ll be hurricanes causing flooding first.
It’s the fault of politicians who underfunded or hobbled education. Helped with the factors you mentioned of course, but if average people were better educated they could better grasp the big picture.
We could only hope, yet well-educated people still believe gods who will come fix everything are self-evident facts of reality. Still, being better educated certainly wouldn’t make things worse.
This is not about personal responsibility, it is about power. No amount of education protects you from misinformation, or a lack of information, when powerful people have a financial interest in burying the truth.
Big carbon lobbies politicians to dismantle education, yeah. You can’t say education doesn’t fix this when that’s the thing they’re paying to destroy.
A quality education should include media literacy, also, which is what inoculates you against the kind of thought viruses that misinformation presents.
The people who are doing the lobbying and dismantling have the best educations money can buy. This is a structural problem. It’s not going to be solved by everyone being as clever and conscientious as you are.
Not directly on a large scale, but average people vote for candidates, from the city council to whatever the highest office is, and they do.
If Average Person A doesn’t grasp the imminent danger, they’re not going to prioritize picking a candidate that has climate change policy as a platform issue.
Humans are incredibly bad at envisioning things on a large scale, especially something as (relatively) gradual as climate change.
I have hope that enough people in government are/will be making meaningful inroads with regard to climate change, but I don’t think the public will get it until Florida and Louisiana have sunk into the Gulf.
I don’t think it’s climate scientists’ fault; I think it’s incredibly difficult for average people to grasp the big picture, mixed with contrarians and oil industry lobbying/propaganda working against those efforts.
To be more clear about what this looks like in the medium term, consider Katrina level events in Florida happening more and more often. It’ll be hurricanes causing flooding first.
It’s the fault of politicians who underfunded or hobbled education. Helped with the factors you mentioned of course, but if average people were better educated they could better grasp the big picture.
We could only hope, yet well-educated people still believe gods who will come fix everything are self-evident facts of reality. Still, being better educated certainly wouldn’t make things worse.
… who are funded by Big Carbon.
This is not about personal responsibility, it is about power. No amount of education protects you from misinformation, or a lack of information, when powerful people have a financial interest in burying the truth.
Big carbon lobbies politicians to dismantle education, yeah. You can’t say education doesn’t fix this when that’s the thing they’re paying to destroy.
A quality education should include media literacy, also, which is what inoculates you against the kind of thought viruses that misinformation presents.
The people who are doing the lobbying and dismantling have the best educations money can buy. This is a structural problem. It’s not going to be solved by everyone being as clever and conscientious as you are.
Education is a structural problem.
Do you want corporate lobbyists to have less power? That would be great.
What does it matter what average people can grasp? Average people have no power to change anything.
Not directly on a large scale, but average people vote for candidates, from the city council to whatever the highest office is, and they do.
If Average Person A doesn’t grasp the imminent danger, they’re not going to prioritize picking a candidate that has climate change policy as a platform issue.
If democracy actually worked, sure. In the immortal words of Method Man:
Cash rules everything around me C.R.E.A.M., get the money Dollar, dollar bill, y’all
The average person is aware and is led to believe that throwing their milk cartons in the correct hole is making a difference.
If it didn’t, there wouldn’t be entire political parties trying to suppress people’s ability to vote.
Voting absolutely matters.
Yeah, haha. Voting doesn’t work. Also, ignore the entire Republican party.