this post was submitted on 02 Feb 2024
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[โ€“] Theharpyeagle@lemmy.world 5 points 10 months ago (1 children)

From the view of the global West, I believe this comic still applies. I'm very much not a fan of asking developing countries to not go through the same industrial revolution we went through, it's the lack of action at home that bothers me. Here in the US, we've got half the population railing against EVs instead of wanting to invest in them and find more environmentally friendly ways to produce them; people who want to gut the FDA and EPA and reduce regulation; people who who don't give a damn about those who are going to be the first affected by rising water; those who think terraforming Mars is a sexier (and magnitudes more expensive) project than using those resources here on Earth. And so on and so on. Those, I think, are the target of this comic. It's a very Western perspective, I agree, but I also think the West is in the best position to do anything about it.

[โ€“] racemaniac@startrek.website 1 points 10 months ago

It for sure applies to voters, but not to the politicians present at climate conventions as this cartoon portrays. And in the end it's them that have to broker a solution, not individual voters.

They'll of course use such language to their voters since whatever gains votes is fair game, but i very much doubt they themselves are this stupid. Behind the scenes it's just finding ways to screw with the others.