JimC wrote: ↑Sun Aug 18, 2019 5:46 am
We definitely need to speed things up, but it simply may not be possible to speed up the change as fast as wanted by ER...
Why?
As Hermit pointed out, where there's a will there's a way. XR are trying to galvanise that will. We can look to how the UK quickly shifted its economy in WWI or in response to the Atlantic blockade in WWII for example if we like. Again, if the science is to be believed we are facing an existential threat far, far more significant than the dreaded Hun.
Individually we might be thinking that if past experience is anything to go by then we should be OK - we've had problems before, massive problems like war and pestilence, and we're still here right(?) But the past is an unreliable sample. I'm reminded of the statistician's joke about the clever turkey who noticed that the farmer came out to the barn every day at 10:30 with a bag of grain. Based on the available data the turkey reasoned that tomorrow was going to be just as good as today until, that is, 25 November when the farmer came out to the barn with a cleaver. Looking at the turkey's graph the data clearly indicated an ongoing upward trend that gave it no reason to worry about tomorrow, but the data didn't account for that single, unpredictable catastrophic event. The difference between us and the turkey is that our predictions can account for tomorrow - indeed predictive models are the foundation of the scientific arts - and catastrophe is baked into those climate models whether we like it or not.
So do we accept the science or don't we? And if we do then shouldn't we act now in light of what the science is telling us, or not? Why is it impossible to be carbon neutral by 2025? What are the problems, what are the blockages, what are the breaks on that, what can be done to alleviate the issues, what resources do we need, what are the manpower requirements, the political choices, the economic necessities, etc etc?
What 'we' face is what what 'humanity' faces; the threat to 'us' is the threat to the future progress of our civilisation and perhaps our species itself. XR are talking collectively, inclusively, and they want governments to acknowledge and promote the unvarnished scientific truth so that people are as informed as possible. This, they believe, will galvanise people into thinking about this seriously, and by that to make rational decisions and knowingly undergo the hardships needed to literally save our civilisation, our species, and our biosphere. Their naysayers on the other hand confuse matters by collectivising the experience of individual turkeys: it's not a problem for us collectively because individually we are not in crisis; extreme weather events are individual weather events not part of a greater pattern etc; we got grain today didn't we? As one of the comments to the Hardtalk video pointed out the Goans lost their entire rice harvest as the result of a single storm. The crisis is ongoing, but as long as we can buy our rice from somewhere else this year it doesn't really seem to be effecting us - we're still getting grain tomorrow.
So rather than waiting for the day when the farmer comes along with his big chopper we need to start thinking about getting off the farm, and if that's not an option then we need to creep up to the farmhouse in the middle of the night and peck the bastard to death in his sleep. It's a matter of survival.