
Originally Posted by
Trackhead
I see them as the same thing.
I didn't get that at all from what you wrote above.
To wit:
I'm calling bullshit on any single person willing to sacrifice either money, convenience, affluence, or lifestyle (or a combo of any of these) to make any meaningful benefit.
With which I completely disagree.
One is done upstream of the individual, the other by the individual. Most of them done by the individual cost money and are more easily achievable for those with some sort of disposable income, or a real dedication to prioritizing money to those choices.
There's a lots of meaningful stuff people can do that's affordable. Eat less farmed meat, less processed food, recycle, buy used, stay local.
Most of the problem is the tribal rejection of what has been pretty well established. Once people see that, I think they're more willing to take steps, however small.
The latter are imposed by the government, incentivized by the government, or in the form of taxes or downstream consumer price increases to meet government restrictions.
In the end, they all affect the individual (usually).
Again, I'm kind of confused by the distinction since I don't see government as intentionally run by some disjoint cabal, as cast by the corpocrats and their lobbyists. They're very good at playing the tribal id game.
There's only some truth to the cabalist view because we've let the very wealthy have too much influence in government instead of being better educated voters.
Government in the USA is supposed to be of the people, by the people, for the people[/i].
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