yes, well done, you found some pictures of me using the AC unit during the peak of summer. did you read the part of my post where i said "people don't tend to use the AC for 80% of the year"? their summer is incredibly humid as well as hot: which means that for half of the summer months and early autumn, it's monsoon season. people don't use their AC units during weeks of heavy rains, dilbert.
still, july and august was very hot, i'll give you that.
and how am i a hypocrite? i am talking continually about the need for systemic change and for STATE-LED solutions. you are the one who wants to reduce the climate crisis to a series of personal decisions made by individuals and consumers. this entire line of thinking is FALSE and STUPID. no amount of 'consumer buying power' or 'ethical consumption' is going to change the direction this ship is drifting in. you seem to enjoy the small satisfactions of feeling smug and morally superior over your personal lifestyle ... when you live in a state that is expanding its fossil fuel exports and which relies upon said exports for a substantial amount of its revenues. see what i mean, when i talk about 'systemic critique' and you talk about 'selfish tourists'?
the purpose of conferences like cop26 is precisely to try and secure international collaboration, right? to try and force states to commit, to breaking this cycle of supply+demand and the pussyfooting around who is culpable ("blame them for demanding and burning the stuff!' "why should we stop our own developments when they are building 100 new facilities in the next 5 years?") the point is the SYSTEM is broken and the SYSTEM needs changing. you reside in your own self-satisfaction, perfectly contented with your own simple circumstances, and then, well, if the rest of the world is going to burn, oh well ... it's not my fault ... humanity is stupid ... que sera, sera ... amazing intellectual prowess there, dilbert.
migrating to a racist, insular monoculture
you just quoted a picture of mine with a 7/11 in it ... an american convenience store. but yes, insular monoculture etc etc.
with one of the worst carbon footprints in the world.
i can't help but feel you're being a little bit selective here with your data.
australia has a higher per capita emissions rate than korea. which is exactly as i have been saying: you are enjoying a high quality of life in a rich nation that is incredibly costly on a per-individual basis.
australia's per capita emissions: 15.83
south korea's per capita emissions: 11.58
united kingdom's per capita emissions: 5.99
Here the price of electricity averages $50/MWh and its largely renewable, the UK price is $200/MWh and its mostly from fossil fuels, who are the dummies in the room? Its not my state anyway.
total emissions per country, 2021.
australia: 380.93 Mn
united kingdom: 389.75 Mn
so you have the same total emissions as the UK but 40% of the population. still, your cost per MWh is cheaper, so great work i guess!
i guess this is why you talk so much about 'overpopulation' or 'my personal fuel bill', as it's a pretty useful diversion away from the fact that the australian way of life is extremely costly. and you're always careful to mention your own province, which is rather disingenuous, don't you think? i could move to rural oxfordshire and claim to be living an unimpeachable lifestyle, too. meanwhile the massive expansion of the australian state's fossil fuels develops apace ... but dilbert isn't worried! look, my neighbourhood has a wind turbine!
just think what the world would be like if everyone had the same per capita emissions rate as an aussie bloke with his steaks and long beach drives. you have the same per capita consumption as america. isn't per capita the more meaningful statistic when YOU are the one stressing INDIVIDUAL CARBON FOOTPRINTS as a meaningful metric in this crisis?
Last edited by uziq (2021-11-03 19:38:46)