🦘min0nim🦘

Refugee from the great Reddit crisis of 2023

  • 4 Posts
  • 44 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2023

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  • Checking sources twice is something you should do from a news agency that is actually reputable. As in it trades on being honest and accurate.

    You’re not obliged to read everything from an outlet that has no track record of honesty and integrity simply because you’ve been beaten around the head with the internet ‘logical fallacy’ meme one too many times.

    Thinking that everything you read on the internet should be worth your time to fact check is the ultimate logical fallacy.













  • Can you find any recent analysis that supports your claim that nuclear costs are at the same level as solar?

    The only one I’ve seen suggest this was from a nuclear industry lobby group, and it inflated the costs or solar by insane amounts.

    In Australia this is a bit of a hot topic and all impartial estimates suggest that nuclear will not get close to renewables in any way, even taking into account storage and grid costs.

    In the 10 years since this single reactor was built, one of our states has transitioned to almost 100% renewables. Wholesale costs have plummeted, but renewable projects are still profitable in the market. I was involved in a reactor project in a western nation some time ago (it’s still being completed unsurprisingly), and the lock-in wholesale price to support that project was simply extortionate. Solar generation prices are a whole magnitude smaller.



  • This is why you don’t substitute social media for primary sources if you want to learn anything.

    Ships and planes ARE NOT the biggest CO2 emitters. Random big corporations ARE NOT the biggest CO2 emitters.

    Transport (I.e driving your car) and energy (I.e. running the AC) are the biggest CO2 polluters by far, with over 50% of emissions from those 2 sectors.

    Everyone can make a difference very easily by driving less and using less power…with the happy side effect of sticking it to the corporations you say are the biggest polluters.

    Because - no surprise - the biggest corporate polluters are almost all oil and energy companies.




  • Yes, there are things you can and should be doing.

    People blaming ‘corporations’ while not doing anything themselves are a huge part of the problem. Out of the 100 largest corporations contributing the most CO2, almost all of them are fuel and energy based.

    So, number one - drives less, or don’t drive at all. This might change where or how you live.

    Number 2, buy 100% green power or install your own PV.

    These 2 things alone can be contributing up to 50% of your own greenhouse emissions. This isn’t ‘corporations’, it’s us buying power and driving around.

    After that everyday consumption is huge. So don’t buy shit to just throw it away. Only buy what’s necessary. Spend more on fewer things, and things that will last.

    And finally, do these things because you care. If enough people make some changes. It starts to seem normal. Then others do it too. And vote.

    The number of smart, tech savvy people here who think some boats and random companies are the source of impending catastrophe are sadly mistaken. The actual information on what’s causing and contributing is well researched and easy to find. You’ll be able to find an online calculator for your country which will give an averaged breakdown of your own emissions. You can use that to keep drilling into what actions will have the biggest impacts.

    Everyone needs to make changes to the way we live. Some need to go first for others to follow.