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PaganDude

PaganDude@lemmy.ca
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Oh fun, so how well did this method grow grains, corn, & rice, the main staple crops? Turns out, really badly. So food is going to get incredibly expensive, got it.#

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When do we start eating the rich?

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This is called Normalcy Bias. Since it failed last time, we shouldn’t do anything to counter it.

This allows tragedies to happen. Don’t enable it.

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The problem is it’s extremely energy intensive. The math just doesn’t work. IIRC, we currently have three big “carbon capture” plants operating to try and remove CO2 from the atmosphere. (As opposed to the carbon capture they do in things like concrete plants.) Those plants are operating at a fraction the efficiency they expected. Age even if they did work, we’d need to open a new plant like those every single day for a decade before we could capture just the emissions we’re putting out right now.

It’s not gonna work.

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Yup, the idea of electric cars is great, but it easily becomes something like Braess Paradox. Where building bigger roads leads to more cars & more traffic. Building electric cars just means fuel is cheaper so people drive more.

And even if we were able to electrify every single vehicle in the world, with sufficient charging infrastructure, cheap reliable renewable energy, and abundant resources for cheap replacement batteries; that still leads to collapse. Assuming electric cars are afforable,b that pushes more “investing” in so many car-centric single-family suburbs that are cashflow negative will have to finally face drastic increases in taxes. We’ll wish that walkability and public transit should had been prioritized, as we desperately densify in patchwork ways that cost more in the long run.

Then if you look at the amount of pollution caused by rubber tires, continuing with electric cars using rubber tires is just leading to collapse from inhaled particles and forever chemicals.

The answer has always been walkable cities with infrastructure for bikes, busses, streetcars, and rail. This temporary century-long obsession with abandoning what’s worked for human cities and splurging with the assumption that the temporary abundance of cheap energy would never end. But we never change in time.

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“Despite widespread abuses, Rwanda maintains support for Canadian government” works just as well, given how we treat indiginous people, unhoused people, environmental protestors…

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Well given we have limited resources and climate change is causing a lot of issues, we really should stop growing the economy and creating more inflation, because we’re going to see widespread deflation over the next few decades. Everything we build up now will come back down, as we refuse to build for the new world & cling to the old one.

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A lot of it is just giving more public money to perlite who have money, so not take a great fix. Rental prices aren’t about covering costs, so why would lowering costs help?

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You say that as if the solution is just “people in charge say it should be fixed”. What are the major causes of the housing crisis & see do you see it being fixed?

From what I’ve been reading from various sources, the problems we’re seeing are a combination of deep-seated urban design failures, combined with the changes to investment rules over the last few decades. Neither are quick fixes.

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