biffvernon wrote:JavaScriptDonkey wrote:
That's a remarkably convenient way to avoid personal responsibility.
Yes, it allows one too drive gas-guzzling fast cars and fly to holidays in the sun in the sure knowledge that one is making no difference to global warming. Ethically it is, of course, complete tosh, which is why I don't do those sort of things.
Instead I campaign for carbon reduction at source, stopping the stuff getting out of the ground. Working on the supply side is likely to be more effective than on the demand side, getting folk to consume less.
Of course this will all be meaningless drivel in the eyes of global warming deniers.
Yes, it has to be on the supply side.
To expect it to be on the demand side is to expect consumers to deliberately make the most costly choice in a game of prisoner's dilemma. They are simply not going to do that. Which leaves only a few other choices for policy makers;
1) Constrain the supply side and leave the demand side alone. Then let the market push out those who can't afford the resource whose supply is being constrained. Grossly inequitable but would, in principle, work as long as the haves are prepared to build very high walls to keep the have-nots at bay.
2) Constrain the supply side and equitably constrain the demand side (rationing, in other words). This would also require price controls.
3) Do nothing.
Now, I know that JSD's response is likely to be that the second of the above two policies, being controlled by politicians, will be a virtually unworkable dog's breakfast of inefficiency and unintended consequences and he''d be right.
But, the alternative of standing by while everyone plays their own individual game of prisoner's dilemma all the way to the edge of the cliff of resource depletion and environmental collapse and then over it (3), will be an environmental disaster. And the alternative of only constraining supply and allowing huge swathes of the population to be priced out of the marketplace (1) will be a social and political disaster.
So, the least worst option has to be (2), no matter how difficult to implement.
What we'll probably get, of course, is a combination of (1) and (3) because the people managing the country are cowards/greedy bastards and/or serve cowards/greedy bastards.