by gg3 » Sun 27 Feb 2005, 00:47:26
It's rather shocking to see the implicit scapegoating going on. Some, speaking for the poor and working classes, blame the rich for all the world's woes. Others, speaking for the rich, blame the poor or at least try to justify holding them down as part of the natural order of things.
Historically, disparities in equity have been the #1 cause of violent social upheavals. Look back at the 1930s: the US was about to come apart at the seams, and socialism was starting to look good to a growing percentage of the population. Gotta give the liberals credit for the New Deal, which effectively held the country together.
Jack, re "punish those who choose to live well:" what's your definition of living well? And are you going to tell that to your grandchildren?
Re. conservation measures:
First, nature bats first. Last, nature bats last. In the long run (or between now and another thousand gigawatts of nuclear and two hundred gigawatts of wind) the only choice we have is how to distribute the misery. We can distribute it rationally, by which is meant, equitably and fairly and in relatively small amounts at a time. Or we can wait and go flying over the edge, and have the huddled freezing masses decide they have nothing left to lose by starting violent upheavals.
Start with moral persuasion, or social pressure if you will: "I want" is not a moral imperative; and "Because I can" is not a moral justification. Work it back from there.
Carrots and sticks: Status and acceptance and praise for efficiency. Stigmatization and ridicule and shame for wastefulness.
Enlist key media figures to tout the efficient lifestyle. Enlist the fashion industry to make sweaters etc. the height of style. Enlist the appliance industry, automobile industry, all the rest of 'em; not on the basis of finger-pointing but on the basis of "rising to meet the national challenge." Offer tax incentives for all manner of conservation retrofits including home insulation, double-pane glazing, etc., as well as solar and wind installations. These things should also become status symbols.
Next: Bring SUVs under the regulatory umbrella for automobiles (they currently slip through a loophole between cars and trucks), and then relentlessly raise the Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency standards to the point where SUVs and similar obscenities-on-wheels are phased out. If a few wealthy fools want to keep their 2005 Hummers running forever, in the manner of antique automobile enthusiasts with their Ford Model Ts, that's a small drop in the bucket comparatively speaking.
Tradeable energy credits? Great idea.
No more freeway expansions? Excellent.
Now let's take $200 billion a year (cost of Iraq war) and invest it into public transit. Also do an emergency override of all local building & zoning codes to prohibit sprawl and require mixed-use development in all new construction.
Re. drooling morons on public transit: tough shit, you don't have to look at them. Re. gangsta assholes on public transit: hire more cops. "Excuse me sir, you can't take up two seats there." And if they wise-ass the cops, write 'em & cite 'em. Hell, hire recent military vets to do this one: "You gonna' mouth off to a Green Beret?!"
Re. kidnappings at bus stops: Public Safety Cams. A little box on the bus shelter with a couple of pushbuttons. One is for Emergency: turns on the camera and microphone, and gets the cops there pronto. One is for Safety Watch: connects you to a central station where someone is watching; they appear on screen to say Hi and you know you're covered. After they see you get on the bus, they switch off. This is not "pervasive surveillance" because it's voluntary. It's also a viable deterrent.
More re. kidnappers etc: Decriminalize "consenting adult" crimes thereby making plenty of room in prison for kidnappers etc. "Lock 'em up and throw away the key." For entire categories of violent crime, one strike and byebye for life. Strict *and* consistent works: think of the crime rate in Singapore.
And one can always issue concealed-carry permits to people who pass simple background checks; after all, how many times have we heard that a well-armed society is a polite society..?
Interestingly, many of the measures that make for effective conservation also make for a safer society, and one that is *more free* because it's safer.
The list goes on. One doesn't need to engage in group finger-pointing when one can simply single out individuals and behaviors for praise or its opposite, regardless of "group" membership.
And a little bit of inventiveness goes a long darn way.