tourmaline
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2009
- Messages
- 349
I am an exploration geologist working in metals.
I have considered myself an environmentalist for as long as I have known the term. I recycle, reduce, and reuse as much as I can. I have an old car, it gets ~28 mpg, and I try not to use it. I dont buy frivolous toys. I advocate renewable energy/resources and deplore negligent practices.
I have friends that also consider themselves environmentalists. But they usually find ways to excuse there own ecological footprint and condemn others, especially those would produce the services and products they use every day. For example, they benefit every day from the use of fossil fuels and metals without considering they both cause degradation of the environment; and they ignore their economic support of related industries by repeated business (which is why people like me have jobs).
One in particular, grows plants using artificial lighting, owns 3 "gas guzzling vehicles," and admits that he is too lazy to recycle. He often makes the statement that individual households being environmentally conscious is pointless/insignificant considering the scale of industry. He has the nerve to criticize me for working in resources because I help those that pollute on a larger scale than the individual.
My counter points to him usually follow the "every bit counts," the practicality of going "cold turkey" with regard to fossil fuels, the economics of "only-recycled" material, practicality vs ideals, and if it wasn't for people like me you would not have such an easy life.
So I ask the JREF community their opinion of environmentalism with practicality in mind.
Are my friend and I both hippy-crits?
Is it just me or do many environmentally minded people love the proverbial "sausage" yet chide its production?
Do the producers of resources have more "blood on their hands" than the end user?
Are we all just fukushimaed?
I have considered myself an environmentalist for as long as I have known the term. I recycle, reduce, and reuse as much as I can. I have an old car, it gets ~28 mpg, and I try not to use it. I dont buy frivolous toys. I advocate renewable energy/resources and deplore negligent practices.
I have friends that also consider themselves environmentalists. But they usually find ways to excuse there own ecological footprint and condemn others, especially those would produce the services and products they use every day. For example, they benefit every day from the use of fossil fuels and metals without considering they both cause degradation of the environment; and they ignore their economic support of related industries by repeated business (which is why people like me have jobs).
One in particular, grows plants using artificial lighting, owns 3 "gas guzzling vehicles," and admits that he is too lazy to recycle. He often makes the statement that individual households being environmentally conscious is pointless/insignificant considering the scale of industry. He has the nerve to criticize me for working in resources because I help those that pollute on a larger scale than the individual.
My counter points to him usually follow the "every bit counts," the practicality of going "cold turkey" with regard to fossil fuels, the economics of "only-recycled" material, practicality vs ideals, and if it wasn't for people like me you would not have such an easy life.
So I ask the JREF community their opinion of environmentalism with practicality in mind.
Are my friend and I both hippy-crits?
Is it just me or do many environmentally minded people love the proverbial "sausage" yet chide its production?
Do the producers of resources have more "blood on their hands" than the end user?
Are we all just fukushimaed?