• Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    Planes now: a huge waste of resources because people believe they’re entitled to traveling around the globe

    How about we don’t repeat the same mistake with space travel?

    Edit: always funny to see that progressives aren’t ready to question their first world privilege to travel around the globe to go meet people that will never be able to afford to do the same thing

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      5 days ago

      I mean, people should get to experience the wonders of the world around them.

      “Sorry, due to the circumstances of your birth beyond your control you only get to experience corn fields and the local grainary. If your parents had more opportunities maybe you would have been born where there’s cultural artifacts to experience, diversity and education, but you don’t and never will” is a pretty bleak standard.

      What if instead of focusing on the people who want to see the world we focus on the people who made it so you can’t do so by train or boat?

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        5 days ago

        Being able to go spend a week 5000km away from home at a moment’s notice wasn’t a thing 100 years ago, it’s a privilege, not a right and it’s an extremely wasteful privilege that can be afforded by a small minority of the world’s population. What you’re saying to ridicule what I said is exactly how the vast majority of the world will live their lives.

        • fossilesque@mander.xyz
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          4 days ago

          Exposure to other cultures is extremely important for building a just society. We have other options to make it more sustainable.

          Edit: We’ve always been a mobile species. Sedentary lifestyles are extremely new to us, we are meant to travel and meet others. It’s healthy. Otherwise populations get isolated and weird.

          • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            4 days ago

            Bingo, we don’t need everyone to go see with their own eyes the famine happening in a country for it to become something people care about.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                4 days ago

                We’ve always been mobile but we’ve never been that mobile. Traveling thousands of km was a commitment that would take people’s months if not years and, again, only an extremely small minority would travel that much in their lifetime, most people never traveled more than tens of km away from home.

                • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                  4 days ago

                  Most people lost several children in infancy as well. Appealing to how things were to justify how they should be falls flat.

                  Why should we return to a world where the people you know as a child are the only ones you ever meet? Why is that better?

                  We were once less mobile. We also decided that was awful and have consistently found ways to be more mobile. If we’re looking to history, we’d be forgiven for taking the lesson as “always find a way to go further, faster”. Hell, we invented water vessels so we could travel more than a few hours from drinking water. It used to be that people didn’t rip apart the earth to get metal and lay pipes, they just never went more than a few hours from a water source.
                  The concept of moving water to the people was then an unimaginable luxury and privilege available only to a small minority.

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    4 days ago

                    The difference is that tourism is not an essential need, healthcare is. Tourism via air travel is extremely wasteful, in a week of vacation people have the environmental impact equivalent to months of their regular lives.

                    But hey, guess visiting the world is more important than saving the world!

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    4 days ago

                    Oh really? So back then you could leave your house in France and be in China less than 24h later?

        • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          4 days ago

          So what if it’s new? Medicine that we now consider a basic necessity is newer than airplanes, and a significant portion of the world lives without it.

          Something beneficial not being available to everyone isn’t an argument to ensure no one has it.

          I wasn’t ridiculing your position, I was accurately stating how bleak it is. That you acknowledged that it was accurate but thought it was “ridicule” maybe says something about the position.

          Very few things are a “right”, and being a privilege doesn’t make something bad, it just means that it’s good and others don’t have it.
          Society advanced as we work to extend privileges to everyone, and it advanced faster when we take stock of the privileges we’ve developed and find ways to provide them better.
          Air and car travel are resource intensive and dirty ways to travel. Instead of denying people the wonders of the world, we should find ways to provide better solutions to the problem of travel, and leave the intensive solution to cases where it’s speed is needed.
          Instead of being mad at the family taking a plane to a beach vacation, be mad at the system that made taking the train more expensive.

          We should work to enrich the quality of people’s lives, not just leave huge deaths of people behind because it’s expensive or inconvenient to do otherwise.

          • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            4 days ago

            Want to enrich the quality of life of people? Stop wasting resources to travel the world, reduce your environmental impact so the people you plan on visiting can keep on living where their currently live.

            • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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              4 days ago

              Why? Our ancestors never worried about environmental impact, and it’s clear that the only thing that matters is what we used to do.

              Our ancestors used to find themselves in an environment that wasn’t good and they’d walk to somewhere that was. Or starve.

              Or we could, instead of shitting on people who want to see the world and and enjoy the abilities we’ve developed to do so, shit on the people who made the “not terrible” ways of doing that impossible.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                4 days ago

                Ok, so you’ll agree that in the meantime people need to stop traveling then? Right? RIGHT?

                • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                  4 days ago

                  How far is traveling? What means do you find acceptable? And until when do you mean?

                  Do I need to wait until I have access to a totally renewable train to go to the nice beach that’s a 90 minute drive away? What about the 25 minute drive to the flooded salt quarry that gives everyone a rash due to the stunning population of migratory waterfowl? The 15 minute drive to the park on the river with a vaguely unsettling murk to the water?

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    4 days ago

                    Hey, you just mentioned a bunch of destinations that you don’t need to use a plane to go to, good job, enjoy them!

                    Air travel is the issue, not traveling.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                4 days ago

                So I should drive a huge diesel truck without a catalytic converter because if I don’t do everything possible I might as well do nothing? Traveling the world is a luxury, get over it.

                • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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                  4 days ago

                  So, people should stop emigrating? Flying to Puerto Rico to see their families?

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    4 days ago

                    If people were responsible enough to take the environmental impact of air travel into consideration when making life choices they might reconsider their decision to move thousands of km away from their family.

                    Hell, if we just charged them based on the environmental cost they would realize they can’t afford it.

                • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                  4 days ago

                  No, you should sell your phone, computer and car because if you’re that angry about people partaking in luxuries with an environmental impactcand you don’t think “less impactful alternatives” are better than entirely forgoing the luxury, then it’s hypocritical of you to do anything but walk or bike and eschew optional things with environmental impact.

                  It’s quite specifically that you’ve been saying that other people should do without rather than doing better, so… You first. You have legs. You can bike. Our ancestors got along with less, so you can sell your car. You don’t need a phone. It’s a luxury you can live without, so sell yours and get over it.

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    4 days ago

                    Doing better is taking vacations close to home, it’s not never going on vacation. People have visited 20 countries but have never visited their own country or they make themselves believe that they need to go to Punta Cana once a year to feel good about their life.

                    The cellphone comparison is keeping the same phone for years (receiving shorter distances in more energy efficient means of transportation) vs changing phone every year (taking a plane to visit another country). Well guess what, I’ve been using the same phone for years so guess I’m good here.

    • Godwins_Law@lemmy.ca
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      5 days ago

      I think there’s a solution in taxing the heavy users while not punishing people who only fly every 1~3 years. This specifically needs to start with the abuse of private planes with ridiculously high carbon use per capita.

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        5 days ago

        In the end those heavy users represent nothing compared to the planes used by regular tourists. On an individual basis then sure, they’re worse, but that’s like saying African countries need to stop using old cars because they don’t have modern emission equipment while you’re stuck in traffic in LA in your 2020 Honda Civic.

        Traveling thousands of miles for a few days of vacation isn’t a right, it’s a privilege that people are abusing. People act like they can’t live without it but it’s a small minority of people who will take a plane in their lifetime.

        Emissions at altitude are worse than the same emissions at ground level and planes don’t have any filtering equipment.

        Their fuel economy per passenger isn’t that great either, two passengers in a small car burn less gas per km than if they were using the biggest plane full of passengers to travel the same distance. Four passengers in a V8 SUV are more fuel efficient than an A380 filled with passengers.

    • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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      4 days ago

      You do realize that tourism is a big part of a lot of ‘third world’ countries economy?

      Stopping or restricting air travel means that the poorest places would lose a big part of their income.