I really appreciate lists like this. I'd add a few of my own: only fly on 
business and only when necessary, work remotely as much as possible, 
consolidate online orders to reduce the number of deliveries, tap water, etc. I 
fail often, though, e.g. taking 2 extra bodies with me on my last business 
trip, extra trips with my pickup truck during my recent move, eating lots of 
meat while on the cancer drugs, etc.

The trouble, however, is that no amount of individual cutting back by a 
conscientious person will compensate for the behavior of your average American. 
Renee's son, for example, lives in fear of tap water and, therefore, only 
drinks bottled water ... mostly from little plastic bottles ... never mind all 
the plastic in his clothing, which consists mostly of tech-fabrics. My closest 
and oldest friend is, in spite of my attempts to shame him, a committed 
tourist, flying to 2 or more distant lands every year just for *pleasure*. And 
even though he has a decent public transit route to his job, he drives his 
(admittedly efficient) gas-powered scooter ~40 miles every workday .... never 
mind all the .75 ton trucks carrying city-cowboys to their desk jobs at 85 mph 
in, say, Dallas, TX.

It seems a little like bvllsh¡t. Their behaviors are easier and more 
"efficient" than the penny-wise behaviors that are more energy efficient, in 
the same way bvllsh¡t spreads/survives more easily than truth. Any solution 
will come in the form of something that severely *resets* all of our behavior, 
be it government or the earth, herself.


On 1/1/20 8:08 PM, Curt McNamara wrote:
> * year round biking, very low auto use; high efficiency home insulation; 
> setback thermostat; no ac; purchase wind energy; eat local food (mostly 
> plants); educate those who are interested.

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

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