@dredmorbius
I’m not going to sign off on a defense of
littering, leaving the lights on when we leave a room, failing to car-pool
Those are things that, to the extent we can avoid them, we should avoid.
And then re
Actions which require perfect volitional compliance in the face of ever-greater rewards for defection are doomed.
Let me first steel doll that statement by replying to it as if you hadn’t written “ever-greater” or “perfect” or “compliance” (don’t worry, will address that too soon).
Actions which require [… a critical mass of voluntary participation] in the face of […] rewards for defection are doomed.
I have already expressed my pessimisim re the overall, aggregate success of such actions but I think that without such actions we would be even less likely to succeed.Collective action whether via shoe or ballot also require participation. Haven’t seen much success in either, these last few decades. I am not opposing them; I advocate for them. Hope springs eternal in every human breast. With a dream in your heart you’re never alone. But that doesn’t mean that Leonard is legitimate in arguing against people refraining from littering, leaving lights on, or using cars.The forest is made of trees and vice versa.
Collective action is made by people, just like cutting down on individual littering, driving, and smoking is.
Regarding
perfect
Rather than “perfect”, what we need is “enough”, i.e. a “critical mass”. We need enough people to do better — whether that’s in the boardroom, in the congress, on the bench, with shoe in hand, or behind the wheel or behind the shopping cart. (And yeah, researching and implementing ways to not only halt but actually reverse emissions ior their resultant climate change.)
That nitpick of mine isn’t necessarily a statement of optimism: I don’t know that the human civilization as a whole could muster such a critical mass of enough. “Perfect” would at least be possible even if extremely unlikely. You wouldn’t need more than everybody. When the target is “enough”, I don’t know whether that means one out of ten (optimist) or eleven out of ten (pessimist).
But for the purpose of game theory, this is not just a nitpick. If the complex net of messed-up-ness were reducible to one single payout matrix of discrete choices (it’s not), “perfect compliance” (which is needed to refrain from, for example, nuclear war) is a rather different game than a game of “enough”. In the game of “enough”, every little bit helps. And, standing in the way of these types of actions (“actions” such as, uh, refraining from littering) is something I am not gonna sign off on.
You misunderstood what you quoted from me:
You, an individual, can’t effect consumer pattern change on the wide/collective level. But you apparently can effect policy making, production, or marketing pattern change on the wide/collective level?
The latter (“palace-storming”) is the type of action you, Leonard and me is calling for. I’m not your enemy there. In addition, I ask you to not fight or argue agains the former type of action (“wallet-voting”). I don’t know which moment, which choice, which second this tide is going to turn from an uphill to a downhill battle but standing in the way of change is not OK.
Re
compliance
A.k.a. participation in saving the world. Everything you say on the futility of participation at the consumer level is as true of the corporate or the political (whether ballot or revo) levels. But I’m not giving up—on any and every level, we need to fix this!
Re:
Ever-greater
I singled out this word not because it’d be false: arguably, the lure of consumerism, luxury and gilded cages is increasing (even though the phrase “gilded cage” is as old as Aesop). But because you argued for a game-theoretical framework where my participation (in “refuse, reduce, reuse, recycle”) is inherently linked to rewards for non-participants. Me not drinking soda or littering somehow benefits those who stand to gain from soda or littering. This is one of several reasons why this particular game model is not applicable here.
The capitilist engines of destruction are helped by which:
Refuse, reduce, reuse, recycle?Non-participation in refuse, reduce, reuse, recycle?Obviously the latter more than the former. So don’t preach that.