@dredmorbius
And it’s crossing annoyance thresholds.
This has been a very provocative and frustrating discussion on my end too. I feel misread and strawdolled.
You come across as repeatedly responding to me as if I were a complete randian minarchist saying “don’t vote, don’t organize, don’t do actions — just leave it to consumers to behave responsibility and it’s fine.” Since I am saying the exact opposite of that, then yeah, there’s a frustrating expression/clarity issue. I am saying “DO vote, DO organize, DO direct action. Also don’t litter.”
As far as your position, it comes across as being that ANY attempt at one person doing one thing slightly less harmfully/wastefully is not only
- improductive/pointless, but actually
- actively counterproductive/harmful
Since you said that you were off the soda and on the RRRR, that apparently and hopefully can’t be what you mean. So yes, please, be careful and clear with your messaging around this.
I have encountered many people “downstream” from discussions like this who have gotten the takeaway that RRRR is pointless, dumb, harmful and a fool’s game. Please help change their minds.
The reason you come across as having that message is that you write things like “the ‘individual reponsibility’ market mechanism creates defectors, who pay less and receive more”. Which, OK, payout matrix time:
A defects, B defects: awful, a lot of littering
A cooperates, B defects: half the littering
A cooperate, B cooperates: neither litters, yay!
Neither the amount of defection, impact of defection, or rewards for defection are direct functions of the presence of cooperators. If by “cooperation” we mean lowered consumtion of things like burgers, soda and cars.
When the product has a negative externality we obv want to participate in lowering the demand for it by refusing it.
Taking your statement at face value it’d mean that the correct response to lower defection rates is to… actively defect & encourage defection!? That’s how people gonna read it! They’re gonna be like “Wow, only way to fight big burger ag fac is by buying more of their burgers, burger-eating is a tool our opposition use freely so we gotta dig in!” Since that can’t be what you mean, then yeah, we need more clarity here!
It’s not the actions Leonard criticises but the framing, for the reasons stated.
So I’ve said over and over again that we can do both. We do need to be careful to not remove these issues from the political realm and to keep identifying and demanding change on a larger scale, including what is out of reach of consumers (including but not limited to business/corporate non-consumer-driven externalities).
And vice versa — for example, there is no central solution to fix the issue of paint getting in the water from consumers cleaning their brushes at home. (Did math stuff for a Canadian water treatment op for a while.) That is an issue that is currently out of reach of the organizations (such as states or syndicates).
Collective action resulting in newly codified rights, resonsibilities, torts, and standing create a hard floor.
I have said that I am in favor of newly codified rights, resonsibilities, torts, and standing over and over and over again. I don’t know how to get from here to there but I am on board with these things. I am not fighting them, not in the way of them, not your enemy re them.
Just as I am in favor of an end to overconsumtion, waste, emissions, littering, cars.
As I said, Jevon’s paradox of increasing rewards for defectors is not a direct function or response to good behavior. I.e. the “me refusing soda does not benefit soda” example.
Collective action has its own problems; I’ve written many thousands of words on the snowdrift dilemma previously, and proposals how to get around it.
One of the points I am trying to say is that things that are described as “collective action” (such as voting, striking or organizing) depend in individuals acting, and things described as “individual actions” (such as RRRR) work better when many people do it — collectively.
That’s what I mean by the two tracks being in some ways the same.
False.
The dynamics differ offering different capabilities (and failure modes).
I should’ve been explicit that I meant the same in this particular regard.
And I have beem explicit that they differ in other regards which is why I’ve been saying both.
Market failures aren’t resolved by marketing them harder.
Man, I wish I had finished writing that book called “market failures” I put on my “someday/maybe” list 20 years ago. You are preaching to the choir on this, which I thought you knew? Markets suck! And putting as heavy of an emphasis as I do on lowering consumtion, on refuse, is not “marketing harder”.