(no title)
czep
|
4 years ago
It used to be called "pollution". Reframing the topic as global warming or climate change was a dedicated effort to soften the language and introduce room for doubt. I mean, everyone agrees that pollution sounds bad and is bad and we should stop doing it. But by calling it climate change, suddenly there's now an avenue to challenge its legitimacy, and shift attention onto the ideological debates. Meanwhile, as everyone is distracted, industry gets a free pass to continue polluting with zero consequences.
smcl|4 years ago
dredmorbius|4 years ago
The modern sense of "environmental contamination" in common parlance dates largely to the early 1960s:
https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=pollution&year...
mensetmanusman|4 years ago
I have never failed to convince anyone in my midwest sphere of influence (midwest, know far right and far left folks) that ‘pollution’ needs to be dealt with.
You can replace ‘climate change’ in an essay with pollution and dramatically simplify changing peoples mind.
throwaway0a5e|4 years ago
The problem was re-framed because western industry mostly stopped belching obvious pollution and that framing of the problem did not resonate with western voters who could see that the rivers and sky were cleaner than they'd ever been. It used to be that smog was a feature of weekly weather in urban areas and if your dog jumped in a river 50mi downstream of a textile factory you'd know what color they were making the day before. By the 90s that kind of stuff was cleaned up a ton.
Not everything you don't like is the result of the evil other guys.
air7|4 years ago
wumpus|4 years ago
jeffbee|4 years ago
czep|4 years ago
ako|4 years ago
earleybird|4 years ago
unknown|4 years ago
[deleted]