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HyulianGrader | 1 year ago

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toomuchtodo|1 year ago

This is internalizing the cost of the externality. If paying the true cost of something is oppressive, hooboy, you're gonna have a bad time, because humanity has been living on credit for 100+ years wrt carbon emissions, the ag revolution, etc. I too am unhappy when a discount I was getting due to mispricing disappears.

If you don't believe in climate change, the argument is not worth having.

https://www.wired.com/story/everythings-about-to-get-a-hell-...

fergonco|1 year ago

If my family had to pay the true cost of the food I ate before becoming independent I wouldn't be here.

Now my family has a couple of engineers, and my work has a positive impact in mitigation of climate change.

There are many realities out there. And many ways to fight climate change.

fdjhgA|1 year ago

Denmark was not very eager to investigate the NordStream leak, source of gigantic methane emissions.

All European countries support a stalemate war, oil laundering shipped via massively inefficient routes with high dirty ship diesel emissions, military CO2 emissions, private jets traveling to Davos (there is no fuel tax for private jets in Germany!) and a lot more.

But let us take away the milk from poor people.

api|1 year ago

The problem is that this is a regressive tax. It falls disproportionately on the poor, working class, and farmers. This will only lead to a populist revolt that will set the whole project of reducing GHG emissions back by a generation or two, not to mention being grossly unfair.

It's also going after a bit player in global GHG emissions. Replacing coal for electricity generation and oil wherever possible (land transport) are the big ones and where the vast majority of the attention should go.

You don't solve a problem by going after the hardest aspects of it down at the end of the long tail. You solve it by going after the head, which is carbon-rich fossil fuels.

Dig1t|1 year ago

It's easy to throw around the word "externalities" and just ignore what it means to real people who have been farming their land for generations.

Everything has externalities, just being born and existing has negative externalities, why don't we just confine everyone to their apartment to limit their externalities? Why don't we force people to pay a tax every time they leave their house to internalize their externalities?

This rule is authoritarian, and it is wrong for the government to use its monopoly on violence to do this to farmers.

vuxie|1 year ago

Or, in this case, a tax pushed for by multiple large and small parties, negotiated in agreement with the agricultural sector. Long time since it was polled, but it was like 50/50. No elites needed.

Tadpole9181|1 year ago

The quality of discussions on HN seriously seems to have plummeted in the past two years.

"Differing opinions than mine are evil. There will be no discussion."

And it's the top comment too. Good Lord.

soupfordummies|1 year ago

Shame indeed.

That whole idea of “my opinion isn’t up for debate because it’s actually not my opinion — it’s a fact. And therefore there will be no discussion…”

It’s infiltrated so many other social spheres and I would argue it’s one of the top contributors to why were so polarized and divided today.

no_time|1 year ago

What discussion would you like to see? I feel like this article doesn't really belong here to begin with.

I don't think this is a topic where people can be swayed by well articulated arguments unlike say, under post about the merits of Clojure.

I can see myself giving Clojure a shot after reading a nice comment about it. But no amount of arguing is going to convince me to approve of a tax on a food item I like. The difference in beliefs just goes too deep.

arp242|1 year ago

It's from an account that literally has a post complaining about "The Jews" ending with "Heil Hitler". I quote: "I cannot wait for the 30s again. I'm so glad I'm here and still young enough to be actively involved in what's to come. H[eil] H[itler]" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40768048

So I think it's pretty clear who they mean with (((spiteful hegemonic elite)))...

candiddevmike|1 year ago

That's a lot of hyperbole for "price of beef gets closer to the real cost of producing it".

Chicken and turkey have always been cheaper and are just as nutritious, if you want to stick with meat.

mikeyouse|1 year ago

Some say pricing externalities, some say a spiteful hegemonic elite striving to humiliate its populace. Tomato - tomahto.

rvense|1 year ago

They haven't been working this much land this intensively for millennia. So-called "conventional agriculture" is an experiment that's younger than my dad. Although this tax is only about carbon, the negative effects of the Danish agricultural sector on the rest of us who have also been living here for millennia are too many to mention. They provide next to no jobs and result in a few percent of GDP. In return, they are killing our seas with algae, poisoning the rivers and groundwater, and taking up sixty percent of the surface area.

Fully half of my country is used to grow pig feed, and most of that meat is exported.

The rest of the world can grow its own fucking bacon if it wants it so badly. This country needs less agriculture. There's no "but".

HorizonXP|1 year ago

The runoff argument is a good one. That’s an externality that’s easily forgotten.

However, if Denmark stops exporting pork and tells everyone to grow it itself, what happens when those countries stop exporting products that Denmark doesn’t make? Is Denmark going to produce its own computers?

I understand the frustration and the argument. Maybe there’s something else Denmark can and should export.

fergonco|1 year ago

The key is on which farms is this applied. If it's on big companies I find it ok: they have the power to emit a lot of gas, I guess. But on the small/family farm?

A grand-uncle(?) of mine had to kill one or two of his 5 cows when the country entered the European Union. Just about retiring age. I totally relate to your comment.

bryanlarsen|1 year ago

It applies to all farms, but the proceeds are distributed as adjustment subsidies. Small farms will receive a disproportionate share of the subsidies, so they will likely be net beneficiaries.

piva00|1 year ago

> I wasn't going to click until fascism was brought up and now he sounds like an interesting guy.

> I'm the most racist person you can imagine and I don't get it.

On a submission titled Data-fueled neurotargeting could kill democracy:

> Cool. How can we help?

Look, this is a place for discussion, not edgy behaviour. It'd be best if you tried to participate in the same way, you are not spitting facts and your opinion is, at best, quarrelsome. It'd be best for all of us if you approached this space with less of this stupid rhetoric.

entropi|1 year ago

To me, this seems like the way to reduce the carbon emissions the least, while pissing off the largest possible voter base. Also making the least fortunate suffer the most. Brilliant move, slowly clapping here.

Make a few decisions like this in a few years and voila, you get pissed off masses who won't suffer any more taxes or cancelled bbq dinners for your "libtard agenda" and another Trump-like fellow will rise. Meanwhile no one taxes private jets or yachts for carbon emissions. I guess their costs are not "externalized".

bryanlarsen|1 year ago

"no one taxes private jets or yachts for carbon emissions"

Canada does, it has a carbon tax on pretty much everything except fertilizer and heating fuel.

Broad based carbon taxes are the correct solution, but they're also the reason Trudeau is going to lose the next election.

rvense|1 year ago

Nobody's barbecue is going to be cancelled because of this. Meat and animal products are some of the cheapest and most easily available calories you can get here.

lawlessone|1 year ago

>This is the kind of oppressive tax a spiteful hegemonic elite would impose

it'S lITERalLy ninEtEeN eIghTY-four

wegfawefgawefg|1 year ago

It isnt really fair to mock this viewpoint. Everything genuinely is 1984 now, but worse because we have AI on our cameras, and 1984 didnt have the internet. Or robots, which may soon be relevant.

stuckinhell|1 year ago

The studies showing red meat is actually good for you, kinda make me believe this. My health has also dramatically improved after eating more red meat and less low fat vegetarian options, but I'm a sample size of 1. My personal lived experience about what actually worked for me, really makes me question more things.

lolinder|1 year ago

Lived experience is one thing and if it works for you go for it, but as for the studies: there are studies that will justify basically any diet decision you want to make.

If you want to rely on answers from authoritative sources your only logical option is to go with the mainstream consensus which is still that red meat is terrible for you. As soon as you branch off into less mainstream studies you're now in the territory where you could logically justify nearly any health decision based on which studies you decide to cherry pick. At that point you have to ask yourself if you're really basing your decisions on the studies or if you're picking your studies based on your decision.

Again, the science is so sketchy that just doing what works for you makes sense, but it's not a good idea to pretend that you're doing it because of the science.

wegfawefgawefg|1 year ago

I was mostly eating vegetables for years, but eventually chronically underweight. At 25 I went to the doctor for severe knee pain, and the doctor told me I just need to eat some god damn food. I went out and gorged myself on korean barbeque. After that I started adding beef, lard, and meat in general to my previously mostly lentils and fried vegetables cooking. I am now no longer underweight and dont experience strange symptoms of deficiency such as the papillae on my tongue dissapearing, and loud painful joints.

candiddevmike|1 year ago

> The studies showing red meat is actually good for you, kinda make me believe this

Which studies are those?

pengaru|1 year ago

> less low fat vegetarian options

so... you eat less bread and feel better? surprise!