Its thundersnowing in the east metro right now... >_>
yes, ever since we started considering Corporations people its really put a dent in our per person carbon footprint. you know since the average residential output in this country was somewhere in the 1/5th range of industrial output before.
*sigh* I was joking. Forget it. Industrial output is about 3/5th of our output as well (with about 1/5th coming from agriculture and 1/5th from residential). That's not the point. A) I was joking B) if "the American people" wanted to change things and were concerned about climate change, American politics could and would legislate for it. This doesn't happen, ergo, it's not something America, as a whole, feels concerned enough about to actually change anythign. It's been that way since the '90s, it hasn't changed yet. America doesn't have more "heavy" industry per person than any other country, doesn't have "bigger and more widespread climate problems" or "longer distances" than any other country, or whatever else I've heard as ridiculous reasons not to want to do anything about carbon footprint (I do, however, think carbon footprint is a disastrously bad way of comparing or calculating pollution - a diesel car produces less CO2 but more other pollutants than gasoline, for example).
Either you say "we, as a people, want to be good for the environment, but Evil MegaCorps don't, and they control congress", in which case GasBandit is right and you guys need to revolt. Or, "we, as a people, feel this is important, but not actually important enough to base our voting on it", which is fine, but does mean that yes,
you guys are polluters. I don't intrinsically have a problem with that. The USA likes to be policeman of the world, perhaps Europe can be the garbage man
. Or C, "we think this is important, but not something that should be put into legislation, because Freedom" in which case you're an idiot - pollution, like minimum wages, health insurance, slavery, and a number of similar things, aren't things a regular person can have much impact on - but they
are things that need to be there (or not) for the general good, because otherwise it
will lead to the rich and powerful pushing down the weak and poor. A corporation has
no reason to be more green than the competition - their CEO will never have to wear a mask or have a problem paying for clean water.