I mean, it did up until maybe now.
Sure. That doesn't mean smell isn't telling us something though.
Eh, I'm not sure addressing it at the same time is as helpful as it seems.
People have limited bandwidth and energy. Better to rally them to supporting climate action targeting companies, which has the knock on effect of influencing people's personal climate responsibility. (e.g. if you put a carbon/GHG tax and include the meat industry, then all of a sudden veggie/vegan alternatives are a lot cheaper and people end up buying them without having to personally and collectively motivate themselves.)
Edit: at this point I'm beginning to think that people arguing for consumer responsibility as equally or even more important than legal regulation on emitters are at best useful idiots propping up polluting industries or at worse bad faith actors.
But the average person does not care enough.
Can you point to examples where this has worked to change mass social behaviour where it hasn't been underpinned by laws or regulation or taken multiple generations to achieve?
We need change now. Targeting companies is the only way to change things now - not some years down the line when eventually we get every common person to understand that taking on hardship voluntarily is prevents collective hardship even more years down the line.
Maybe, get out of the way? Like police officers in civilised societies?
If a car is going fast enough to endanger you, killing the driver will not stop the car.
You guys should try having kids. You'll learn to fall asleep within moments.
Miracle cure, I tell ya.
...do... do we have a /c/HailCorporate yet?
An inconvenience?! Murder them.
Fuck you. You're part of the problem.
There's also DuckDuckGo's browser - but I'm not sure what it's based on.
Fire Engine Tank Trap.
Unlike a normal tank trap, this works by forcing crippling indecision upon the crew over which outlet to attach to.