To save everybody the trouble, this article only elaborates on reasons around the environmental impact and carbon footprint of traveling to an isolated place such as Antarctica.
I like that this trend of realizing that our hedonism is causing environmental damage.
Hollywood is a great example of frivolous waste that is producing movies that will never be watched by anyone in 100 years. Not to mention provides little to negative value right now. If there wasnt infinite entertainment, you could argue that hedonism is the correct ethical system and we should invest into entertainment, but there is enough entertainment to last multiple lifetimes.
We can probably expand this to things like coffee, but you could argue that it provides value.
How about firework shows? Veblen goods?
Would love to see low-impact entertainment become a thing.
Just want to say how lame that is. What's the point of even living then? Why not think about how we can enjoy life sustainability and pragmatically instead of doing without for essentially religious reasons. This doesn't mean pretending to be happy while not doing stuff, it means finding ways to do what we want in such a way that our kids can do it to. Otherwise we might as well strip mine everything now and then shut down into the kind of lifestyle zealots are proposing. Some kind of pious self denial is as old as society I guess, but it doesn't help anything. What kind of a defeatist society do we have that people advocate giving up?
Why not play the million video games that already have been released? Why not read the million books that have been released? Watch the TV shows and movies that have already been released?
When you are done consuming all of them, you will be dead multiple times over.
All these examples of “living” involve being in a single location while being completely sedentary, something I would say most people would get very tired of quickly.
Everyone here seems to miss the point. The point is that a large population of the world (and likely almost everyone on this forum) live an over hedonistic/decadent lifestyle that overconsumes and contributes to environment destruction. The fact that most people can't seem to grasp that astounds me. This being a more politically liberal crowd whike being generally more wealthy crowd and consumerist is also striking. It seems like every day there is a new post about the climate change and the comments are quick to point fingers towards the fossil fuel conglomerate yet nobody ever confesses their excessive consumption that fuels thise conglomerates. Everyone here is too busy trying to sell their software that doesn't really do anything positive for world.
To your point directly, it is totally possible to "live" in a single location. Nobody said anything about being sedentary. There are many ways to make oneself useful every day. But if you live in New Mexico, maybe fresh salmon from the grocery store isn't an option society needs. These things are nice, not necessary, and it wasn't that long ago that we all got along fine without all the options required to feed every hedonistic impulse we have.
There are plenty of things we don't let people create because of their harm or risk of harm. You're not allowed to create a nuclear or chemical weapon, for instance. And, no matter how much your artistic soul desires it, you're probably not allowed to create a snuff film.
8 billions living a western lifestyle was always going to be a catastrophe and those praying to st. Technology to bail them out for that catastrophe, are hardend anti social creatures future generations have every right to attack.
The individual hedonism of the common person, even the extreme examples like in this article, are a drop in the bucket compared to industrial manufacturing, shipping and power generation.
And not for lack of advancements in those fields, no, but for the sake of filling the coffers of shareholders.
The hedonism that's destroying all we love isn't watching movies or drinking coffee, it's unchecked greed - hoarding of capital.
It's easier to tackle the problem at the source, consumers will adapt to say making single use plastics more expensive for manufacturers, but probably not a campaign asking them to use less single use plastics.
Consumers require the end result, we (as a collective) generally don't care how we get it.
I want my home to have electricity - that doesn't require that it comes from a coal plant spewing fly ash and carbon into the air. That decision is made by someone who stands to gain less money if the transition to cleaner sources is made.
Hedonism isn't necessarily the enemy, as one can take hedonistic enjoyment from low-impact activities. And indeed many common pastimes are already in that category.
Your point about realization is key, I think. The awareness of the consequences of various activities and choices. Which somewhat relies upon translating those consequences into metrics that ordinary people can easily grasp.
For example, in some countries, it's law that smoking tobacco must be sold in packaging which includes graphic imagery of surgical outcomes from tobacco use. Staring a diseased organ in the face (so to speak!) every time you have a cigarette is an easily grasped metric.
Perhaps other industries should fall under similar controls. Airline tickets with images of ???. Petrol pumps with ???. But of course, therein lie long battles between different interest and commercial groups. Or, as in tobacco's case, for the situation to progress to sufficiently large and undeniable quantities of deaths and disease, such that action becomes a belated but foregone conclusion.
It strikes me that concerns with “sustainability” like this may be a bit passé given the population of humans is very likely to peak, and decline soon. That solves myriad problems.
Hacker News Man wants to ban the entertainment options of millions because they are a "frivolous waste". Coming soon, list of entertainment options that are not wasteful, and thus should be allowed for the masses ("low impact entertainment", as defined by Hacker News Man's impact metrics).
How about proposing better ways to price externalities, if applicable, to the entertainment options and then let people decide whether they are willing to pay for the impact (by, perhaps, working towards eliminating or reversing said impact).
I'll consider not travelling, be it for business or pleasure, when the Powers That Be(tm) start not flying around in their Executive Transports(tm) to meet up and have Grand Feasts(tm) that cost entire slices of national budgets.
G7? COP? NATO? UN? And more? Remote all that bullshit. There's no reason Biden or Kishida or Xi or Macron or whoever the hell it is has to go anywhere in person anymore in the era of high speed digital communications.
At least politicians traveling are ostensibly doing it as representatives of their constituents. In theory it is reasonable that diplomatic summits whose outcome could affect millions of people are attended not by the millions but by a small number of professionals whose job it is to advocate for the millions.
Much less defensible, from a utilitarian perspective, are the corporate retreats and company meetups that are quite common in the tech industry.
Suggesting that war, presumably the invasion of Ukraine, is in any way, shape or form, comparable to leisure travel, is absurd.
That said, I would be really interested in hearing you make your case that people should just accept invasion “for the environment” or they can’t care at all about any other environmental issues.
> Suggesting that war, presumably the invasion of Ukraine, is in any way, shape or form, comparable to leisure travel, is absurd.
It's not comparable at all. The ukraine war is infinitely worse for the environment.
> That said, I would be really interested in hearing you make your case that people should just accept invasion “for the environment” or they can’t care at all about any other environmental issues.
We accepted the invasions of iraq, afghanistan, et al. What's another invasion amongst friends? Gotta save the environment right?
The title of the article implies there are reasons why you wouldn't want to go there, and the body of the article tries to guilt you into pressuring your legislators to prevent people from going there.
> Traveling to Antarctica is a carbon-intensive activity.
> By one estimate, the carbon footprint for a person’s Antarctic cruise can be roughly equivalent to the average European’s output for a year, because cruise ships are heavy polluters and tourists have to fly so far.
> Almost all travel presents this problem on some level. But “this kind of tourism involves a larger carbon footprint than other kinds of tourism,”
Other kinds of tourism, like NA and EU tourists going to Asia? Like ultra long haul flights from Australia & New Zealand to the US? Singapore to New York?
I think reading this article is a waste of time because it's acting like going to Antartica is something special. Yes, there are plenty of tourists who only drive or take the train to get to their destination, but there are millions of tourists who fly 12-20 hours each way to go to the other side of the world which is significantly more than the 100,000 visitors Antarctica gets.
I'm saddened to see that The Atlantic, which once published the amazing piece "My Family's Slave", is also publishing this garbage with gems like
> As a species, we’re not very good at self-restraint (see: AI)
If the article solely made a case for banning unnecessary boat traffic then I’d be all for it, but they muddle their point by including irrelevant parts such as
> Last year, for instance, a company named White Desert opened its latest luxury camp in Antarctica. Its sleeping domes, roughly 60 miles from the coast, are perched near an emperor-penguin colony and can be reached only by private jet. Guests, who pay at least $65,000 a stay, are encouraged to explore the continent by plane, Ski-Doos, and Arctic truck before enjoying a gourmet meal whose ingredients are flown in from South Africa.
If this camp requires coming by plane, isn’t this good since it avoids boat trips? The previous paragraph talked about harming the ecosystem but it doesn’t make any claim or offer evidence that these camps and their guests are littering the ecosystem.
Or is the point still “planes bad”? If so, then my criticism from my parent comment still applies.
I agree it could have more evidence, but it seems very likely that this trip is far more carbon intensive than a normal plane trip since all the food and probably a number of other supplies and amenities have to be flown in.
That being said, I think the overall lifestyle of people who pay $65,000 to visit Antarctica is a bigger problem than trips to Antarctica. "just one hundredth of the world population (77 million individuals) emits about 50% more than the entire bottom half of the population (3.8 billion individuals)." [0]
It’s a bigger problem with a bigger opportunity. We just need policies that impact 77 million people instead of policies that impact 3.8 billion people .
If tourism to Antarctica is really spiking and it's legitimately bad for the ecosystem / environment, I'd say writing an article about it in a major publication is just about the worst possible thing you could do to help the situation.
I know that's not the point of this article, but I really don't understand the appeal of going to Antarctica (unless you're going for work).
I'm sure it's beautiful out there, but all I see is a very expensive trip out to somewhere that's freezing cold with very little infrastructure beyond the bare necessities for people who are working out there. That sounds like the opposite of a good time.
45 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 98.4 ms ] threadHollywood is a great example of frivolous waste that is producing movies that will never be watched by anyone in 100 years. Not to mention provides little to negative value right now. If there wasnt infinite entertainment, you could argue that hedonism is the correct ethical system and we should invest into entertainment, but there is enough entertainment to last multiple lifetimes.
We can probably expand this to things like coffee, but you could argue that it provides value.
How about firework shows? Veblen goods?
Would love to see low-impact entertainment become a thing.
Why not play the million video games that already have been released? Why not read the million books that have been released? Watch the TV shows and movies that have already been released?
When you are done consuming all of them, you will be dead multiple times over.
To your point directly, it is totally possible to "live" in a single location. Nobody said anything about being sedentary. There are many ways to make oneself useful every day. But if you live in New Mexico, maybe fresh salmon from the grocery store isn't an option society needs. These things are nice, not necessary, and it wasn't that long ago that we all got along fine without all the options required to feed every hedonistic impulse we have.
On mobile. Writing is probably fucked up. Sue me.
To save the planet? Meh
And not for lack of advancements in those fields, no, but for the sake of filling the coffers of shareholders.
The hedonism that's destroying all we love isn't watching movies or drinking coffee, it's unchecked greed - hoarding of capital.
"industrial manufacturing, shipping and power generation."
I want my home to have electricity - that doesn't require that it comes from a coal plant spewing fly ash and carbon into the air. That decision is made by someone who stands to gain less money if the transition to cleaner sources is made.
Your point about realization is key, I think. The awareness of the consequences of various activities and choices. Which somewhat relies upon translating those consequences into metrics that ordinary people can easily grasp.
For example, in some countries, it's law that smoking tobacco must be sold in packaging which includes graphic imagery of surgical outcomes from tobacco use. Staring a diseased organ in the face (so to speak!) every time you have a cigarette is an easily grasped metric.
Perhaps other industries should fall under similar controls. Airline tickets with images of ???. Petrol pumps with ???. But of course, therein lie long battles between different interest and commercial groups. Or, as in tobacco's case, for the situation to progress to sufficiently large and undeniable quantities of deaths and disease, such that action becomes a belated but foregone conclusion.
I'd say you're optimistic: US copyright on works for hire expires 95 years after first publication.
How about proposing better ways to price externalities, if applicable, to the entertainment options and then let people decide whether they are willing to pay for the impact (by, perhaps, working towards eliminating or reversing said impact).
> We can probably expand this to things like coffee, but you could argue that it provides value.
why should anyone need coffee, when they can just take caffeine pills?
G7? COP? NATO? UN? And more? Remote all that bullshit. There's no reason Biden or Kishida or Xi or Macron or whoever the hell it is has to go anywhere in person anymore in the era of high speed digital communications.
Much less defensible, from a utilitarian perspective, are the corporate retreats and company meetups that are quite common in the tech industry.
That is why we ostensibly have ambassadors and embassies for the few occasions when someone must be physically present abroad.
For everything else, there's Maste-- I mean your favourite means of high speed, high fidelity, instantaneous, secure telecommunications.
Their logic is similiar to admonishing a smoker for causing environmental damage while supporting the coal industry.
That said, I would be really interested in hearing you make your case that people should just accept invasion “for the environment” or they can’t care at all about any other environmental issues.
It's not comparable at all. The ukraine war is infinitely worse for the environment.
> That said, I would be really interested in hearing you make your case that people should just accept invasion “for the environment” or they can’t care at all about any other environmental issues.
We accepted the invasions of iraq, afghanistan, et al. What's another invasion amongst friends? Gotta save the environment right?
https://allthatsinteresting.com/snake-island
> By one estimate, the carbon footprint for a person’s Antarctic cruise can be roughly equivalent to the average European’s output for a year, because cruise ships are heavy polluters and tourists have to fly so far.
> Almost all travel presents this problem on some level. But “this kind of tourism involves a larger carbon footprint than other kinds of tourism,”
Other kinds of tourism, like NA and EU tourists going to Asia? Like ultra long haul flights from Australia & New Zealand to the US? Singapore to New York?
I think reading this article is a waste of time because it's acting like going to Antartica is something special. Yes, there are plenty of tourists who only drive or take the train to get to their destination, but there are millions of tourists who fly 12-20 hours each way to go to the other side of the world which is significantly more than the 100,000 visitors Antarctica gets.
I'm saddened to see that The Atlantic, which once published the amazing piece "My Family's Slave", is also publishing this garbage with gems like
> As a species, we’re not very good at self-restraint (see: AI)
> Last year, for instance, a company named White Desert opened its latest luxury camp in Antarctica. Its sleeping domes, roughly 60 miles from the coast, are perched near an emperor-penguin colony and can be reached only by private jet. Guests, who pay at least $65,000 a stay, are encouraged to explore the continent by plane, Ski-Doos, and Arctic truck before enjoying a gourmet meal whose ingredients are flown in from South Africa.
If this camp requires coming by plane, isn’t this good since it avoids boat trips? The previous paragraph talked about harming the ecosystem but it doesn’t make any claim or offer evidence that these camps and their guests are littering the ecosystem.
Or is the point still “planes bad”? If so, then my criticism from my parent comment still applies.
That being said, I think the overall lifestyle of people who pay $65,000 to visit Antarctica is a bigger problem than trips to Antarctica. "just one hundredth of the world population (77 million individuals) emits about 50% more than the entire bottom half of the population (3.8 billion individuals)." [0]
[0] https://wir2022.wid.world/chapter-6/#tab_61b433da73d0e
I'm sure it's beautiful out there, but all I see is a very expensive trip out to somewhere that's freezing cold with very little infrastructure beyond the bare necessities for people who are working out there. That sounds like the opposite of a good time.