• Jack@lemmy.ca
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    21 hours ago

    I’m not offended - I understand most people have very different priorities. I personally think that preventing a mass extinction event is more important than police, doctors, schools, roads (for cars), and fascism; because I happen to think that a catastrophic climate cascade means nothing else matters. Healthcare is nice, but doctors will all be dead when the biosphere becomes unlivable.

    I don’t stand with the genocidal Hamas voters, nor with the genocidal Israeli voters.

    • neatchee@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      And that is exactly what the reply means by privilege. It is a luxury to be able to think that far ahead.

      It turns out, when you’re at risk of being dead in a week, a month, or a year, you tend not to care about whether humanity will be around in 20 years.

      So having the ability to focus on the long term is a privilege that the vulnerable do not have.

      Of course, these things are not mutually exclusive. But when you have two parties that both suck at climate care, but only one of them is trying to incarcerate or kill LGBTQA+ folks, for example, and your focus is on things like “don’t vote for anyone or you’re supporting fascism and climate destruction” it reeks of privilege and a disregard for the immediate welfare of your neighbors.

      EDIT: To put it another way - if the cost of humanity’s survival is sacrificing our LGBTQA+ neighbors, perhaps humanity is not worth saving.

      • Jack@lemmy.ca
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        3 hours ago

        So it’s okay to help yourself in the short term, and by doing so help make the biosphere unlivable?