If your nation were being invaded I doubt you would demand people show they've been in combat with their own resources or else their calling for government led nation wide responses is illegitimate and hypocritical. And like global warming, the government would, through it's agencies, already know it is real and serious. No-one should have to go without stuff to get their elected representatives and governments to take the climate problem seriously. I'm disappointed you are, again and persistently, trying to make this about activism and not about the climate problem.
As it happens I think anyone who imagines people voluntarily choosing low emissions lifestyles will fix the problem are wrong; it isn't concerned people going without stuff that is needed, it is building a sufficient abundance of zero emissions energy to displace fossil fuel burning. When our primary energy is all zero emissions energy then everyone's emissions, even people who are extravagantly wasteful and don't care, will be low emissions. That will come from the investment choices of electricity generating companies and emissions intensive industries with the support of governments not frugal fanaticism.
I do some things and don't do some other things to reduce my personal emissions but the hell will I go all stone age to win the respect of people who would only mock me if I did - speaking of hypocrisy. I am a functioning member of the society and economy around me and it is a highly fossil fuel dependent one. A bit of sacrifice is okay with me, sure, but pointless gestures of personal emissions purity won't change the systemic problem of dependence on fossil fuels.
In practice it takes mobilising the fossil fueled industrial capabilities we have now to make sufficient low emissions energy capabilities to retire the fossil fuel burners in the future; there is no cold turkey or knock it down and start again. That isn't hypocrisy, it is basic practicality - and using fossil fuels to build replacements for fossil fuels applies to building nuclear as much as renewables. As does the appropriateness of electrification of heating and transport. Having a coal power station's output used to make solar panels that will produce many times the energy used to make them sounds like one of the best possible uses for it in the face of the climate problem.
Preserving enduring prosperity is the point of committing to strong climate action early; avoiding economic disruptions and collateral damage has been integral all along, and does it without indulging the false denial driven assumption that inaction is cheap.
Emerging climate policy, like renewable energy, is the work of a lot of capable people apart from environmental activists who take the problem seriously - and a lot more competent than you appear able to give them credit for.
As it happens I think anyone who imagines people voluntarily choosing low emissions lifestyles will fix the problem are wrong; it isn't concerned people going without stuff that is needed, it is building a sufficient abundance of zero emissions energy to displace fossil fuel burning. When our primary energy is all zero emissions energy then everyone's emissions, even people who are extravagantly wasteful and don't care, will be low emissions. That will come from the investment choices of electricity generating companies and emissions intensive industries with the support of governments not frugal fanaticism.
I do some things and don't do some other things to reduce my personal emissions but the hell will I go all stone age to win the respect of people who would only mock me if I did - speaking of hypocrisy. I am a functioning member of the society and economy around me and it is a highly fossil fuel dependent one. A bit of sacrifice is okay with me, sure, but pointless gestures of personal emissions purity won't change the systemic problem of dependence on fossil fuels.
In practice it takes mobilising the fossil fueled industrial capabilities we have now to make sufficient low emissions energy capabilities to retire the fossil fuel burners in the future; there is no cold turkey or knock it down and start again. That isn't hypocrisy, it is basic practicality - and using fossil fuels to build replacements for fossil fuels applies to building nuclear as much as renewables. As does the appropriateness of electrification of heating and transport. Having a coal power station's output used to make solar panels that will produce many times the energy used to make them sounds like one of the best possible uses for it in the face of the climate problem.
Preserving enduring prosperity is the point of committing to strong climate action early; avoiding economic disruptions and collateral damage has been integral all along, and does it without indulging the false denial driven assumption that inaction is cheap.
Emerging climate policy, like renewable energy, is the work of a lot of capable people apart from environmental activists who take the problem seriously - and a lot more competent than you appear able to give them credit for.