Why Governments Won't Act On Climate Change?
This video dives into the intersection of climate change, government policy, and economic frameworks, focusing on how systemic issues like discounting functions and cost-benefit analysis undervalue human lives and the future.
The host traces the origins of these problems back to historical policies like the 1936 Flood Control Act, Reagan-era executive orders, and how these frameworks continue to justify inaction on urgent issues like climate change.
Using examples like asbestos regulation, the fossil fuel industry's deceptive practices, and lawsuits like Rockhopper's, the video highlights how prioritizing profits over people perpetuates a destructive status quo.
The video critiques the "discount rate," a tool that devalues future benefits and lives, explaining its role in delaying climate action.
It discusses the ideological biases behind this system and the harmful consequences of framing environmental protection through a corporate profit lens.
While highlighting these systemic failures, the video calls for urgent climate action, rejecting the notion that future well-being can be reduced to numbers on a balance sheet.
Topics: Climate Change, Global Warming, Government And Politics, Sustainable Development Goals
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