this post was submitted on 09 Apr 2025
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[–] cecilkorik@lemmy.ca 38 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

If we're actually trying to achieve sustainability, we have to stop being consumers. "consume" means to use up and destroy leaving nothing useful behind. This is what consumers do. Think about this the next time someone says the "additional price is passed on to the consumer" and phrases like that. Want to stop paying those prices? Stop consuming!

Instead of sending your money to some evil dictatorship on the other side of the world to "consume" something else, we should be building a system and a society where we can give that money, probably a little more more money even, to somebody in your local community to do actual productive work that doesn't destroy the environment.

Right to repair is a huge project that we need to force down the throats of the large corporations who want to keep us being consumers forever no matter how much it destroys the planet. But India can still do things like this even without having the "right" to repair, they just figure out a solution and do it anyway, and we can too if we learn from them. We throw away so much perfectly useful stuff. Not just electronics but everything in our modern world from clothes to cars, because economics has told us that it's expensive to repair or repurpose or salvage, and cheaper to buy a new one, buy more, buy in bulk, buy and dispose. And it often is, but that's false economics. It's the economics of throwing more shit in landfill and digging up more tons of rock and burning coal to turn it into something new. It's the economics with all the costs externalized onto the environment and onto the future. It's the economics of us destroying ourselves.

[–] njordomir@lemmy.world 9 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Yeah, even if we didn't reuse, we could at least recycle. We got so into the craze of shoving computers in everything we stopped considering if we might be better off sticking to easily fixable tech for some things. My appliances are old as dirt, but parts are very affordable, there are 100s of youtube videos on how to fix them, and there are very few things that can break to begin with. That's a far cry from the landfill of bricked smart fridges next to a factory somewhere.

[–] iopq@lemmy.world 8 points 2 weeks ago

When I replaced the batteries in my earbuds I broke the left one. It shouldn't be this hard to replace a part that eventually dies