2021-04-04 at 5:21 PM UTC
Anyone watch this?
It's a pretty good eco-documentary coming from a deep-green point of view, which points out how industrial society is unsustainable, how renewable energy is just an unrealistic cope by the system, how dependent on oil and gas we are, and how the real problem is that there are too many people consuming too much stuff for the planet to support.
Predictably it sent the system nuts, and nearly got Michael Moore cancelled - perhaps he should have stuck to his bread and butter of stirring up anti-white hatred.
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2021-05-14 at 7:10 AM UTC
oil will be needed for making solar panels to crude oils for heavy machinery to vasoline products
we might be forced to allot things like a fucking commie bread and vodka line
2021-05-14 at 2:05 PM UTC
oil is the most abundant renewable resources this planet has to offer.
2021-05-14 at 2:21 PM UTC
yeah i watched it and he is right on, all of these alternative solutions to energy are scams and solve nothing. hey instead of burning some black sludge 5 miles underground, lets burn trees! yeah, thatll be so woke and vegan! save the endangered black slime!
what the documentary failed to mention about solar panels is we will never have enough of them to replace oil, mostly because the rare metals they require are limited.
2021-05-19 at 12:43 PM UTC
Sudo
Black Hole
[my hereto riemannian peach]
Sounds interesting, I'm an eco terrorist sympathizer who kinda works in the environmental industry so it sounds very relevant to my interests.
Idk how to feel about Michael Moore, I really feel I should hate him because of his personality but I always find myself agreeing with the major points of his films and am impressed by how they are constructed