Cosmic Yak
Philosopher
We didn't get EPA rules by changing our consumer behavior.
Not true. In the vain hope you are open to correction, here's the history of how the EPA came into being. It was a direct result of public opinion.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Environmental_Protection_Agency#History
trying to score cheap points?
No. Proving you wrong. Again.
The EPA did NOT some into being because individuals decided to change their consuming behaviour.
Which is what I said, and which you decided to replace with a straw man.
There was Protest and Counterprotest, violence, sabotage, Scientist going public and lots of people dying.
And a President who decided to actually create and enforce standards against polluters.
I guess I was wrong: you are not open to correction. Instead, you clearly prefer to double down on your made-up nonsense.
From the link, which you obviously didn't read:
Beginning in the late 1950s and through the 1960s, Congress reacted to increasing public concern about the impact that human activity could have on the environment...
The 1962 publication of Silent Spring, a best-selling book by Rachel Carson, alerted the public about the detrimental effects on animals and humans of the indiscriminate use of pesticide chemicals.
In the years following, Congress discussed possible solutions. In 1968, a joint House–Senate colloquium was convened by the chairmen of the Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, Senator Henry M. Jackson, and the House Committee on Science and Astronautics, Representative George P. Miller, to discuss the need for and means of implementing a national environmental policy.
Finally the Nixon administration made the environment a priority in 1969-1971 and set up a series of major agencies headed by the new EPA.
Unless you are going to make some arbitrary and unsupportable distinction between 'consumers' and 'the public' (who are the same people: exactly the same people), then it is quite clear that changes in public opinions and behaviour led directly to the setting up of the EPA.
Notice too, no mention of "Protest and Counterprotest, violence, sabotage, Scientist going public and lots of people dying". That's just you making stuff up again.
Even if part of that is true, that is still an example of changing consumer behaviour having a direct effect in the setting up of the EPA.
Changing consumer behaviour had nothing to do with it and would have changed nothing: only the force of the State can stop the biggest polluters in the world. i.e. Big Oil, etc.
Let me spell it out for you in baby steps.
1. Large sections of the public become concerned about environmental issues.
2. They put pressure on their elected representatives.
3. Those representatives pass laws setting up the EPA.
4. The EPA acts to stop the biggest polluters in the world.
Simple. Obvious. And similar things have happened all over the world.
We need to nationalize them, fire-sell their assets and use them to pay for the cleanup and transition to sustainability.
The oil production and refining companies of the Gulf, China and elsewhere are already nationalised. The expense of nationalisation of US companies (which I guess is what you're talking about) would be immense. It's a Just Stop Oil level of pie-in-the-sky impractical nonsense.
Which is obvious, and which is why no one is allowed to say it on mainstream media.
It's not obvious, and no-one is stopping the media from reporting on your idea. Most likely, they aren't because it's a colossally stupid idea, and not worth reporting on.