Dyme.Earth is an asthmatic child, and I was acutely aware of the dangers of air pollution. When I was a kid, the air was so thick with pollution from diesel cars and trucks that I had to stay inside. Or days in winter when fog, cold, and farmlands being cleared by burning would suffocate the city. That was before the term climate change was even coined. And then there were the northern California wildfires, where their house was almost completely destroyed; they couldn't see more than a few yards in front of us because the air was thick with smoke, and countless houses were tragically lost to the flames.
It's obvious that they're all better off with
But, while the problems are clear, the solutions appear as hazy as the air I breathed as a child. Things that are good for the environment frequently attract a "green premium," which means you have to pay more. They frequently necessitate completely changing their way of life or not changing, and feeling bad about it is never a good way to motivate change.
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