, and I came away with a mix of empathy for the man and amazement at the depth of his self-importance. Since his subsequent decision to buy Twitter, most of the journalists I know have been either predicting the end of the internet as we know it or insisting that nobody cares about Twitter except journalists. If you’re not a journalist, help me out here: Who’s right? Please weigh in in the comments. Meanwhile, here’s the update.
That tilts at one of our central motivating questions here at WIRED: What does it actually take to bring about positive change? One could see some hope for the clothing industry by looking over at the food industry, which has spawned entire sub-industries catering to consumers’ ethical and environmental qualms.
To detach from a capitalist model. Full stop.
It is too bad that major publication players( Guardian,Wired,Politico, Atlantic Constitution,NYT, etc) can't get interim funding from resources to publish so we get deeper background on our current events. Paying for these now,I would be eating peanut butter consistently.
Ban all cheap disposable clothing, ban all toxic polyester crude oil textiles, ban all toxic chemical dye. Start a Public education campaign to educate the horrible humans who buy new clothes every season and throw away/donate old items constantly.
You really had to use that image, didn't you?
No money 🤣