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tzor wrote:FROM BUSINESS INSIDER
Why is it that no one wants to talk about the Godzilla sized Panda in the room? Everyone wants to shut down the coal industry in the United States, but it's China's coal industry that is killing their people - not the US coal industry that is killing our people. It is China's automobiles that are killing their people - not the US automobiles killing our people (and they don't really want to kill the gas guzzling automobile because that's how they get the road revenue). When the Pope speaks, people assume he is talking about the US ... but it's really China, a nation where he is not welcome because of their attempt to subjugate all religion to direct party control.
The group tracked ground-level emissions from sources such as industrial smokestacks, vehicle tailpipes, marine and rail operations, and commercial and residential heating throughout the United States, and found that such air pollution causes about 200,000 early deaths each year. Emissions from road transportation are the most significant contributor, causing 53,000 premature deaths, followed closely by power generation, with 52,000.
Metsfanmax wrote:So first, when you account for population size, China has less than double the number of per capita deaths due to air pollution each year compared to the US;
tzor wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:So first, when you account for population size, China has less than double the number of per capita deaths due to air pollution each year compared to the US;
Just one second here. That ain't right. Let's DO THE NUMBERS I know math is hard, given one quoted per day and one quoted per year but the video also gives the per year numbers as well. So as they say on Marketplace, let's do the numbers.
Population of China 1,357,000,000
Deaths 1,600,000
0.11790%
Population of United States 318,900,000
Deaths 200,000
0.06271%
No china is worse by a factor of 1.8.
Math is hard.
khazalid wrote:true enough, but on the other hand, average life expectancy has skyrocketed since the great leap forward. the pollution is a by-product of this, but it's hardly as black and white as you make it out to be.
*this post was sponsored by the incarcerated wailings and gnashings of mrswdk*
Phatscotty wrote:The Chinese government clearly needs to force every citizen to purchase canned air insurance.
Phatscotty wrote:khazalid wrote:true enough, but on the other hand, average life expectancy has skyrocketed since the great leap forward. the pollution is a by-product of this, but it's hardly as black and white as you make it out to be.
*this post was sponsored by the incarcerated wailings and gnashings of mrswdk*
You talk like the great leap forward was some good thing
mrswdk wrote:Who says khaz was mocking anyone? Life expectancy and overall quality of life have risen significantly in China over the past 50 or so years, and the improvements of the most recent decades have been fueled by China's industrialization (of which one side effect is, funnily enough, pollution).
mrswdk wrote:Who says khaz was mocking anyone? Life expectancy and overall quality of life have risen significantly in China over the past 50 or so years, and the improvements of the most recent decades have been fueled by China's industrialization (of which one side effect is, funnily enough, pollution).
khazalid wrote:mrswdk wrote:Who says khaz was mocking anyone? Life expectancy and overall quality of life have risen significantly in China over the past 50 or so years, and the improvements of the most recent decades have been fueled by China's industrialization (of which one side effect is, funnily enough, pollution).
that was exactly my point.
khazalid wrote:*this post was sponsored by the incarcerated wailings and gnashings of mrswdk*
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