The Defense Department will install solar panels on the Pentagon, part of the Biden administration’s plan to promote clean energy and “reestablish the federal government as a sustainability leader.”

The Pentagon is one of 31 government sites that are receiving $104 million in Energy Department grants that are expected to double the amount of carbon-free electricity at federal facilities and create 27 megawatts of clean-energy capacity while leveraging more than $361 million in private investment, the Energy Department said.

The solar panels are among several improvements set for the Pentagon, which also will install a heat pump system and solar thermal panels to reduce reliance on natural gas and fuel oil combustion systems

    • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      This is like putting solar panels on an oil rig

      I mean, even for a low effort post its not really making much sense.

      I assume your simile is suggesting that and oil rig shouldn’t use solar panels (for reduction of green house gas creation) because it is a primary source of green house gasses (eventually). So you’d prefer an oil rig to, what, burn oil for electricity instead generating even more green house gasses?

      • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I mean, even for a low effort post its not really making much sense.

        I mean, only if you don’t bother to think about it at all, for even a second.

        The Pentagon facilitates a greater portion of global emissions than any other single building on the planet. Any where. From any time period.

        Its pure symbolism. And its a weird symbol. Its like the peace sign on the helmet of the Vietnam era US soldier.

        And also probably not a particularly great place for panels. Its not like we don’t still have the ability to transmit power over distances with renewables.

        • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          The Pentagon facilitates a greater portion of global emissions than any other single building on the planet. Any where. From any time period.

          So you’re arguing want them to be as bad as possible with zero improvement? Why? What does that accomplish?

          And also probably not a particularly great place for panels. Its not like we don’t still have the ability to transmit power over distances with renewables.

          You didn’t read the article. Even if the Biden Administration (who is allocating the money) has some green ideas in mind, the Defense department officials aren’t concerned with that. The Defense department wants to ensure reliable access to electricity (such as in the event of a cyberattack) and wants to save money on energy.

          So your idea about transmitting power over lines doesn’t accomplish Defense department’s goal.

          • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            So you’re arguing want them to be as bad as possible with zero improvement? Why? What does that accomplish?

            See this, this mentality you are carrying around, its why the world has gone to shit.

            Its the philosophy of incrementalism. Of support for the lesser of evils, when the lesser is still, well, evil. The mindset itself is the second half of a two part waltz that bad-faith actors use to achieve their goals. In the world, you rarely ever get the oppurtunity to do things twice. By going half as far or less than you needed to accomplish some goal, you’ve taken up the space that an action that could have been used to set the goal posts at beyond a distance that was enough to accomplish some goal. Its a premise that assume there will be some future time where you’ll be able to fix the mistakes of the past.

            Its the same philosophy that touts Obamacare as some grand reform because “we did what was possible”. This kind of false pragmatism carries with it two fundamental issues when it comes to accomplishing policies. We had an oppurtunity to do “something” and we used that oppurtunity to do half of what was required. It took almost no time for that to be eroded into a situation that’s now effectively worse than where we started.

            This is the true consequence of half measures. They take up the space where a full measure could have been made, and steal the impetus a full measure requires.

            • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              So I suppose you never, ever vote and never, ever participate in any sort of humanitarian aid, because there is not a single candidate or organization on this planet, and has never been any candidate or organization in all of history, that was perfect and sinless?

            • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              This is the true consequence of half measures. They take up the space where a full measure could have been made, and steal the impetus a full measure requires.

              And only your vision for that full measure, yes? Irrespective of what others think? You’re preaching facism, and it has no place in the USA thank you very much.

              • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                This is the true consequence of half measures. They take up the space where a full measure could have been made, and steal the impetus a full measure requires.

                Social security was a full measure. It covered all Americans. It did the entire job it set out to do.

                It is an example of a full measure.

                The postal service is a full measure. It doesn’t cover some of the addresses. It cover all of them.

                The American public school system covers all students.

                That is what I mean by a full measure and the equate that to facism is beyond idiotic.

                • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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                  Social security was a full measure. It covered all Americans. It did the entire job it set out to do.

                  It is an example of a full measure.

                  Voted and supported by both houses in the legislature and signed by the President. Which healthcare law which you consider a “full measure” would pass the House and Senate today to be signed the President?

                  The postal service is a full measure. It doesn’t cover some of the addresses. It cover all of them.

                  The postal service predates the United States (1775), so I don’t think that support your argument.

                  The American public school system covers all students.

                  Not historically it didn’t, or are you not aware of Brown v. Board of Education? Even today is arguable it doesn’t because its largely controlled by municipalities with 50 different sets of standards at the State level with many massively underfunding their public school systems, or doing so disproportional.

                  That is what I mean by a full measure and the equate that to facism is beyond idiotic.

                  Your examples are bad because only 1 of 3 is actually done at the federal level, and even that one doesn’t have any analogous proposed legislation for carbon emissions or universal health care that would pass the House and Senate. So unless you’re planning on embracing fascism to push a version through, you’re divorced from the reality of gaining consensus to pass law today.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        I’d prefer the oil rig didn’t exist and I’d prefer people stop confusing greenwashing for progress.

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          Sure, great, but thats ignoring the practicalities of reality. If you want real change you’ve got to evolve from an ideologue if you’re actually interested in seeing the change you want.

          Oil rigs aren’t going to disappear overnight. If they did economies around the world would come to a grinding halt. Famine and disease would run rampant and wars would break out fighting over the remaining supplies. Likely 80% or more of humanity would die out within a generation. You and I would not be among the survivors.

          So maybe a better way to get rid of oil rigs is to reduce their need by, oh I don’t know, replacing oil consuming energy generation with PV solar panels…like the article is talking about. It will be on very small change in a whole list of changes needed to get rid of those oil rigs, but is on the path, and its realistic.

          people stop confusing greenwashing for progress.

          There’s plenty of greenwashing occurring in the world today. This event isn’t one of them.

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            There will never be real change as long as people settle for greenwashing, there will be ticky-tacky incremental bullshit changes until society collapses. With incrementalism oil rigs aren’t going to disappear ever, and neither will the Pentagon. They’re going to kill us all.

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      10 months ago

      I’d take it. Just that little bit less oil we need. Stop trying to shit on everything.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        Greenwashing is harmful because it tricks people into thinking there’s been progress and we aren’t on track for the collapse of civilization.

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            10 months ago

            By trying to present the Pentagon as environmentally friendly, instead of one of the worst polluters on the planet.

            • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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              By trying to present the Pentagon as environmentally friendly

              The only person presenting that narrative is you. Just read the article:

              ‘Brendan Owens, assistant secretary of Defense for energy, installations and environment, said the projects will improve energy resilience and reliability at the Pentagon and other military sites in the U.S. and Germany. He called energy use "central to everything we do.’‘’

              ‘Solar panels will provide "an uninterrupted power source’’ at the Pentagon in case of a cyberattack or other outage to the bulk grid, as well as reduce strain on the building’s power load, Owens said in an interview.’

              Its not about “green” to that member of the Defense department, its about continued operation and money. Yes, it will also reduce green house gas creation, but the Defense department isn’t even making that claim.

              So what you’re doing is putting words in their mouth, then calling them hypocrites for using that language you created. Thats a straight up straw man fallacy you’re using.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                10 months ago

                Uh huh, and you think they reached out to the media to create this headline because they want us to be informed about building maintenance. Okay lol

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              10 months ago

              I saw this and thought: “Hey, that’s a good first step, I wonder how long it is before they take another?” Not that the pentagon went green. Check your bias.

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                10 months ago

                Taking steps that do nothing in lieu of steps that do something is the definition of greenwashing.

                Your response:

                “Hey, that’s a good first step, …"

                Demonstrates the effectiveness of the seeded story. Propaganda and marketing work.

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                  Wow, do you not understand incremental progress? And I never said that they were green. You can acknowledge progress (however slight) without being a stooge. So, what’s the amount of progress that it would take before you stop complaining about the small steps?

                  • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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                    Oh I do understand the philosophy of incrementalism.

                    I understand the consequences and costs of failing to take bold action to do what is necessary to change the course of a situation.

                    Small steps have only taken us backwards, and it gets worse every cycle. Only bold steps and decisive actions have moved us towards a more perfect union.

                    Not understanding the cost of small steps forwards on a train that’s hurtling in the wrong direction is meaningless. Its justification is to support the problem while being able to rinse your hands of the issue. The justification of smalls steps as progress while we’re clearly regressing is the fundamental problem we face as a society, because time, space, and oppurtunity are limited, you will only get so many opportunities to take action. When we either decide to take small steps, or accept them out of others, we further the issue.

                    Incrementalism as a social philosophy is a failure, and is costing us our ability to survive on this planet, its costing us our ability to have a civil and just society.

        • gibmiser@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          As much as I hate the military industrial complex, symbolic actions matter, and we need some form of military so as long as we have a military I hope it will utilize green energy when possible.

        • KNova@infosec.pub
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          10 months ago

          the alternative is imminent collapse of civilization and no solar panels

          • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            the alternative is imminent collapse of civilization and no solar panels

            This thinking, the entirety of its attitude. Its why fascism was able to take root in the US.

            Its the other half of the mechanism in a ratchet effect that slow walks us into deterioration.

            Only revolutionary action and upheaval can take us back.

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            10 months ago

            I’m not going to fucking care if the Pentagon has solar panels while I’m fighting to the death over the last unopened can of beans in an abandoned Walmart.

            • KNova@infosec.pub
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              10 months ago

              Yeah, I get it. Not sure that stating the doomer case is any better than installing solar panels, though, is my point. It gets us the same outcome in the end.

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                10 months ago

                If people actually realized how fucked we are they wouldn’t settle for greenwashing. We could get organized and fight back.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I think a lot of oil rigs use solar panels. It’s notike they can burn crude for energy. Everything on the rig has to be brought there by boat, including batteries and fuel.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        This would be meaningful. More reporting means more information to wield when convincing people we need more than solar panels.