6 Socially Conscious Actions That Only Look Like They Help
There are those who want to improve the world around us and who do so in intelligent, well-thought-out ways. Then there are those of us whose desire to help the environment is mostly based on being bored or shallow or wanting to fit in after we get lost in Whole Foods. Unfortunately, most of humanity is made up of the latter type. Also unfortunately, a lot of the half-assed stuff we do not only doesn't help but actually ends up making things worse for everyone.

The Idea
Imagine an oil spill, and chances are the first thing you'll think of is an oil-covered bird helplessly flapping its wings. Birds rely on clean feathers to keep warm and stay afloat, and slicked birds often starve to death while grooming themselves. Understandably, after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill, volunteer information focused heavily on pictures of dirty pelicans and information about helping these birds, because it's a much more effective ad than showing people wiping down rocks.

"Hold on, rocks. We'll get through this together."
How We Half-Ass It
Although it seems like something that can be done with a net, a bottle of shampoo and some dead fish, bird capture is really a job that should be reserved for the experts. But during the Gulf spill, that didn't prevent inexperienced cleanup crews from trying to chase down oiled birds, which succeeded only in terrifying them even more and in most cases driving them further away from relatively safe territory into the oily waters and away from the experienced cleaners who could have brought them in safely. Still other workers did worse, disturbing nests of endangered birds and even trampling their eggs and chicks.

"The Monday Margarita Breakfast is great for morale but hard on the wildlife."
And the survivors aren't much luckier: If they make it through the grueling cleaning process, they're often released into the wrong habitat, and depending on species and location, up to 99 percent of them then die quickly of starvation or poisoning from ingested oil. In other words, scrubbing oil off a helpless bird makes for a great photo op. But if you want to help, your time, energy and expense would be better spent doing virtually anything.

The Idea
So, lately your yearly vacations to the International Cheese Rolling Festival have left you feeling unfulfilled. Don't despair: There's always voluntourism, a growing movement that allows you to travel the world while helping the needy. A recent survey found that two-thirds of American high school students have considered this type of volunteer vacation.

This isn't a new trend among rich white people, either.
Traditional organizations mostly look for volunteers with relevant skills: doctors, nurses, dentists, qualified teachers and people fluent in foreign languages. Still, they also welcome unskilled travelers who can do stuff like clerical work and cleaning while the professionals offer the help that's desperately needed.
How We Half-Ass It
Acquiring a professional skill can take years of effort, and typing up vaccination reports doesn't exactly make for great travel photos to send back home. So instead, the boom in voluntourism is focused on prepackaged tours offering unskilled volunteers a wide range of exciting activities: weeklong stays looking after children in AIDS orphanages, short trips to Africa to build houses and stints teaching English in isolated parts of South America.

"These people need my liberal arts degree and ability to swing a hammer haphazardly."
So what? It's better than your standard vacation, where the only person you "help" is your own fat ass up onto a waterslide, right? Wrong: In most cases, this practice actually hurts the people it's trying to help.
Let's say you work in construction. One day, your neighborhood suddenly floods with energetic, iPod-toting young people who joyfully start doing the same job you're doing, but for free. Imagine the American immigration debate, only the immigrants have no skills, and they aren't just working for less money, but for free -- their only compensation being a series of photos about how caring they are posted to their Facebook pages when they get back home.
So the result is wonkily made houses sprouting up everywhere, built by people who don't know drywall from the holes they're putting in those walls, pushing local workers out of much-needed jobs and screwing up economies that are already screwed up enough to warrant charity work.

"Ooh! Rita! Get a picture of me pouring my CamelBak into this little girl's water jug."
Long-term effects aren't much better if you're into helping children, either. Voluntourists jump at the chance to make a lasting difference in the lives of cute underprivileged youths. But the thing is, they really want pictures of those malnourished children swarming about their knees in gratitude -- that's the picture that gets you laid back home at the pub. But the most lasting good is done to the community by training other local teachers to teach English, and nobody wants to sleep with the guy who brings home pictures of himself surrounded by competent adults looking at books together. So local teachers go untrained, and confused students end up getting a new and completely inexperienced English teacher every month or so.

"Hey I think our teacher might be a dumbass."
Foreigners who volunteer for short periods in orphanages can do even more harm. The steady flow of Western media attention on AIDS orphanages means they get tons of funding that could otherwise have been devoted to keeping those children with their surviving extended family instead. One study of Cambodian orphanages revealed that only 25 percent of "orphans" there had actually lost both parents. In the worst cases, this leads to children being placed in orphanages by both of their alive but desperately poor parents, because they can only get someone to help their kids if they completely abandon them to rich people who take pictures alongside them, like a substantially more tragic version of that guy in the Donald Duck costume at Disneyland.

On the plus side, you and your girlfriend get to spend a fun week playing with cute kids and taking blurry cellphone pictures of temples. Surely that's worth some premature orphan-ing.

The Idea
Since the dawn of time, mankind has dreamed of saving the world using alcohol. And for a while in the mid-2000s, when biofuel use became a big issue, it looked like it might finally happen. Ethanol fuel, an alcohol-based alternative to gasoline, gave us the chance to cultivate our own fuel sources rather than rely on foreign oil imports. Even better, you can make ethanol out of pretty much anything: grains, table scraps, grass clippings, crop waste -- really, any substance that has ever been secretly fermented in a prison toilet can probably be used to power your car.

He's experimenting with the legendary Jenkem colada right now.
How We Half-Ass It
America was faced with a choice: Put time and effort into the research and development of advanced, sustainable biofuels, or say "fuck it" and just make ethanol out of the stuff we make everything out of: corn. Guess which one we chose?

With enough corn, the whole world could be as picturesque as Kansas.
Today, over 90 percent of America's ethanol is produced from corn, an industry propped up by government mandates and a federal subsidy of around $5.6 billion a year. This is despite the fact that growing corn uses a ridiculously large amount of water, causes epic erosion and requires a nitrogen-rich fertilizer that has been linked to algae blooms and huge aquatic "dead zones" in the Gulf of Mexico.
Given all that, you'd hope that it at least works, right? Nope! Adding corn ethanol to gasoline makes cars less energy-efficient, and producing it actually requires about 30 percent more energy than we can get out of it. In other words, not only does this type of ethanol fail to reduce our energy consumption, it actually increases it. To top it off, corn-based products that until recently would have ended up inside people have instead been going into SUV gas tanks. This has caused a massive worldwide increase in produce prices, as we literally burn people's food in order to get ourselves to the store so we can buy more food.

These guys have America's balls in a tighter vise than OPEC's.
Meanwhile, less-developed biofuel alternatives like algae biodiesel or cellulosic ethanol have struggled to compete for attention and funding. Both of these are thought to be more efficient than corn and aren't derived from food products, but they're sorely lacking in spiteful irony and so have gone largely uncultivated. Recently, there have been efforts to cut down on corn ethanol subsidies, but they've been opposed at every step by politicians from corn-producing Midwestern states, who have all eerily developed a sudden love for the environment.

Sweet momma Gaia needs more Monsanto corn!"








I remember when the Prius and other hybrid cars first became available in the Los Angeles area. They were very hard to come by not just because people were wanting to relatively cheaply save the environment, but also because the wealthier environmentalists (a lot of them Hollywood types) were all wanting to buy them to show that they were doing their best to save the environment. The problem was that they were show pieces and were not only rarely driven, but were preventing the average commuter from being able to purchase one (both due to scarcity and increase costs due to demand). The thing is that most of the wealthy environmentalists are just that... wealthy. And could have afforded the greater costs of buying a full blown electric car or custom made environmentally friendly car.
Reply Hide All See All 3 RepliesOf course the other reason people wanted to buy the Prius was because it allowed them to enter the HOV lanes and reduce their commute time in half. The funny thing about that is that the Prius is most efficient in commuter (backed up) traffic where the average speed falls below the point at which they use gas. I have a friend who said that now that the Prius can no longer use the HOV lanes, he's finding out that he's saving over $200 per month in gas.
$200 a month... in GAS?!
But wait, SAVING $200 a month in gas, meaning the total a month spent on gas is MORE than that?!
Wow. I'm even more "too poor to afford a car" than I thought. :/
@Toadoo4 - my friend works in sales and services for an IT company so he uses his car to travel all over the county on a daily basis. The number of miles that he drives is probably around 35,000 per year and mostly for the company he works for. Gas in LA is around $4.50/gallon today so he's probably saving 2 gallons per day now that he's stuck in traffic. Not a job I would want (in traffic half the day), but he enjoys it.
hehehe, i live in the persian gulf. $200 of gas money can last me about 6 months. you jelly?
Great article. I didn't know about some of these. I'm not really a green person but I do try to at least not be an irresponsible p***k about it.
ReplyBtw Kansas is known for its wheat not its corn. Which is why Kansas University "waves the wheat" when it wins a game
Perfect... just perfect.
ReplyShould have added the "Lets all get together and turn off all our electricity for an hour one single day of the year so we can reduce electricity usage for the entire planet!!" bullshit. But this article showed these actions also have negative effects, i don't know if it would still count.
ReplyI wish I can say this article is bull and that it advertises false reason against playing your part in helping to make a difference in the world, but sadly, I'm afraid this just isn't the case, and all the points raised are actually valid for many reasons. It appears that Western society has formed this counterintuitive system which has long since collapsed in on itself, and the new generation of people have extensively become the by product of this hypocrisy.
ReplyI have always wanted to volunteer but ended up seeing the pointlessness of it - the same thing that was mentioned in the article.
I also heard somewhere that the actual process of manufacturing the hybrid's engine causes just as much pollution as driving a normal car.
If we truly want to make a difference, we would have to all become full on Bhuddists or something to that effect.
You mentioned washing in #3, but as someone who works in a store, let me tell you: most people don't. And those bags that people bring in to the store can get naaaaaaaaaaaaaaasty. That's actually what I've always heard as the main trade-off between plastic and cloth bags - plastic bags are litter and whatnot, but there's virtually no chance of bacteria or germs being spread on them. Cloth bags, on the other hand? Yeesh! That said, I do own about 10 cloth shopping bags, and I *almost* always remember to bring 3 or 4 with me when I go shopping (and proceed to buy 5 or 6 bags' worth of stuff).
ReplyBuying a used car is more environmentally friendly than buying any Eco-friendly new car.
Reply Hide All See All 6 RepliesOr, y'know, not buying a car at all. Cars suck. Walk and take the bus, all it takes is a little time management. And I don't just say "cars suck" because I weep for Mother Earth, they're also freaking sinkholes for money. Not worth it.
Yeah! All it takes is a little time management! To walk the approximately 16 miles the average American commutes to and from work!
Too bad public transportation isn't a thing that exists, huh?
Public transportation that exists? Oh yes, very real.
Public transportation that exists and goes anywhere near your work or home? Only in major cities. The other 96% or so of America (by geography, not population) has to either drive or hoof it.
Yep. I live about 50km from work. And there are no buses! I'll just leave at 1am every day shall I?
Idiot.
Yeah, coming from personal experience, walking is not as great as you make it sound. I live in a small-ish city, and work two jobs. Public transportation doesn't make stops near my home, or one job, and the only stop it makes near my other job is too late for me to be at work on time, so i have to walk the forty minutes to and from each job every day. That adds up to an extra hour of commute time each direction, or taking away an extra hour of sleep. Cars may not be the greatest thing ever, but they do sever their purpose.
True story on a similar note: "Free-range" is not regulated by the FDA when it comes to eggs. You could store your hens in an S&M dungeon (Hey, I'm not gonna judge what you do) deep underground and you can label the eggs as free-range.
ReplyBah, 'cause off the Eurocrats, all of the eggs in Europe will soon all be free-range.
"You could store your hens in an S&M dungeon". This is a pretty awesome picture, honestly.
Wait, I don't need a teaching certificate to teach at third world countries? And my brother doesn't need to become an architect to build houses for the less fortunate? And my sister doesn't need to go to med school to take care of people in impoverished and AIDS ridden countries?
ReplyAnd ethanol I already know about, since my dad works for the EPA. Unfortunately, people are more willing to listen to the politician who is being lobbied by a big ethanol provider rather than people whose job IS the environment.
That's right. All you need is a few thousand bucks and a shitload of white guilt.
The reason why I don't want to do peace corps. I considered it but perusing the site I realized that I would probably be put somewhere I didn't have experience (and shouldn't being proficient in the language of the region matter?), per the site's description of the program. A friend of mine also voiced the same opinion...after actually serving in the corp. He is ridiculously talented and majored in anthropology. He speaks some language I have never heard of, but they stuck him somewhere with a language he didn't know, and wasn't able to use his strengths. If you are not certified teacher or doctor, you will get stuck anywhere they need you, regardless of your qualifications. i basically said screw that. I'm just gonna move out there and do a decent job doing something I am decent at, and giving the people I am helping a decent experience. I'm not gonna half-a$$ helping other people. I will go where they need me AND I can be of help, like, doing something I am good at.
I'm actually really good about the reusable bag thing, but I don't do it for the environment. I do it because all those plastic bags annoy the bejeezus out of me. The weird thing is, cashiers occasionally get confused by the fact that I bring reusable bags. One guy picked the bags up, looked at them for a second, and asked me what they were for. It was pretty funny, actually.
ReplyI like reusable because they make toting groceries easier. What I don't like are the cashiers that try to stuff three bags worth of goods into each bag. I have lost all my insulated bags this way.
The first thing they drilled into our heads over and over in my economics class is that, ultimately, trade means everyone gets more of everything. Doesn't it follow that the reason all first worlders have a dependable food supply is they get food from all kinds of places? In the past everyone ate food that came from right by their house, so if there was a drought or something, people in that area were pretty much screwed. The fact that we ship food across the world all the time seems to be the reason why, if one source is currently messed up, people anywhere can immediately get food from somewhere else instead. Like, efficiently, and before anybody starves. So while I think there must be some ways to make food production and transportation more efficient-- and I'm sure somebody's working on doing that-- it seems to me at least that we want a lot of trade in food items. Also, isn't a varied diet healthy? Just my thoughts.
Replygood points
The Rebound effect....last year I don't want to leave my old PC on for long stretches of time if I'm not actively using it. After I upgraded to the latest Intel CPU and nvidia graphic card which are power efficient, I left my PC on almost 24/7. They are "cool" and quiet unlike the old version which has a whiny fan that barely kept the heat down.
ReplyThis article made me rethink my habits....
My clunky computer from 2001 uses eight times the energy of the 2011 model.
If I actually use my computer three hours a day (it's more than that, but stay with me), then the old one, only being on for those 3 hours, would use as much energy as the new one staying on permanently. And that's assuming the new one is "on", which it wouldn't be, as it hibernates after 15 minutes of not using it.
Since I got my computer last year, I have earned the price I paid for it back in electric bills. Take that, SRP!
People are ready to fly miles to help under the under-privileged, nobody cares for the locals that really could use some help...
Reply Hide All See All 5 RepliesHmm what looks better...helping starving 3rd world children or helping the homeless in the immediate vicinity...
Obviously, every homeless person got there of their own free will and doesn't deserve any kind of charity. Duhhhh.
I think there's a saying like that, "Charity begins at home."
There will always be another charity or group you could be helping besides your own. While it is a good point about helping our own, I just can't knock anyone for their volunteer choices. SOMEONE has to choose that cause. It’s no use to get into this whole “my charity is better than your charity because more people are dying in mine”, or “My choice is better than yours because I help people around the corner from me and you go, like, really really far”. It’s stupid and unproductive. Come from your heart. You don’t HAVE to choose a certain cause. You should choose one you WANT to. Pick one you can make a difference, something you can actually be of use, something you won’t loathe when you get up in the morning, and something you can actually bring your best to.
Now, now that that is said, I do thing we need more help here. A TON of more help. Yes, I am very glad that at least here it isn't absolute poverty, as in, you can't even panhandle because nobody else has any food or money either. But I do realize something more has to be done.
I just use a midget to carry my grocery's.
ReplyAs long as you aren't vegan/vegetarian, it is pretty easy to be an efficient "100-mile-dieter"... When you need groceries, do the following in order:
Reply Hide All See All 4 Replies1) Stop at the farmer's market and buy everything that you can there, which means you will likely get your tomatoes, corn, apples, etc from a locally-owned farm
2) Stop at a local independently-owned butcher to get the meat you might need, as they tend to source animal products from the closest farms (cheaper for them)
3) Go to the supermarket/grocery store and buy whatever is left on your list that couldn't be purchased at the first two places (oranges, mangoes, pomegranates, FrootLoops, whatever)
DONE
As far as the ethanol-fuel nonsense... I HATE THAT CRAP!!!! Almost all gas stations now use E10 (90% gasoline and 10% ethanol) for ALL gas they sell, and in the winter this goes up to E30!! Ethanol has a much lower energy-content per-gallon than does gasoline, so people experience between 6-20% drops in fuel economy AND in power, because unless your car is tuned specifically for the unique properties of ethanol (very high octane allowing for very advanced timing), you lose. If it is tuned for ethanol, you can in fact make a lot more power, but you'll lose even more fuel economy. STUPID!
Not only that, but ethanol causes the following problems (and many, many more):
- black "film" or "goop" to form in fuel lines and inside the fuel tank
- clog fuel filters up to 5x faster than pure gasoline (i.e. no ethanol)
- clog fuel injectors, reducing power and economy
- cause severe engine wear issues if your oil becomes fuel-contaminated as ethanol pulls in water which then forms acids that the acid inhibitors in most good oils can't completely compensate for
- increased wear on starts (unless it is below 0*C)
- exponentially-increased wear on fuel pump due to normal gasoline additives being unable to compensate for the anti-lubrication caused by ethanol (thus, fuel pumps fail far more often, costing between $400-2000 to replace)
- it is corrosive to seals in the engine, which can cause oil contamination (fuel getting into oil), oil leaks, etc
- causes excess carbon build-up on intake/exhaust valves, pistons, rings, combustion-chamber walls, valvetrain, etc
- damage expensive catalytic converters if the engine runs rich
- ATTRACTS WATER (which should be repelled) which can cause gas lines between tank and engine to freeze in winter
My recommendations:
- Find a gas station near you that sells "pure gas", which you can find via Google if you search for the term
- Use "Stabil Ethanol Treatment" in any gasoline that won't be used within 2 weeks or so of purchase
- Use Redline SI-1 Fuel Injector Cleaner on a REGULAR BASIS (every 1k miles) to remove the gunk that ethanol leaves behind; it contains PEA, the most effective detergent for this use as it cleans off the carbon without leaving any residue of its own
- Use "TOP TIER" gasoline: Shell, Mobil, Chevron, BP
- Use "Chevron Techron Concentrate" Fuel Injector Cleaner every or every-other fill-up
- Replace Fuel Filter every 15k miles
- Change your oil yourself, using a GOOD SYNTHETIC OIL (Pennzoil Platinum, Mobile1, Redline, Royal Purple), a good filter (Royal Purple, K&N, Mobil1, Bosch), and do so every 5-7k miles
- Change air filter every 10k miles (5k if dusty environment) or get a good "dry" lifetime filter (AFE "ProDryS" is best), change cabin air filter every 10k miles with an activated charcoal filter
- Change spark plugs every 40-60k miles, as ethanol leaves carbon deposits that the plugs cannot always burn off
- Try using "Seafoam", a strong petroleum-based detergent that is applied, with the car running, through the brake-booster line (sucks it into the manifold), through the throttle-body (then clean it with a tooth-brush; do this one with the car off), through the PCV system (gets the manifold), and through the gas *use 1/3 of a can for each
- Keep tires inflated to optimal PSI (see door jamb and tire sidewall for rating) as in cool weather they can lose 10psi in a day if the temp drops enough *ONLY CHECK WHEN COLD i.e. when car hasn't been driven for 4hrs or more
Now you have a car running efficiently, clean on the inside, and it won't be as affected by ethanol as much as it could be.
the only problem with that local food thing is you're making trips to 3 different stores and wasting a lot of gas.
@Henrytod, do you not have shopping centres where you live?
"As long as you aren't vegan/vegetarian, it is pretty easy to be an efficient "100-mile-dieter"... "
Abd yet in your explaination your first suggestion is to go the the local farmers market. And the you list two other stores...if you're a vegetarian, you ONLY have to go the the farmers market, so how is this not better??? Honestly, you made no sense with your whole example. And I agree with henry, if your going to three different specialized stores you will probably waste a lot more gas than any other way....
I don't know about henrytod, but I don't have a shopping center with a farmer's market, a butcher and a regular grocery store all in the same location
I feel sorry for my son and daughter.
ReplyThis was an interesting and thought-provoking, but boy howdy am I ever depressed as hell after finishing it.
Reply*an interesting and thought-provoking ARTICLE. Good job, me.
it takes a big man to correct themselves ... i gave you 2 thumbs up :)
Eating local for stuff that can grow in your area when it's in season makes sense just because it usually tastes better than the imported stuff (I've never had a supermarket tomato, even the ones grown organically, that taste as good as a garden or farmstand one), but some stuff you just can't get. It's stupid to pledge you're going to eat nothing but local stuff unless you're going to only eat native stuff in season (which would mean nothing at all in the northeast of the US in the winter). Of course it's more expensive, which means a lot of people just can't afford to do it.
ReplyIt is hard to remember the bags. I keep mine in the trunk of my car and I still sometimes forget until I'm already in line to check out. I reuse plastic bags for toting stuff and lining wastebaskets, etc so at least they get more than one use.
Another drawback to the eating local campaign is that it would cause serious damage to economies that rely on exporting certain crops. Also, local eaters call themselves localvores and that has annoying douchebag written all over it.
ReplyOne of the best articles on here, imo
Reply