Los Angeles Times

Less preaching, more solutions

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Re: “It’s up to us to save our planet,” Opinion, Sept 15

The Dalai Lama believes we must act on climate change. That is no surprise and we should pay attention. But while many people are now willing to take action, the problem is that they do not have sufficient informatio­n to make the best decisions.

If I want to buy a piece of fruit and want to choose between an apple or banana, I have little informatio­n to decipher which choice is responsibl­e for the least fossil carbon pollution. If fossil carbon pollution is properly priced, all our decisions will be the best ones for climate change — because they will be the best ones for our budget.

JIM MARTIN

Huntington Beach

Certainly, the Dalai Lama and Greta Thunberg are impressive catalysts for the “let’s do things to fight climate change” movement. But they, like most of the public, are not engineers or physicists.

In order for the public and politician­s to support efforts to change our energy consumptio­n and the conduct of our daily lives, we need to know what specific options exist, the costs for those options and how long developmen­t will take.

I have just completed reading “Drawdown,” a book edited by Paul Hawken, which details 78 (yes, 78!) plans to reverse global warming. The technicali­ties are carefully summarized in plain language.

Media, such as The Times, should be giving a voice to those who can similarly explain such innovation­s, so that people know what can be done within a reasonable time frame in order to save our planet.

SEYMOUR R. LEVIN

Los Angeles

I’m tired of empty platitudes about fighting climate change from leaders (religious or secular). If the Dalai Lama has a serious suggestion for fighting climate change, I would love to hear it. But telling us again how important it is is just wasted space.

ROB H. AFT

Rancho Park

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