Feed them well, educate them, raise them in a clean environment, and help them find meaningful work that provides a decent income.
Gosh, don't stop there. There are many interaction scenarios where everyone pursuing their own agenda creates reasonably consistent efficiencies, but there are so, so many more that require a sense of community in order to enact. If you want a clean and healthy environment for you kids, you will need to create a common good that people pursue by forgoing short-term self interest.
You need to raise your kids well, obviously, but you also need to help create roadblocks where certain scenarios are degraded due to zero-sum thinking.
So because poverty still exists that means we aren't doing any better? You don't see the flaw in that logic?
That's not the logic. The logic is that we know that there's a problem when the absolute number experiencing that problem increases. Obviously, the absolute end goal is zero poverty, but is 'the average is going down' an acceptable outcome? Certainly not. We won't know that we're on a path that's acceptable until both the average and the absolute number are coming down.
So I assume you have sold off all your crypto currency and now advocate for the banning of them due to the negative impact crypto mining is having on the environment. Especially since 60% of all crypto mining takes place in China, and the computers that do the mining are connected to a power grid that gets most of its electricity from burning coal.
This is just outright hostile for no reason. We all do things that 'destroy the environment' while pursuing money. It's a function of the way our economy runs. Everyone hustles. We all try to make personal choices to limit the harms we cause, but we all have a floor that we're willing to tolerate. People have a hard time with individually being charitable (even in the form of foregoing consumption or profits) when we see everyone else just seizing those profits instead of us. The best we can do is being moral to the edge of our tolerances, and then asking society to change the system so that it's easier to make the right choice.
If I say that I think that donations to poverty are super-important,
especially once you cross the median wage, then someone saying to me "yeah, but you saw a movie last week when it could have bought a bed net, so you don't actually give a crap" is
tiring. Well, it would be, if it happened.
I also own banking shares, even given my opinion on the value of buying financial assets (though I'm heavily weighted in Pharmaceuticals too!). Not because I'm a hypocrite, but because I project that I will have certain needs in the future. We all do damage with our hustle. And we all do damage with our consumption. But I will outright bet that my consumption damage is lower than many who disagree with me (politically). And my hustle causes damage, but I do the hustle I do because that's what I'm paid to do.
I'm not sure that yelling at low-income hippies about their environmental footprint is the best use of one's "I care about the environment" emotional quotient.
I need to detail this in the other thread, because Bitcoin is especially insidious when it comes to damaging the environment, because none of its utility is maintained through high levels of price support, but its damage to the environment is entirely proportionate to its market price.