Sometimes it really gets to me how fully neo-liberalism has replaced the question of "good or bad" with the question of "can you pay for it?"
Not to mention the clear incentive in this particular case for companies to prefer lower populations of the animals they are pretending to be trying to protect
Yeah, when you purchase a stock that goes up in value when an animal dies, you're literally incentived to kill as many as you can to drive up the price. You literally make money every time you kill something in a scheme like this.
Sometimes it really gets to me how fully neo-liberalism has replaced the question of "good or bad" with the question of "can you pay for it?"
Not to mention the clear incentive in this particular case for companies to prefer lower populations of the animals they are pretending to be trying to protect
Yeah, when you purchase a stock that goes up in value when an animal dies, you're literally incentived to kill as many as you can to drive up the price. You literally make money every time you kill something in a scheme like this.