I agree with most of what's being said here. Especially the bit about waste. There's nothing wrong with wasting energy, provided you have the means to keep wasting it next week, next year and 50 years from now.
I'm not sure what the state of play is in the US, but here in UK it's not just a matter of people depending on others, mostly the government, to do things for them. Or at least make sure the things get done. It's more a matter of (legally) having no choice in the matter, as the law seems geared to prevent people being independant of big business.
I, and many others I know, have run into brick walls when we try and do something useful for ourselves.
One guy around here makes furniture from recycled timber. He rang the local council and asked if they'd mind if he drove around and cleaned up all the little patches of wasteland, at no cost to them. He was trying to get free wood, of course. The council flatly refused and went so far as to say that they'd prosecute him if they caught him doing so. Most of this empty land doesn't even BELONG to the council! It's common land, not actually owned by anyone. So surely any timber, scrap metal and building material that's been (illegally) dumped there is the property of everyone. Which, you'd think, would mean the first guy to come haul it away has the right to. Apparently not!
We get the usual guff about using buses as well. Same here as there. Buses are rarely more than half full. Often completely empty. Most people, including myself, do anything they can to avoid using a bus. I really DO have better ways to spend my time than listening to some old biddy telling her friend about her gall stones, dodgy hip and the questionable lifestyles of her extended family. Plus it takes about 4 or 5 times as long to get anywhere on public transport as it does to drive. That's obviously working well as a transport policy, isn't it?
With regard to renewable energy. If you live in a city in the UK, the answer (at least as far as generating anything like the electricity you need, rather than a couple of token panels for bragging rights down the pub) is simply NO. You need planning consent to do just about anything to a house here. Ask if you can put a wind turbine up and it will be a definite NO. Too noisy, risk of blowing over, eyesore, etc.
PVs and solar water heat do, in theory, qualify for generous grants. The catch..
They MUST be installed by professional, accredited companies. I've got quotes from a few, just for laughs. The typical cost: £12000 to install £5000 worth of PVs, cable and inverter. And remember, if that's not grid tie, you then need to pay another contractor to install a secondary electrical system to your house. And a plasterer to make good all the damage from chasing out cable runs in the wall....
You aren't legally allowed to do anything but the most basic electrical work yourself. You MUST use a contractor. And if you say 'screw it! How are they gonna know?' and the planning office finds out, they can quite legally send someone round to rip out all the things you did. Then they send you a bill for doing so.
Most of the really good subsidies for alternative energy are only for grid tie systems, too. If you live in the middle of nowhere and want the same stuff installed, you get next to nothing, as you aren't sharing your energy surplus with the grid. What surplus? Most, if not all, of the in-town' PV systems I've seen are good only for reducing your bill. They aren't big enough to replace the grid. Oh, by the way. I checked with my current utility company and they will pay me £0.04 for each KWh I give them, while charging me £0.07 to buy it back when the sun goes down. The guy I spoke to was basically trying to talk me out of it, with the 'you'll never cover your installation costs' argument.
Sure seems like they're trying to STOP us from being green, don't it?