Dealing with those environmental problems requires breaking the corporate power the profits from and perpetuates those problems, and breaking corporate power does get characterized as "just wanting chaos" by plenty of people.
Objection
Love a properly-sourced meme ❤️
Redirecting money from the budgets of the people keeping himself alive is certainly a choice.
Somehow I think that if a president starts nationalizing the assets of rich white people, SCOTUS is going to decide it's not an official act.
Does that extend to other countries like Cuba, Vietnam, or China? Also, what does "praise" entail, exactly? If someone posts misinformation about a country to make it look worse, and I correct it, does that constitute "praise?" If I oppose taking military (or economic) action against a country, is that the same as supporting said country?
If I were to say, "The DPRK does not force everyone to get the same haircut," is that acceptable? How about, "The largest military exercise takes place every year on the Korean DMZ where US forces practice bombing and invading the DPRK, as they did before in an extremely destructive conflict, and so, domestic policies aside, their hostility towards the US is understandable?"
No? Those warmongering psychos were perfectly fine with bombing schoolchildren, they're just upset that he stopped bombing schoolchildren:
Trump’s former vice president Mike Pence also issued a rare criticism of his former boss, arguing the Memorandum of Understanding “does smack of the kind of appeasement that our administration rejected in the Obama-Iran nuclear deal”.
“I would urge the President to take a step back, continue the blockade and pursue a negotiated settlement that commits Iran to dismantling their nuclear program, dismantling this missile program, ends support for terrorist proxies and opens the strait.
“Failing that, we should let our Armed Forces finish the job on our terms,” he wrote on social media.
Yeah, sometimes I feel like we should just get it over with and start global thermonuclear war for no reason too. Just end it all, you know?
The Republic and the Jedi Council don't exist in Luke's time. Luke is also the strongest Jedi, after Yoda dies. "Married" and "Future Father" are just lifestyle choices, one of which hadn't even happened yet.
Plus, Luke's getting sloppy makeouts with one of the leaders of the Rebellion, that has to count for something.
Huh. This may be the first time "Trump just says what everyone's thinking" has actually been true.

That is what's traditionally known as "The National Question" and it's a lot more debatable and nuanced than you give it credit for.
Let's take the example of Ireland, which was much discussed by various Marxists historically. The movement for Irish independence was not inherently socialist, and the resulting state was still a capitalist system. It was defined more along the lines of nationality than class. However, under the existing system, Ireland had been horribly exploited and abused by the English, and so, this raises the question of whether socialists ought to lend support to such a movement, even though it is not ideologically pure. This is, of course, not something that is specific to Ireland.
Practically speaking, many struggles for independence have historically been more national in character. Frantz Fanon, for instance, was one Marxist who argued strongly for supporting such national liberation movements, observing that oppressed cultures can be stifled in psychological and cultural development because all they can think of is to be free of foreign control. Furthermore, the disparity between the rich and the poor of a colonized country may be less than that of the disparity between colonizer and colonized, and therefore an alliance along class lines can be permissible. Only after removing the pressing outside problem does internal class conflict emerge (and with it class consciousness), and until then it is unreasonable to expect the proletariat of a colonized country to recognize common cause with the proletariat of a colonizing country, especially if said proletariat does not emphatically support decolonization.
In general, this idea that "everyone is included under the conception of the international proletariat" moves away from practical, materialist questions and towards abstract, idealist principles. The national question is very much a relevant and important question in the modern day. Yes, we can all say, "I support the liberation of the Iranian proletariat just like the proletariat of every country" but one person might "support Iranian liberation" through bombing the shit out of them, while another might support leaving them alone and letting them deal with their government on their own, in their own time.
Eventually and ideally, socialists are broadly agreed that in time national distinctions will fade away and become unimportant and irrelevant. However, this must be done voluntarily. If the oppressed are expected to give up their cultural or national identities in order to receive support from socialists in oppressor countries, than this expectation is, and will be seen as, just another foreign imposition.