I agree completely, but convincing the broader population to get on board to switch to renewables and a renewably powered electric lifestyle is challenging, especially in places like the US where use of fossil fuels is a cultural identity issue for many.
Redefining a high standard of living doesn't mean having a low standard of living, but it often means living differently than we have in recent decades.
For example, you can live a luxurious lifestyle in an energy efficient way by living in a smaller and efficient house. If it's an all electric house your standard of living can even increase due to better indoor air quality.
Multifamily and village style walkable neighborhoods, whether in rural or urban areas, and where people make fewer long drives for work and groceries, can also improve quality of life.
But unfortunately those kinds of lifestyles are not very attainable, and rarely affordable in places in the US.
In the state of MI today, off-peak electricity is 11c/kWh and gas today costs $3/gal.
The Mustang Mach E uses 190wH per mile, so each mile costs ~2c.
The Mustang Mach 1 ICE car gets 20mpg, so each mile costs 15c.
So today in MI, the energy cost of the electric is already 1/7 of the ICE. Nonetheless, you will find far more EVs per capita in California, where the EV energy cost advantage is far lower due to high electricity prices.
The difference is cultural.
Maybe it will change and MI will be an EV buying state, lets see. Alas, Biden has thrown the auto industry a bit of a softball with vehicle efficiency (far less aggressive than what he campaigned on), out of a practical need to bolster his support in the industrial and largely gas powered Midwest.
As a result, I don't suspect you will see a national carbon tax in the US anytime soon. That's the unfortunate reality that we have to work with.
Which is too expensive to compete, another false narrative that we can't do it without nuclear (or that it is all hopeless without carbon capture or geoengineering).
We just have to use the tools that we have today (plus efficiency improvements).
There's no need to compromise on standards of living, that's a toxic and false narrative that we need to suffer in order to fix things.