Minor nitpick: if it's snowing outside (and you can do so), then wear a fucking sweater inside! Heating a whole room by a few degrees when you could just not run around with a T-shirt is just so wasteful.
If you can't wear one, because you're disabled, then ignore my rant, please.
But let's not forget the fact that a heart pump would be great, if ran minimally and a small fireplace is not going break the bank. So don't think heating is a complete burden, enjoy the fruits of labor we all work hard on.
Significantly lowering indoors temperatures can have detrimental effects on health, particularly for elderly people. Also, electricity should be sufficiently accessible and cheap that I don't need to freeze my butt off in my home in order to pay the bills.
You're reading waay too much into my comment. I specifically said that there were exceptions and only said that you shouldn't heat up to t-shirt temperatures.
I suppose it's not you I'm annoyed with actually. It just rubbed me the wrong way. We've had 13-15C indoors this winter in order to afford the power bill, and that's with geothermal and a decently isolated house. Combined increases in grid fees and electricity price have multiplied our power bill five-fold the past years (and that's with everything else inflating also).
Next winter we'll hopefully have cleared the chimney and start burning wood again during the most expensive parts of winter.
Fair comment, just wanted to add that it depends on the humidity and shelter condition. Dry cold is perfectly comfortable with extra layers - I've heard many stories of relatives sleeping outside in snow caves or under layers of snow over animal skins - but depending on how badly insulated your house is and how close to the ground (the answers for which, for most people in the situation of the comic, are: badly and low) you may not have much of a choice.