That's just it Zero.
I don't doubt that the Earth is getting warmer. That's probably true.
What i have a problem with is the people saying that humans can some how control it, or are responsible for it. There have ALWAYS been climate variations. Some times warmer, sometimes colder.
But we have no control over it. The Earth has NEVER had a constant temperature.
It all boils down to FOLLOW THE MONEY. As long as they can use their "chicken little, the sky is falling" routine to control people and get their money, they are gonna continue it.
As I asked before, if man COULD lower the temperature, then how would they know when it was at the "right" temp? And how would they then STOP the temperature from going TOO low? And what IS the "right" temperature in the FIRST place?
I keep asking, and no one has an answer.
"Wade" wrote:
Ok... so what exactly is it that you're arguing for? An absence of responsibility when it comes to the environment? "Global Warming" is just something people have gotten obsessed with because of a) the doomsday appeal and b) it's still a controversial subject with contradicting research results. There are plenty of reasons to be responsible in our treatment of the Earth and its resources. Global warming or not, we are NOT living a sustainable lifestyle.
"MassPackersFan" wrote:
What constitutes a "sustainable" lifestyle?
When the Bushites and others were yukking it up over USA GDP growth rates in the neighborhood of 5 percent a few years ago, I pointed out to my students that mature economies have never been able to sustain that kind of growth.
On the other hand, when the "sustainable development" people talk, I also often object. Because the last 250 years or so have shown that we can sustain pretty substantial growth; and the evidence of the last 100 or so show that the amount that we can sustain is not decreasing, but increasing. Perhaps (though this evidence is as debatable as a lot of the global warming stuff) even increasing at an increasing rate.
The thing that I find myself pointing out over and over again: the constraint on sustainability is not resource-based. It is human ingenuity.
Now if people want to argue that man and his brain have reached the point of diminishing returns with respect to their ability to invent and innovate, fine. I don't agree, but I can see several reasons why that might be the case. (The example of the Tower of Babel comes to my mind.)
Let me put it this way. Say our lifestyle currently requires resources X, Y, and Z. Suppose, too, that through our profligacy we run completely out of one or more of those resources. Disaster, right?
Well, not necessarily. Because, while we've used up matter/energy taking forms X, Y, and/or Z, last I knew the law of conservation of matter/energy hasn't been repealed. And while it is true that right now we don't know what to do with resources X', Y', and Z', what is to say that some researcher/inventer/entrepreneur/govt bureaucrat combination won't figure those out.
And if they do figure it out, guess what? That sustainability equation just got changed.
Again. Just as it got changed after industrialization proved Malthus wrong. Just as it got changed after the info revolution proved the Club of Rome wrong.
Do we have a moral obligation not to "waste" resources? Sure. But calculating economic waste is a lot harder than people think. Because waste is a question of value, like everything interesting in economics. You can't just count the amounts of things; you need to count the values of those things being counted.
Ironically, the sustainability people tend to ignore their best argument in this regard, because, too often, they tend to ignore the best measure we have of value -- the money price.
Yes, I know. Lots of values don't get included in price. External effects, blah blah blah. But I didn't say the money price was a great measure of value when it comes to looking at our natural resources. I only said it was our best one.
Take "carbon footprint", for example. We add up our emission of certain gasses.
So what's the value of the methane Foster farts after drinking all that lousy wheat beer? If you think we're wasting or using up resources or damaging the ecology, find a price that reflects that resource or ecology value, and point out how it has increased. Then you're talking about something that tends to have a lot of value going to waste.
But until you do, you might just be worrying about beer farts.
"Cheesey" wrote: