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Debate Topic: Environmentalism (Little Upsilon)

Topics: General: Debate Topic: Environmentalism (Little Upsilon)

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 03:22 pm Click here to edit this post
"1 word: Nuclear"

"i do agree about the nuclear thing though. too bad nobody wants the waste in their states"

I'm no scientist, but I don't know that nuclear energy is the best option. It is a limited resource as well. Last I heard we may have enough Uranium and Plutonium to last from 50 to 100 years at current consumption rates. With technological advances that may increase that range but energy consumption will increase as well.... Look what China did in only a decade and India is right behind them.

Honestly, I have no idea what can be done to solve the energy problems we'll face in the future. Thank God for smarter people than me!

Sorry I don't have anything to add to the environmentalist debate. I'd rather stay away from that soapbox.

BC

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 03:51 pm Click here to edit this post
Known uranium reserves, those currently being exploited, are in excess of 200 years at todays rates of consumption.

Since exploration was only conducted on a serious basis for less than 10 years in 1950's-1960's, actual deposits are believed to be much greater. Much, much greater.

Váli (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 04:02 pm Click here to edit this post
Money makes the world go round. Whilst there is easy money to be made from fossil fuels you can forget about alternative sources of enegy taking over.
Oil station are cheaper than nuclear power stations. So nuclear is a no no.
Wind turbines spoil the view of the countryside according to environmentalists, I actually think they look quite nice.
Solar pannels may provide a good export to our middle eatern friends rather than tanks. They could probably power the world with all the sun they get. Probably not very practical, but al least they wont need nuclear power.

BorderC (Kebir Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 04:56 pm Click here to edit this post
"Known uranium reserves, those currently being exploited, are in excess of 200 years at todays rates of consumption."

Funny how many sources can say many different things. Conservationists sources will state fewer reserves and Expansionists greater. For all you and I actually know the U and Pu resources could run out tomorrow.

This is the Science of the 21st century..... Question EVERYTHING.

Anyways, we can agree that nuclear power is a limited thing. The more we use it the less we'll have. We'll still need something else.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:17 pm Click here to edit this post
Quote from william Ryan: 'Adding up all anthropogenic greenhouse sources, the total human contribution to the greenhouse effect is around 0.3%.'

Now, the bigger the life form the bigger the measurment of enviromental change would have to happen before it would have an impact on it's survival. But for our tiny life forms (which happen to be at the beginning of the food chain) the measurment of enviromental change that creates death is tiny.
Your 0.3 to us is nothing, but to life at the beginning of our food chain 0.3 seems to be enough to kill them.

Both us and the living natural world have the ability to change our enviroment. Some of the living help in the natural balance of survival. Some are a hindrance in the natural balance. We are a hindrance. Like 1000 elephants roaming through a field of flowers. Or a million wood worm in a tree, we have done what we wanted and consumed what we wanted, regardless of the concequences and warnings.
To the point where we might have even tipped the balance of life to death.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:20 pm Click here to edit this post
lol nix. We are a part of the living natural world. Only a religious view would state otherwise.

As for macro analysis of the world's food chain, ever hear of "fuzzy" science?

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:22 pm Click here to edit this post
Hello FarmerBob.
I know I'm talking to all sorts out there.

I take it your talking about companies like Montana that can produce seeds that produce a crop which seeds cant be germinated to grow next years crop. Meaning you have to buy seeds again the year after to grow another crop.
You can keep them.
If woman did'nt desire the man who has everything. Man would'nt need to consume/destroy our natural enviroment to get the wealth for the woman to desire him.

Anyway. You still hav'nt answered how things are going to change for the better if countries go bankrupt. :)

You said on another thread: 'As nations prosper, concern for the environment will follow in due course.'

And I asked: 'as nation's become poorer, what happens then?'

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:35 pm Click here to edit this post
As nations become poorer they become dirtier. As nations prosper, they place greater emphasis on maintaining the natural beauty of their country. Not everywhere, or where you might prefer, or to what degree; but, conservation begins when there is public perception that the nation can afford to remove land from economic exploitation.

Wealth provides the shift in priorities towards the asthetic, which is what environmental concerns are. It is the appreciation of beauty that places works of art into museums, historical sites into preservation, and land into parks. And as we have already discussed, unexploited land is the only real environmental virtue.

Doomsday prophecies of microcontamination or grand pronouncements about entire ecosystems that exist only in computer models is worship of the microcosm and Malthusian self-hatred.

Real pollution can seen and measured directly. It's effects are obvious. That kind of Environmental Protection is not politically powerful, however. It is too simple, fixable, and quantifiable to fit into the great socioeconomic worldview of the "Environmentalists".

However, how many living creatures base their survival instincts on what's good for the environment?

There is the myth that the "natural world" is always in balance. Hardly. It is always out of balance. Living things procreate and are consumed or die off. Where is it ever in perfect harmony outside the minds of so-called environmentalists?

Over 99% of all species have become extinct.

Where's the balance in that?

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:36 pm Click here to edit this post
I'm not much of a conservationist myself but they make some good points. The large aquifer (I forget its name at the moment) that provides water to the middle of the US is being used up. If it dissapears then what happens to the corn, wheat, etc fields that are throughout that region? Melting ice caps are going to rduce the availablitiy of water in other places as well.

I don't know that there is anything to do about this but humans are notorious at reacting rather than planning. We're going to have to find a way to adapt to all of these changes. We may not have to live through this, but our children or grandchildren may. I think that's the whole point of this. I certainly hope I'm not around for that, but I'm concerned for my daughter and any future kids/grandchildren I may have. It's really a downer when you think about it. :(

But, if there is an active God in the universe (which I believe there is) then He'll hopefully take care of this. If not, we may need to start cloning Einstein to get genius back to solve our future problems.

Damn. That's depressing. Sorry.

BC

Váli (Kebir Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:37 pm Click here to edit this post
Humans are a cancer that is spreading across the body of the earth. Happy days for us at the moment, but as the body begins to die so shall the cancer.
Advanced civilisation is a finely balanced thing. It would not take much to send us crashing back down.
The smartest scientist will soon stop researching and start looking for food when their stomach starts to rumlble.
The most humane soldier will stop obeying 'human rights' when his family starts to go hungary.
When his neighbour steels his food, the power plant worker will stay at home.
A small rise in temperature may not seem a big deal, but the world can not feed itself at the moment, what will happen when the food and water shortages start to spread?
Britain for one cant feed itself, China and India are to big for themselves. Maybe it will be time for a new British empire, but the world has changed, it wont be so easy this time. War world three will soon be upon us. Not for idealism, not against some evil world power, but to feed ourselves.

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:40 pm Click here to edit this post
That might be World War 4. World War 3 will be about energy, most likely. It will be the more pressing concern once the world economies start to rebound.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:45 pm Click here to edit this post
And that Vali, is exactly the kind of grand Malthusian prohecy that I am talking about.

It shows no appreciation of the natural world, only sociopathic self-hatred.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:45 pm Click here to edit this post
Survival is the basics of the natural world.

All I ask on behalf of Mother Nature is when the time comes. DONT BURN TYRES.

Váli (Kebir Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:46 pm Click here to edit this post
BorderC, People already starve to death in this world. Our good lord does nothing to help them. Why will he help Americans above others?
Human kinds destiny is in our own hands. We have the means and the ability to change our paths.
If you are blind to the danger or under estimate it you will not avoid it.
We way disagree about the impact of humans on the environment, but one thing is for sure. The best way is not to wait and find out who is correct, but to take action now so that we dont have to find out.
Most of us buy house insurance, just in case. Luckily I have never needed it, but I am not going to stop paying for it just in case I happen to be the next unlucky person. So why risk the home to us all?

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:48 pm Click here to edit this post
LOL Vali. You will die in a car accident in the next year.

You had better never leave your home, because what if I'm right?

That is your logic.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:49 pm Click here to edit this post
We are the gaurdians of our futures lifes. It's not about our own fear of death.

You might be right FarmerBob. Alot of people do die in car accidents. What's your point?

Váli (Kebir Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:51 pm Click here to edit this post
It does not show self hatred. Only the realisation of the power of the human race. We have the ability to destory or save this world. Within certain limits of course.
To other species I am sure we would appear as a cancer. Spreading and destroying all before us.
But unlike cancer we have the ability to realise the consequences of our actions. The world is warming, no doubt about it. Has for how much is due to us, it does not matter. All we can do is stop our contribution to it and hope that it is enough.
If its not, we will then have to find other means.
For if the humble plankoton starts to die, we all die. Well just the oxygen breathers anyway.

Váli (Kebir Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:51 pm Click here to edit this post
No my logic is to take the precautions you are able to take.

Váli (Kebir Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 07:54 pm Click here to edit this post
When I get in my car I put my seat belt on, and look where I am going. Hopefully farmer bob in his tractor is watching where he is going and wont miss the red light and hit me ;-)

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 08:01 pm Click here to edit this post
And incidently, the world produced sufficient food to feed itself for the last several thousand years.

Notice the human population grows?

Local famine due to natural disasters have occured, but the 20th Century has seen only deliberately induced starvation by governments. Famine as a weapon.

Furthur factoid for you nix. As nations become wealthier, they reproduce less. So much for the "embrace the Third World Way" for population control.

Váli (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 08:07 pm Click here to edit this post
Yes the human population grows and feeds itself.
Britain was once mostly forset, it is now mainly farmland.
The Amazon gets more and more destroyed each year to provide more farmland.
At some point the ability to acquire new farmland to feed a growing population will be exceeded.
Plus the destruction of forests destoys a carbon sink, which adds CO2 to the atmoshere increasing temperature.
But environmentalism aside, it is only the few that enjoy the amounts and quality of food that you enjoy. Most of the world gets by on the minimum. Malnutrition does not only manifest itself through famine and death, but also through nutrient difficiency. Those people that do not enjoy a good food supply live but suffer health consequences.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 08:08 pm Click here to edit this post
FarmerBob.
My point is that nations are becoming poorer.
I wonder what you think is going to happen as a result of this?

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 09:05 pm Click here to edit this post
"And incidently, the world produced sufficient food to feed itself for the last several thousand years.

Notice the human population grows?"

It has grown substantially. At some point it will peak. Biology has some graph of this. There is some line called the K line I beleive which shows how populations multiply, then exponentially grow, peak and then die off substantially. Granted, humans may be very different than other species, but happens when something like the Ogallala Aquifer (Wikipediad it) dries up and you the midwest agricultural production? We're not talking about just Americans being affected by this, the entire world, including Africa would be affected. It may not even be the only one facing that problem.

There's not a lot you can do to mitigate it either, Vali. You can stop using as much but that means cutting down on production which means shortages now. Maybe there is something to do. I don't know.

Doesn't matter. The world is suppose to end on Dec. 21 2012 anyways, right? :)

BC

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 09:08 pm Click here to edit this post
"My point is that nations are becoming poorer."

Nix, are you talking about this economic downturn? That's only a temporary, short-term problem. Even in this economic depression most countries are far better off than they were even 20 years ago as far as standards of living. This is part opinion and part objective truth.

General Dirt (Golden Rainbow)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 10:59 pm Click here to edit this post
@FarmerBob
"Local famine due to natural disasters have occured, but the 20th Century has seen only deliberately induced starvation by governments. Famine as a weapon."

So true!

"Over 99% of all species have become extinct.

Where's the balance in that?"

This is true also FB, but I disagree some to what your trying to convey. Species die off to make way for new species. Mammals wouldn't be here if not for the extinction of the raptors..and so on.
My point is that humans are consumers. The GREEDIEST of them all. If we keep consuming at the rates we are there won't be a next species to take over Earth. I know that the enviro folks exagerrate alot, as do the polluters. But you being of elderly staure (lol) have seen the changes in the air quality since you were a youngin'. I can go on for days on this 1.

And I personally don't think that our air and food is the issue. I really think mans demise will come from food but not from shortages. Its all the preservitives, chemicals and crap that is in it that will eventually kill us all.

Dirt

Váli (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 22, 2008 - 11:25 pm Click here to edit this post
You maybe onto something there Dirt. Male fertility is in decline. Maybe in a few generations the world will be rid of us.

Asmodeus (Little Upsilon)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 02:32 am Click here to edit this post
Just a shot about "known nuclear resources":

There was a young jew, riding a train somewhere in germany, that had a brainstorm in the early-mid thirties:

He realized that not only could you use uranium to make a bomb or generate energy in a power plant; you could also breed your own uranium to do it. Now, not to rain on anyone's "question everything" but what are the world-wide thorium resources? Considering the uranium is a high-order element, it is rare; but thorium's lower on the scale, and breeds the much better version of uranium, 233 I think, instead of the 235 - in which fission is induced much easier.

Jo Jo Hun (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 04:13 am Click here to edit this post
@BorderC: "Last I heard we may have enough Uranium and Plutonium to last from 50 to 100 years at current consumption rates."

Fifty years is a long time, two generations. Any problem that can be solved for fifty years out is a problem solved, in any meaningful sense.

@ Vali: "We have the ability to destroy or save this world."

In all seriousness, what does that mean, really, to 'save the world'? People say it, as a justification for taking some kind of action, and I don't think it's at all clear what it means.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 05:10 am Click here to edit this post
I think it means that you either play a part in saving the world (Mother Nature) from those who seem intent on destroying the world (Mother Nature). Or you play a part in destroying the world (Mother Nature) by working with or allowing those who seem intent on destroying the world (Mother Nature).

Jo Jo Hun (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 05:37 am Click here to edit this post
Okay, but you didn't explain what is meant by "save the world". Or, by "destroy the world".

Váli (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 09:18 am Click here to edit this post
Killing nature through our action or inaction.
Evolution occurs on long time scales. Sudden mass global changes leads to mass extinction. Humans have and are already causing the mass extinction of other species through the distruction of natural habits both directly through occupying the land and indirectly via pollution.
Throughout histroy the mass emergence of new species usually occurs after a mass extinction of others.
I think people are too far removed from nature these days and forget how dependent we are on the world around us. It really should be save our world rather the world. The bacteria will survive our actions, we as we know ourselves however may not. As I have mentioned befofe our civilisation is very fragile.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 02:19 pm Click here to edit this post
I will post a detailed response to all this later today. My apologies in advance, for it will be a long one.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 02:18 am Click here to edit this post
I take it you forgot about us FarmerBob. :(
As it's Christmas, I'll let you off. :)

Have a spiritual Christmas everyone. It does you the world of good. Christmas midnight mass is where it's at. Stagger into the church as quite as a mouse.........we'll I try to be, I knew there was something I was going to do this year, oil the Church doors.
Sing some songs. Probably not as loud as I usally do after hearing myself on my mates Nintendo wee Karioki game the other night. :(
And then hopefuly, depending on how long it goes on for, meet back up with everyone for a couple more toasts up the village.
Sorted. Payed my respects.
It makes you feel all content on Christmas day.

Anyways.
I hope you all have a very Merry Christmas.
Lets get this party started.

Illo 0210 (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 03:59 am Click here to edit this post
The world may shed a new air borne virus tomorrow that may have the potential to reduce our population by 25%.

Worry about that, IMO, not the ambiguous concept that is "global warming."

William Ryan

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 10:14 am Click here to edit this post
You would think that after killing more people by banning DDT than Hitler killed in concentration camps, or Stalin killed in Russia, people would no longer be affected by the environmentalist's call of "we've got to do something to save the planet".

You would think.

http://www.junkscience.com/ddtfaq.htm

And it's not just more than Hitler killed in concentration camps, OR more than Stalin killed in Russia. . .

It's more than BOTH those figures combined:

http://www.junkscience.com/malaria_clock.html

Fool me once by killing nearly 100 million people, shame on you, fool me twice. . .

Again, the earth's been warmer, the earth's been colder, and our influence on mean global temperature is infitessimally small compared to the influence of the normal fluctuations in solar energy output from year to year.

Note to self: don't try spelling words like infitessimal when you are too tired to bother going to dictionary.com.

Goodnight all, may your holidays be bright!

FarmerBob

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 02:36 pm Click here to edit this post
The views espoused by some on this thread and others that fall within the agenda of Modern Environmentalism are not new to humanity. The precepts of this philosophy (and that's what it is, a philosophy) are intertwined with an ancient religion, Gaiaism, and a relatively more modern worldview introduced by a British economist/minister, Thomas Robert Malthus, 1766-1834.

In his 1798 work, An Essay on the Principle of Population, Malthus makes some rather bold assertions that resonated with and have been expanded upon by many academics.

His central points were these:

1 subsistence severely limits population-level
2 when the means of subsistence increases, population increases
3 population-pressures stimulate increases in productivity
4 increases in productivity stimulate further population-growth
5 since this productivity can not keep up with the potential of population growth for long, population requires strong checks to keep it in line with carrying-capacity
6 individual cost/benefit decisions regarding sex, work, and children determine the expansion or contraction of population and production
7 checks will come into operation as population exceeds subsistence-level
8 the nature of these checks will have significant effect on the rest of the sociocultural system -Malthus points specifically to misery, vice, and poverty

While these may sound like entirely reasonable and arguable theories, the conclusions reached by Malthus were anything but.

"The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race. The vices of mankind are active and able ministers of depopulation. They are the precursors in the great army of destruction, and often finish the dreadful work themselves. But should they fail in this war of extermination, sickly seasons, epidemics, pestilence, and plague advance in terrific array, and sweep off their thousands and tens of thousands. Should success be still incomplete, gigantic inevitable famine stalks in the rear, and with one mighty blow levels the population with the food of the world."

Malthusianism was expanded to embrace ALL resources useful and required for human existence. The argument that there are too many people and will never be sufficient resources for all of us, you see, is not a new one. This quote from his second edition typifies the mindset in this sort of thinking:


"A man who is born into a world already possessed, if he cannot get subsistence from his parents on whom he has a just demand, and if the society do not want his labour, has no claim of right to the smallest portion of food, and, in fact, has no business to be where he is. At nature's mighty feast there is no vacant cover for him. She tells him to be gone, and will quickly execute her own orders, if he does not work upon the compassion of some of her guests. If these guests get up and make room for him, other intruders immediately appear demanding the same favour. The report of a provision for all that come, fills the hall with numerous claimants. The order and harmony of the feast is disturbed, the plenty that before reigned is changed into scarcity; and the happiness of the guests is destroyed by the spectacle of misery and dependence in every part of the hall, and by the clamorous importunity of those, who are justly enraged at not finding the provision which they had been taught to expect. The guests learn too late their error, in counter-acting those strict orders to all intruders, issued by the great mistress of the feast, who, wishing that all guests should have plenty, and knowing she could not provide for unlimited numbers, humanely refused to admit fresh comers when her table was already full."

Malthus's views gave birth or heavily influenced everything from modern demography to the Theory of Natural Selection.

Modified Malthusianism is the guiding principle behind Modern Environmentalism.

Despite the influence and longevity of this philosophy, it has been proven WRONG at every turn. It plays simultaneously into base human fears and elitist sentiments that have great appeal to certain mindsets- just as does environmentalism in its current pop culture form.

Thusly, you have the philosophical underpinnings for the economic and social components of this phenomena of self-loathing that is modern envronmentalism.

Next, we will discuss the belief structure of modern environmentalism in it's Soft Green form, as opposed to the traditional Hard Green practices of the original and present Conservationism from which movement, it diverged.

Barney Rubble (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 02:56 pm Click here to edit this post
\Barney Raises Hand...


"Professor Bob, Wendy keeps touching me. Can you tell her to stop? I think she needs to see the Principal, mr laguna"

FarmerBob

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 03:16 pm Click here to edit this post
LOL Barney. It's almost time for recess.

Alexander Platypus (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 07:30 pm Click here to edit this post
well i guess i think environmentalism is sort of about embracing nature, and organic things, and trying to become more "at one with our surroundings". its kinda hard to put it into words. if you get super literalistic and examine environmental movement with a really critical lens, a lot of it looks like over exaggerated hogwash. but its basically an aesthetic instinct i guess, preferring leafy forests over industrial parks or what have you....

now if this thread is about debating "global warming"/"climate change" and whether or not its man-made, i *definitely* come down hard on the side that it is. there is enormous reams of data proving it.... less than 10% of scientists differ on the point , and almost all of them get funds from oil/gas corps

FarmerBob

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 10:50 pm Click here to edit this post
"less than 10% of scientists differ on the point , and almost all of them get funds from oil/gas corps"

Interviewed them all, have we? Got the signed affidavits and everything, do we?

"there is enormous reams of data proving it...."

Really? The mathematical formulae for the mean planetary temperature taking into account all variables, their relationships to each other and to each system in toto, the exact values of each variable precisely determined for quantitative analysis, all variations of each over time, with the precise values for all variables of human activity entered into the mathematical formulae that accurately describe their relationships to the natural variables and systems, with their sum total effects on the entire global system has been conclusively established, tested under controlled conditions, and withstood peer review and publication of what must be, now, new Laws of Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Mathematics, and several other disciplines? Interesting.

Last I heard, the math to accurately describe such complex systems was entirely theoretical, not yet in existence, and the variables that are believed to be factors were gross estimations with no degree of certainty of their exact relationships to each other or the total system.

But then again, how can 90% of the scientists be wrong? It's been proven, right? It's the overwhelming consensus, right?

Here is the text of Newsweek's 1975 story on the trend toward global cooling. It may look foolish today, but in fact world temperatures had been falling since about 1940. It was around 1979 that they reversed direction and resumed the general rise that had begun in the 1880s, bringing us today back to around 1940 levels.


"There are ominous signs that the Earth's weather patterns have begun to change dramatically and that these changes may portend a drastic decline in food production - with serious political implications for just about every nation on Earth. The drop in food output could begin quite soon, perhaps only 10 years from now. The regions destined to feel its impact are the great wheat-producing lands of Canada and the U.S.S.R. in the North, along with a number of marginally self-sufficient tropical areas - parts of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indochina and Indonesia - where the growing season is dependent upon the rains brought by the monsoon.

The evidence in support of these predictions has now begun to accumulate so massively that meteorologists are hard-pressed to keep up with it. In England, farmers have seen their growing season decline by about two weeks since 1950, with a resultant overall loss in grain production estimated at up to 100,000 tons annually. During the same time, the average temperature around the equator has risen by a fraction of a degree - a fraction that in some areas can mean drought and desolation. Last April, in the most devastating outbreak of tornadoes ever recorded, 148 twisters killed more than 300 people and caused half a billion dollars' worth of damage in 13 U.S. states.
To scientists, these seemingly disparate incidents represent the advance signs of fundamental changes in the world's weather.
The central fact is that after three quarters of a century of extraordinarily mild conditions, the earth's climate seems to be cooling down.

Meteorologists disagree about the cause and extent of the cooling trend, as well as over its specific impact on local weather conditions. But they are almost unanimous in the view that the trend will reduce agricultural productivity for the rest of the century. If the climatic change is as profound as some of the pessimists fear, the resulting famines could be catastrophic. "A major climatic change would force economic and social adjustments on a worldwide scale," warns a recent report by the National Academy of Sciences, "because the global patterns of food production and population that have evolved are implicitly dependent on the climate of the present century."


A survey completed last year by Dr. Murray Mitchell of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reveals a drop of half a degree in average ground temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere between 1945 and 1968. According to George Kukla of Columbia University, satellite photos indicated a sudden, large increase in Northern Hemisphere snow cover in the winter of 1971-72. And a study released last month by two NOAA scientists notes that the amount of sunshine reaching the ground in the continental U.S. diminished by 1.3% between 1964 and 1972.

To the layman, the relatively small changes in temperature and sunshine can be highly misleading. Reid Bryson of the University of Wisconsin points out that the Earth's average temperature during the great Ice Ages was only about seven degrees lower than during its warmest eras - and that the present decline has taken the planet about a sixth of the way toward the Ice Age average. Others regard the cooling as a reversion to the "little ice age" conditions that brought bitter winters to much of Europe and northern America between 1600 and 1900 - years when the Thames used to freeze so solidly that Londoners roasted oxen on the ice and when iceboats sailed the Hudson River almost as far south as New York City.

Just what causes the onset of major and minor ice ages remains a mystery. "Our knowledge of the mechanisms of climatic change is at least as fragmentary as our data," concedes the National Academy of Sciences report. "Not only are the basic scientific questions largely unanswered, but in many cases we do not yet know enough to pose the key questions."

Meteorologists think that they can forecast the short-term results of the return to the norm of the last century. They begin by noting the slight drop in overall temperature that produces large numbers of pressure centers in the upper atmosphere. These break up the smooth flow of westerly winds over temperate areas. The stagnant air produced in this way causes an increase in extremes of local weather such as droughts, floods, extended dry spells, long freezes, delayed monsoons and even local temperature increases - all of which have a direct impact on food supplies.

"The world's food-producing system," warns Dr. James D. McQuigg of NOAA's Center for Climatic and Environmental Assessment, "is much more sensitive to the weather variable than it was even five years ago." Furthermore, the growth of world population and creation of new national boundaries make it impossible for starving peoples to migrate from their devastated fields, as they did during past famines.

Climatologists are pessimistic that political leaders will take any positive action to compensate for the climatic change, or even to allay its effects. They concede that some of the more spectacular solutions proposed, such as melting the Arctic ice cap by covering it with black soot or diverting arctic rivers, might create problems far greater than those they solve. But the scientists see few signs that government leaders anywhere are even prepared to take the simple measures of stockpiling food or of introducing the variables of climatic uncertainty into economic projections of future food supplies.
The longer the planners delay, the more difficult will they find it to cope with climatic change once the results become grim reality.

-PETER GWYNNE with bureau reports

Yes. Absolutely. We must act without delay. It's Scientific Concensus and science is never wrong. Especially when they don't have the math to describe the system, the ability to accurately measure the variables, or even the ability to test the hypotheses.

But then again, under the above conditions, can we even call that science?

FarmerBob

Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - 11:14 pm Click here to edit this post
I apologize for the length of these posts, but if we wish to argue this topic, by god, argue it.

Alexander Platypus (Little Upsilon)

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 01:47 am Click here to edit this post
well i am not a climate scientist i am just stating that i mean, every single scientist i've ever seen on TV or read in a magazine for the last at least 10 or 20 years has said global warming is real.... it seems pretty preposterous to argue against that and i would have to be skeptical of the motive in doing so.

i guess pop science: what about the increased number of hurricanes in recent times? what about the actual physical glaciers melting and collapsing around the polar regions and greenland etc? what about the huge ozone layer hole above antarctica? dont any of those things seem remotely ominous or new to you? there is no possible connection to co2 emissions or the other new chemicals human industrial products have created in the 19th/20th/21st centuries? how come so many different countries are banding together in things like Kyoto Treaty to address an issue that i guess according to you isnt even real??? i mean you are in an extreme minority and i really wonder how you can believe everyone else is so wrong. ok, you found a weird newsweek article from the 70s? so what?

nix001

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 01:49 am Click here to edit this post
:)

Johanas Bilderburg (Little Upsilon)

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 07:08 am Click here to edit this post
Don't confuse the sheeple with logic and reason Farmer Bob.

Despite the warnings no one has flooded. CO2 remains 3 parts per million. Huge snowstorms cover the Northern half of the planet. Nothing has happened. But by God we will throw trillions of dollars, wreck our economies, and fix the "problem".


Kyoto is a scam based on flawed science and we will soon be footing the bill for this nonsense. Who needs an economy.

William Ryan (Golden Rainbow)

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 09:17 am Click here to edit this post
Alexander,

There is a colossal difference between Global Warming, and Man-Made Global Warming. It's akin to the difference between a 90-year old man passing away from complications related to heart disease, and a 23-year old female collegiate athlete being gunned down for the $34 in her purse. It's night and day.

When you write, ". . .every single scientist i've ever seen on TV or read in a magazine for the last at least 10 or 20 years has said global warming is real. . ." do you mean Man-Made Global Warming?

If you are interested, you can find a short list of the very, very few accredited scholars who believe the following:

"There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth's atmosphere and disruption of the Earth's climate. Moreover, there is substantial scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects upon the natural plant and animal environments of the Earth. "

http://www.oism.org/pproject

And by very few, I mean over 9,000 PHD's. Plus over 20,000 more accredited signees to the above referenced petition.

The IPCC (the fountain of man-made global warming theory) has a horrific record of how it handles reports issued by the body. You can find the details if you are interested, but in essence the IPCC will issue a draft of it's report to a body of it's members. Then, regardless of the number of this body (called a Working Group) that disagrees with portions of the report, every member of the body is listed as having contributed to the findings. This practice was most horribly abused in 1990 and 1995. Supposedly, in 1995 the draft was presented to the body, and within 48 hours the final report was completed. I don't normally include 'supposed' information in my arguements, but this came from a member of the NSF, but I've lost the emails, and forgotten the name, so that's why I say 'supposedly'.

The Report is then released. This was the pattern for the IPCC reports of 1990, 1995, and 2001.

In June 2007 the IPCC modified it's methods (finally, but there are still huge issues), and allowed the release of findings submitted by dissenting members of it's working groups (II or III, I've forgotten the exact structure).

One of these dissenting members wrote the following, referring to Chapter 6; section 6-42 of the February 2007 IPCC report (released four months AFTER the initial report to which this internal review refers, enough time for the headlines to have been established in the mind of the public as being 'conclusive'):

"In general, the certainty with which this chapter presents our understanding of abrupt climate change is overstated. There is confusion between hypothesis and evidence throughout the chapter, and a great deal of confusion on the differences between an abrupt "climate change" and possible, hypothetical causes of such climate changes."

I want to leave you with an example of the 100% consensus you've been, well, lied to about for the past "10 or 20 years".

http://www.earthsky.org/article/20-scientists-speak

This is a website of an organization that espouses the 'consensus is reached, the debate is over' line on anthropological global warming. On this page they state, "Twenty six scientists were kind enough – and concerned enough – to answer.
Their answers follow. They leave little doubt. Earth is getting warmer. Humans are the most likely cause."

Look at the other articles on their site. They consistently use verbage such as, "By the end of this century, experts expect Earth’s climate to have changed." Not 'some experts', or even 'most experts', but a definitive statement about climate change. Their language is equally unequivocal regarding the debate - their is NONE.

Yet I urge you to take the time to read the 26 responses included in the above linked article. Are ALL twenty-six saying that the debate about man-made global warming has been concluded? And look harder at the credentials. Of those whose positions are not dependent on the continued belief in man-made global warming being a catostrophic disaster in the making, how many believe the debate is over?

One more item on CONSENSUS - this is how articles were written at the beginning of the debate:

"In a poll of 400 climate scientists conducted by Greenpeace International during
January & February 1992, almost half (45 percent) said that a runaway
greenhouse effect is possible if action is not taken to cut greenhouse gas
emissions. And more than one in ten of those polled believe that such a scenario
is probable. The poll included all scientists involved in the 1990 study of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, & others who have
published on issues relevant to climate change in Science or Nature during
1991." http://earthrenewal.org/global_warming.htm

These are IPCC members (and others) in which 10% felt that it was 'probable' that inaction on global warming would result in a run-away greenhouse effect. This means that nearly 90% of the members believed it was NOT PROBABLE. More than half believed it was NOT POSSIBLE. NOT EVEN POSSIBLE. Do you remember any reports from 1992 stating that MOST of the IPCC members did not believe a run-away greenhouse effect was even possible?!? Did the 1990 IPCC report on climate change which started the whole scare include this information?

No, it didn't. The fact is, that according to this poll conducted by GREENPEACE for crying out loud, a majority of the IPCC members DISAGREED with the IPCC's own report! This is the report that led to the Kyoto Accords!! This (and the 1995 report which has monumental issues with the ideas of 'internal peer review' and 'full disclosure' to the point that it's intellectually criminal) is the foundation on which the need for the Kyoto Protocol was presented to the world! ARRGH!

::deep breath::

Sorry, this whole 'consensus' and 'the debate is over' thing really, really infuriates me. History is rife with examples of a scientific consensus being reached, and subsequent drastic action being taken (for the good of the earth, nation, race, _insert good cause here_) which results in the deaths of millions upon millions.

Anyway, I love a good debate, so thanks for indulging me! Hope you find the New Year better than the last!

General Dirt

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 12:17 pm Click here to edit this post
I could care less about global warming as you guys have covered it quite thoroughly in your posts. The thing that concerns me, and prolly will be the end of mankind, is the poisons in the air, food and water supplies. Our water is so full of heavy metals its hard to find anything pure anymore. the population of the Earth has exploded and food shortages are a very real concern, especially with the bee colony collapses we have been seeing latley. Also, the air is getting worse by the minute and Mother Nature can't clean it faster than we fuck it up. Global warming may be a real thing but its so slow I don't think we will see any real life changing events...but some of the things I have listed above are down-right scary.

Don't even get me started on the pesticides, herbicides and hormones that we consume everyday in our food supply....

Great thread people. Its a refreshing change from the constant SC bickering we do everyday. Glad to see a little pro-activeness!<---is that a real word or did I just make that up? hehe


Dirt

FarmerBob

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 01:49 pm Click here to edit this post
Thank you, William, for yet another oustandingly well researched and presented post.

The question that begs to be asked is "why, then, is this campaign of misinformation being conducted?"

The answers are multiple, but the one that applies to the bureaucrats and politicians at the forefront of this movement is the same answer that applies to nearly issue involving them.

Money and Power

Regardless of the threat presented, the solutions are always the same. Give central planners control of free economies and the power to do as they will. Kyoto represents, if implemented, a financial base for the formation of a nascent world government. Something the UN lacks. The UN is funded by voluntary contribution of the member nations. International agreements establishing international "taxes" with a bureaucracy required to administer such systems are a stepping stone in the process of forming functional world government. It is inaccurate and disingenuous to state that so many countries are united in this belief, i.e. Kyoto. It would be much more accurate and honest to acknowledge that political factions with similar viewpoints that exist within said nations are cooperating.

Sorry if that sounds paranoid, but it is simple truth. World government as opposed to international cooperation has proven to be a line most developed nations are unwilling to cross at this time. There is, however, a minority everywhere that supports the idea completely. Many of these individuals are networked and players in this campaign.

It is a philosophical struggle that has little to do with science and nothing to do with protecting the environment.

Without getting into a new debate over the worth of world government, at least, grasp the reason why all this is happening.

Post Script for William. You are exactly right about the conduct of the politicians "speaking" for the scientific community. The largest UN study on climate change in the late 90's wrote thousands of pages concluding that there was insufficient evidence to make any determination if global warming was occuring much less causes. They concluded that at least 50 years of further study would be necessary before any attempt at conclusions could be reached.
The Executive Summary of a few hundred pages was written by the supervising bureaucrats and politicians that stated conclusions that were directly contradicted by the body of the study. They just made up what they wanted the world to hear and trusted, correctly, that it would be long enough between the reporting of the Summary Conclusions and the actual dissection of the study that public opinion would swayed in favor of man made global warming.

FarmerBob

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 02:00 pm Click here to edit this post
@Dirt. The misinformation that you are being fed about the microthreats to human health are the other side of the coin in the same movement.

The real evidence is exactly the opposite of what you are stating.

The developed nations are increasingly cleaner and healthier than they have been since the industrial revolution. Certainly better than the third world. Real pollution that is conclusively proven to be harmful has been thoroughly regulated, monitored, and reduced for several generations. (Please spare me the links to the prophecies of impending doom websites.)

The scare tactics of the "invisible killers" are just part of the larger campaign to convince our populations that we cannot regulate ourselves and require the intervention of supernational bodies to do it for us.

Please don't buy into this Bravo Sierra as well.

General Dirt (Golden Rainbow)

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 07:53 pm Click here to edit this post
"@Dirt. The misinformation that you are being fed about the microthreats to human health are the other side of the coin in the same movement."

I hardly call it misinformation FB. These are not scare tactics but they are indeed invisable killers as you described. I know a little about this subject as I have an Ag degree...

We CANNOT rely on our 'supernational' bodies as they are the ones who profit and benefit from all of the above. We must rely on ourselves to grow our own foods and take great care to what we put in our mouths, and raise holy hell about what is in our air and water...but its all mute. The pollution has set in and it will take a milenia to reverse the damage we have done. This isn't a 'save the Earth plea' but rather save yourselves.


Anyone who thinks that the pollution we have pumped into the ecosystem isn't causing great harm is in a serious state of denial.

"The developed nations are increasingly cleaner and healthier than they have been since the industrial revolution. Certainly better than the third world. Real pollution that is conclusively proven to be harmful has been thoroughly regulated, monitored, and reduced for several generations."

Yeah right! Cleaner than what? Than before the industrial revolution? Bah! And pollution isn't being reduced. Its simply being shuffled around thru 'credits' and hidden in red tape. If you want to believe the EPA go right ahead as they are a branch of the same govt. that lies to us daily. And you say we've been reducing pollution for generations but the real pollution didn't start till the turn of the 19th century, roughly 12 generations ago. Thats hardly enough time to reverse anything we've done.
How many Prince William Sounds do we need to experiance? How many Chernobyls do we need to go thru? Three mile Islands? These pollution disaters take 10,000 years to reverse and they are piling high on us like pancakes.

I challenge you to prove me wrong. Please don't refer me to any websites as you have requested of me. I simply rely on my education and years of collaboration with my colleagues.

Alexander Platypus (Little Upsilon)

Friday, December 26, 2008 - 09:59 pm Click here to edit this post
i dont feel qualified to judge whether or not global warming is man-made. i am not a climate scientist. maybe some of you guys are qualified to determine that all on your own. but i really feel you are just picking and choosing, cherry-picking really, the scientific reports that fit your political ideology....

FarmerBob

Saturday, December 27, 2008 - 02:25 am Click here to edit this post
I am a Conservationist, Alexander, if we must use labels. No political ideology. A registered Independent who rejects Liberalism, Conservatism, Libertarianism, and all the other -isms that substitute for independent thought.

Dirt. I cannot conclusively prove a negative, so the burden of proof fall back to your argument.

There are over 50,00 man made, regulated chemicals. Which are increasing in the environment? The demonstrable proof of their negative impact?

Pollution is a market externality that can do real damage, and has been aggressively curtailed since the 70's. I support that. And it has been sucessful by all provable measures.


Yeah right! Cleaner than what? Than before the industrial revolution? Bah! And pollution isn't being reduced. Its simply being shuffled around thru 'credits' and hidden in red tape. If you want to believe the EPA go right ahead as they are a branch of the same govt. that lies to us daily. And you say we've been reducing pollution for generations but the real pollution didn't start till the turn of the 19th century, roughly 12 generations ago. Thats hardly enough time to reverse anything we've done.
How many Prince William Sounds do we need to experiance? How many Chernobyls do we need to go thru? Three mile Islands? These pollution disaters take 10,000 years to reverse and they are piling high on us like pancakes.


Where is the evidence for this?

Exxon Valdez? The sound has recovered and you might note that nature did a better, faster job on the areas we didn't "help" clean up.

TMI. No evidence of any ill effects in the Harrisburg area and the the authorities have been looking hard for them.

Chernobyl. Yes. That is about as bad it gets. It is also a case study in the efficacy of central planning. Yet, central plannng is exactly what the Kyoto crowd advocates.

Sorry, Dirt. But you are espousing the same hysterics of the microcosm that the GW bunch is about the macro.

This movement embraces the political/psycholological jujitsu of the invisible threat. Just as there is no hard science for global warming, there is none for the parts per billion doomsday scenarios either.

Show me the pictures. The hard evidence. Not the "ifs", "could be's", computer modeled projections, and other tools of disinformation.

Real pollution leaves real evidence.

Where is it?

General Dirt (Little Upsilon)

Saturday, December 27, 2008 - 03:59 am Click here to edit this post
I'll try and keep it simple and not use lengthy boring statisics from websights that niether of us enjoy. Lets just do compairasons from lets say 50 years ago and today.

50 years ago they didn't issue many smog warnings in large cities.
Today they are a daily event, even in mid-sized cities across the globe.
Smog is poison. If it wasn't why would they bother to issue a warning?

50 years ago a majority of the natural springs and aquifers where still considered pure and safe to drink right from the source with 0 purifications.
Today, because of techniques used in mining, the water is so full of heavy metals that everything needs tested. There isn't 1 place on the planet, excluding the ice caps, that are considered pure.

50 years ago fish was healthy.
Today there are mercury warnings is many, many ecosystems..we are only allowed 4 ounces of fish per month because of health risks. MAJOR health risks.

70 odd years ago we discovered nuclear fission/fusion. Since then we, along with many other countries, have released ungodly amounts of radioactive poisons into our world and it still continues to this day.

Today the test sights are still considered 'dead'. Bikini Atoll will never recover. The Nevada desert will never recover. The underground tests that we, along with all the other nuclear countries have done damage that we have yet to see, via water tables.

I can type for days on the damage we have done to our beatiful planet but I think the above is a good start...and the above doesn't really need boring 'proof' that you request as you know full well that its true.

Now the coral reefs dying, the garbage dumps, the damage done by leaded fuels are all revelant in this debate but I would hafta list a bunch of boring crap to drive my point home, I'll spare you that! lol

I agree that global warming really doesn't hold water as far as I'm concerned but the poisons do. We as a species on planet Earth really need to wake up if our children are to get the chance that we all got.


Once again, great debate Farmer Bob!
Dirt

The Grand Poobah

Saturday, December 27, 2008 - 11:00 am Click here to edit this post
"50 years ago a majority of the natural springs and aquifers where still considered pure and safe to drink right from the source with 0 purifications."

Many Settlers Died from such fun diseases as Salmonella, dysenteriae, lysteria, E. coli, cholerae and C. parvum. Dirty water is dirty water, no matter how you shake a stick at it. One of the leading cause of Death in Africa is WATER BORN ILLNESSES. The same old school ones too.

"70 odd years ago we discovered nuclear fission/fusion. Since then we, along with many other countries, have released ungodly amounts of radioactive poisons into our world and it still continues to this day.'

In France they have developed a revolutionary Nuclear waste recyclement program. Almost all of the wast is reused. More countries will soon adopt this same method.

/side note- on the subject of Global Warming. The Earth spouts out 98% of the C02 that goes into our atmosphere. Cars and coal factories don't touch a volcano. if your in a big cities that sits in a valley, of course your gonna have smog.
------------------------------------------------
I agree with FB, for thousands of years the ones in control scare people into conforming i.e. Hell, the apocalyps, terrorists and michel Jackson.
It's like a Rope-a-dope. They get you looking this way while they sneak up behind you and sodamize you with the bill of rights. The more you look at what might happen, the less you see what is happening.


Poo-Bah

General Dirt (Golden Rainbow)

Saturday, December 27, 2008 - 11:54 am Click here to edit this post
"Many Settlers Died from such fun diseases as Salmonella, dysenteriae, lysteria, E. coli, cholerae and C. parvum. Dirty water is dirty water, no matter how you shake a stick at it. One of the leading cause of Death in Africa is WATER BORN ILLNESSES. The same old school ones too."


These are living pathogens- bacteria and virus types, which are some of Mother Nature finest creations. I'm talking about man-made, man-administered POISONS. You can boil the water and kill anything living. You can boil water till its gone and it won't remove the toxins.

"In France they have developed a revolutionary Nuclear waste recyclement program. Almost all of the wast is reused. More countries will soon adopt this same method."

And just where did the French get the nuclear waste? Did you know that France has the worlds 3rd largest nuclear arsonal behing the US and Russia? Yep, more than China I'm afraid. France has set off 210 nuclear tests since 1960. Thats alot of lil floaty, glowing stuff!

The Grand Poobah

Saturday, December 27, 2008 - 12:33 pm Click here to edit this post
"And just where did the French get the nuclear waste? Did you know that France has the worlds 3rd largest nuclear arsonal behing the US and Russia? Yep, more than China I'm afraid. France has set off 210 nuclear tests since 1960. Thats alot of lil floaty, glowing stuff!"

Some radio-active material from nuclear blasts disapates. And besides, I'm not saying that there hasn't been harmful waste created (I've already told you that we should dump it all on the moon. We aint using it anyways). I am saying, however, that we can now better our methodes. Such is way of progress.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Saturday, December 27, 2008 - 03:40 pm Click here to edit this post
Can you imagine the fall out if one of those rockets taking it to the moon exploded before leaving our atmosphere?

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Sunday, December 28, 2008 - 08:47 pm Click here to edit this post
Bump...

As one of the few intelligent conversations left, this deserves a bump.

Are these forums always this bad??? It's a constant war.... I hope this doesn't scare off new people...

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Sunday, December 28, 2008 - 08:48 pm Click here to edit this post
Bump...

As one of the few intelligent conversations left, this deserves a bump.

Are these forums always this bad??? It's a constant war.... I hope this doesn't scare off new players...

General Dirt

Sunday, December 28, 2008 - 09:22 pm Click here to edit this post
I agree Border, this is actually a FUN thread. A thread where we may not agree, but we are all looking for solutions thru healthy debate.

Lets keep the ball rolling. Where are ya Farmer Bob?
anyone else have any input or opinions?


Dirt

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 29, 2008 - 01:58 am Click here to edit this post
I will add a lengthy post, shortly. I needed to track down a book that I misplaced in my library.

@Dirt. Passionate manifesto. Where is my evidence?

Where are the dead fish with toxic levels of contaminants?

Where are the hospitals full of sick and dying?

Where are the wrongful death lawsuits?

I am waiting for you to advance the argument. At least give the sociological justifications for you philosophy if your don't feel like researching the data.
:)

FarmerBob

Monday, December 29, 2008 - 03:09 pm Click here to edit this post
I believe it is important, at this point, to intellectually step back and define some terms as well as discuss the underlying philosophies behind the environmental debate. The purpose of this is to place into context my responses to specific "issues" as well as provide background for the terminology and references that I use.

Therefore, let us begin by examining the nature of modern environmentalism as opposed to the traditional conservationism that I champion.

The first terms that I will use were coined by an academic named Amory Lovins, who published a article in a 1976 issue of Foreign Affairs entitled "Energy Strategy: The Road Not Taken."
The article gained great influence in the thinking and shaping of environmentalist energy views. Lovins referred to various energy sources as either "hard" or "soft". Those terms are particularly adaptable to differentiating the views of environmentalists vs conservationists.

We both start from the common ground of reverence for the natural world and desire to see it preserved. However, "Hard" and "Soft" Greens differ greatly on diagnosis of the problems and how to responsibly address them.

The first quarrels arise from the underlying facts of the issues. One might suppose that rigorous scientific investigation and disciplined economics would settle any such disagreements, but they don't and won't, and here is why:

Let us begin with Soft Green science. In a classic 1972 essay, nuclear physicist Alvin Weinberg used the term "trans-science" to describe the study of phenomena too large, rare, diffuse, or long term to be resolved by scientific means. Those means used by chemists, physicists, engineers, et al. that revolve around rigorous testing and controlled experimentation under the strict principles of the Scientific Method. The phenomena of trans-science are epistemologically "scientific", and yet, for strictly practical reasons, unanswerable by science.

One of his examples would be that it would take eight billion mice to perform a statistically significant test of radiation at levels the EPA deems "safe" using traditional, accepted scientific methodology. The computer model used instead to set that official threshold may by exactly right, or it may be way off in either direction. The only certainty is that no billion mice experiment will ever be conducted. Even if it did, countless other critical components of the model would remain unverified.

For example, both hard and soft green agree that pollutants in well-defined populations, where exposures are high, and effects strong and quick are certainly bad things in need of immediate remedy. The tough part comes when we attempt to scale out and down from that scenario. From high exposure to low. From short time frames to long, from small, highly exposed populations to huge ones that are hardly exposed at all. Infinite scope and zero effect can be multiplied out to quite a bit or nothing at all. It all comes down to the model.

The untestability of the models of these phenomena are their inherent, fatal flaw and where hard and soft green part company. It's the same dilema whether discussing statistical models for low-order-of-probability accidents or all the most far reaching models of micro-environmentalism. On global warming, ozone, species extinction, radiation, halogens, heavy metals, ad infintium, the central problem with computer models remains the same. For all these big picture issues, the time frames are too long, the effects too diffuse, and the confounding variables too numerous and misunderstood to yield any sort of objective result. Yet, the softs embrace the conclusions of these highly mutable models without question.

To believe in soft green, one must be a savant, or at least place great faith in one. For softs, only the model can do anything and explain everything. It's all rather like modern art, as deconstructed by Tom Wolfe in his classic essay, The Painted Word. The stuff on the canvass doesn't really become art at all until it's been explained to us in The New York Times. You read about it first. Only then, if one is a person of sufficient refinement and good taste, does one "see" what is actually there.

The softness of soft green science is rarely apparent in the summaries presented to us in the mass media or kid's classrooms, however. Those accounts always convey a very high degree of certitude even when couched in terms of "if" and "possibly". While the modelers start with good intentions and honest effort to make a serious product, they betray themselves by attempting to tackle subjects far beyond our capability or knowledge.

The issue is not with computer modeling, per se, but the refusal to recognize its practical limitations. Whereas, we use computer models for nearly everything we build today. A numerical model can be built for nearly anything: a bridge, a circuit board, a space shuttle, or a car. In these applications, the mathematical model of the component pieces are constructed and then analyzed for how the entire system will behave. This is System Dynamics, a well-established, quantitative discipline for tracking the flows of electric current, fluid, heat, and mechanical energy through a system, to determine how it will move, warm, cool, oscillate, resonate, amplify, stabilize, or die out. The basic rules are not very different from rules of accounting. Track energy and materials as they move through the system, conforming with conservation laws that are tested and well understood. The complexity lies in the number of the calculations but not the mathematical validity of the basic priciples.

But what happens when we attempt to model systems that are less well understood? Whose basic principles are mostly assumptions without any mathematical foundation?
These are the soft green models. And they are nearly uniformly the source of all the dire predictions, from Malthusian economic scarcities to doomsday environmental scenario.

Hard greens believe in hard science. Our concerns about pollution, environmental degradation, and biodiversity are every bit as great and sincere as the soft greens, but we do not espouse reckless actions under the dubious conclusions of "trans-science". For one simple reason:

Such actions, as championed by the softs, have proven to HARM the environment rather than help it.

My next post will address the four main areas of environmental concern.
1. Economic Scarcity
2. Pollution, Market Externalities, and their effects on the Macro and Micro Environment
3. Technology and Environmental Impacts
4. Economics of Environmentalism

General Dirt (Little Upsilon)

Monday, December 29, 2008 - 10:29 pm Click here to edit this post
Hello Farmer,
I appriciate your lengthy posts with all the many details.

With all due respect, I don't need a stinkin' computer model to know what is/will happen to the mammals of Earth!
So becaue I have no fancy weblinks, computer model graphs, etc.. what I have stated has no merit or scientific validity? BS. This is where we are suppost to step away from all that crap and go with our common sense.

Poison in our eco-system kills and I don't need a science experiment to tell me so.

Can you find any evidence that will prove what I've said is wrong? Anything thats says that nuclear waste facilities will never leak and will never manage to reach our water-tables? I KNOW that mine run-off kills. The cattle herds in central Montana had taken a beating in the 90's because of mine run-off. The mine settled with the ranchers in a hush-hush manor once it started hitting the papers. This happens everyday, somewhere , in American/the World, and you know it.

Just because scientist are studying it and passing the info doesn't mean the corps are listening or really give a crap/ Its all about the $$.

The atomic energy cartel is doing a study on whether radioacitve material can in fact reach our water...AS WE SPEAK! Why now? They didn't think of this 70 years ago when they started cropdusting the world with it?

FarmerBob

Tuesday, December 30, 2008 - 01:02 am Click here to edit this post
Dirt. You are not paying attention. Do not let political view disrupt reason.

For example, both hard and soft green agree that pollutants in well-defined populations, where exposures are high, and effects strong and quick are certainly bad things in need of immediate remedy. The tough part comes when we attempt to scale out and down from that scenario. From high exposure to low. From short time frames to long, from small, highly exposed populations to huge ones that are hardly exposed at all. Infinite scope and zero effect can be multiplied out to quite a bit or nothing at all. It all comes down to the model.

In one of your examples, there is evidence for further investigation and corrective action.

In another, there is only intuitive fear of "Sandpile Theory" catastrophic system failure.

I will get to Sandpile Theory at some point and discuss its role in the analysis of systems and its application to environmental issues.

Questioning the basic scientific validity of trans-science phenomena, does not imply refusal to accept the existence of all real and potential sources of pollution.

The scientific validity becomes dubious when real data is extrapolated out across space and time to reach unsupportable conclusions. For example, taking the real data from the real problem of mine run off and prophesizing about unlimited ecological disaster from a limited phenomena.

If you are pricked by a pin, will you bleed to death? Using the trans-scientific logic you are still embracing, perhaps you will.

Science is rigorously disciplined and has stopping points where data can no longer support conclusions. Trans-science acknowledges no such stopping points. It's limits are only the limits of the imagination and fears of the "analyst".

Whether discussing issues with global implications requiring potentially huge changes to our societies or more local issues with proportionally the same consequences for local actors, the standards of science do not change. Not if we are intellectually honest and certainly not if we wish to walk into a courtroom for legal redress.

Poison in our eco-system kills and I don't need a science experiment to tell me so.

Perhaps no evidence is required for you to form personal opinions, but do not expect anyone else to take actions based upon the same intuitive approach.

Science, and every other serious discipline must remain dispassionate and apolitical to be of any use to our societies.

Asmodeus (Little Upsilon)

Tuesday, December 30, 2008 - 11:17 pm Click here to edit this post
Octavian lived into his 90's - I'm not sure about the exact age, but let's say, for the sake of arguement, that it was even 80+; that would put his age at twice the life expectancy of a person living in the "industrial revolution" which was closer to 40.

Why would this be? Pollution, and particulate matter in the environment being recklessly thrown about into the earth. And, of course, I'm ignoring the fact that the plumbing originated in Rome, from the word "Plumbus" meaning lead. Now I don't know what it does to life-expectancy, but lead and water should not be fit for human consumption.

Anyhow, since, our life expectancies have reached BC levels. I think that means that the pollution has decreased, no?

BorderC (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, December 30, 2008 - 11:35 pm Click here to edit this post
One person is not a sample when discussing the average of the aggregate. And if you are talking about the Caesar, then that is worse.

I don't know what BC life expectancy was, I doubt you do either, but the error in your argument is astounding. There are people alive today who are 115 or so. The fact that they reached that age doesn't make that the average. If anything they are an outlier (statistacally speaking).

I'm also skeptical of your Industrial Revolution numbers.

Sources?

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, December 30, 2008 - 11:52 pm Click here to edit this post
FarmerBob, you said: 'If you are pricked by a pin, will you bleed to death? Using the trans-scientific logic you are still embracing, perhaps you will.'

That is a good way of looking at it. If Mother Nature just had to deal with one human's polution and destruction then she would be fine. But as it would be for a human who was pricked by a billion pins at once, she also is either going into shock or dying.
It's up to each one of us to do what we can to remove our pin from Mother Natures back. Whether you are at the top or at the bottom. You should always be thinking about Mother Nature. If not for you, then for the future.
The only thing we need to sacrifice is our desire.
Peace&Hardcore.............Nix001
MNA

Asmodeus (Little Upsilon)

Friday, January 2, 2009 - 03:32 am Click here to edit this post
My point, BorderC, was simple this:
Augustus (recorded history) lived to about 80 (probably higher) and yes, he's the exception; since Suetonius discuses him, it's recorded as fact. The fact is that it's comparable to our current day maxes (120 is the theoretical maximum for humans, it being 6 times the age when our skeletons stop growing)

about the sources for my industrial revolution numbers; sorry, my memmory is good enough; but fails at that type of detail - I guess I should've thrown that caveat in there, but I didn't.

Edit:
At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, many hardships had to be overcome, causing great grief to most of the population. Faith was lost, patience was tried, and a blanket of oppression covered the people of Europe. When new inventions arose to facilitate the producing and mass-producing of goods that supplied the people of Europe, nearly everyone was forced to begin a new career within a factory. These are just some of the hardships that many loyal, hardworking citizens were faced with. [b]The reverberations of these new inventions caused a dramatic plummet of the life expectancy of an average citizen to an alarming 15 years of age.[/b] Women and children were expected to work up to 16 hours a day and doing labor that could cause serious injury, like carrying extremely heavy loads. For their work, they were paid ridiculous wages, women around 5 shillings per week, and children about 1. One can easily recognize the negative aspects of such a dramatic event. However, if one "steps back" to view the revolution as a whole, he will notice that the positive aspects completely out-weigh the negative aspects.

The article at: http://www.planetpapers.com/Assets/675.php

I was talking about the upper classes having that ~40 year life expectancy. :)

BorderC (Little Upsilon)

Friday, January 2, 2009 - 05:41 am Click here to edit this post
Well, if that article is true, it doesn't support your argument. The deaths were cause by the work, not the climate or pollution.

It's still very difficult to believe. But I'm not expert.

BC

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Friday, January 2, 2009 - 10:28 am Click here to edit this post
True Story- A local creek that is frequented by young kids has to be closed during the summer due to Blue Green Algae. Such problems as sinus infections, ear infections and staph infections are frequent in the Dirty water. Most people know, yet still don't request a change. The contamination comes from the up stream cattle fields. The Cattle waste runs or is dumped by ranchers into it. Restrictions and an upgrade in the cattle watering systems would solve the problem and the stream would recover.

Would the measure for the funds needed pass? No. No one would want to spend any money to better their enviroment because they would rather blow their money on toys, Drugs and vanity products. It is the Human selfishness that fuels our Decay. Our problems just won't go away.

If everyone would pay attention to the struggles of others, We could better the enviroment with out stepping on toes.

Fact- the rain forests are being destroyed. The enviromentalist blame the farmers. Almost demonizing them to force their agenda.

Fact- If Cutting down some trees means I could feed my family, I will cut down sum trees. This means the local infrustructure needs to be improved. If there is an alternative way to make money, they would gladly take that.

The point of this being, We will never solve our problems untill we face the root of the problems and the the root is in all of us. So I recommend that everyone take a step back and take a good long look at yourselves, then ask urself "what can I do". Then, maybe, shit can start to get done. Anyone can talk, few actually walk.
Poo-Bah

Darke Katt (Kebir Blue)

Friday, January 2, 2009 - 04:25 pm Click here to edit this post
What gives you any more right to exist than the Blue Green Algae, or the viruses, fungi and bacteria which create these infections?

Nature always finds a balance. It is only human arrogance which assumes it must be to our advantage, or even be required to include us at all.

nix001

Friday, January 2, 2009 - 09:19 pm Click here to edit this post
It is also human arrogance which assumes Mother Nature will also be able to reverse the damage that we are doing to her.
We are not just biting the hand that feeds us, were devouring it.

Rick (Golden Rainbow)

Friday, January 2, 2009 - 09:41 pm Click here to edit this post
DK.....Don't ya think that stretches reason and logic just a little bit?

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Friday, January 2, 2009 - 10:54 pm Click here to edit this post
@Darke

There was no Algae in the river before the cattle waste was dumped into it. Also, the Green Aglae kills fish and other aquatic life as well. It is our duty and responsibility to rebuild and replenish nature, especially when we are the root cause.
Also, Human beings/children's welfare or blue Green Algae. I'd rather eradicate the bloom then deal with sick kids and animals. Besides, one river will not put a "Damper" on the Aglae populations.....it's algae.

Jo Jo Hun (Fearless Blue)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 05:53 am Click here to edit this post
Human arrogance? It's human arrogance to think that I have more of a right to exist than do viruses? That's asinine on so many levels! It's insulting to anyone reading it, to be told that we have no more right to exist than does a virus! And it's insulting to one's intelligence--obviously you don't actually believe that yourself! What's wrong with your teachers?! Make sense!

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 10:07 am Click here to edit this post
I was an environmentalist. Until I found out I was really a conservationist. I feel so silly looking back at myself to see how religiously dogmatic I was, considering I'm an atheist. I agree with Jo Jo that we are higher life (technically viruses aren't considered life), and should we have to choose it would be idiotic to not choose us, intelligent life (debatable) over simple life. But its not that black and white, if given a choice between us any some certain life choosing us over it would lead to our extinction as well. But we should try out best to never cause extinction to other life (with maybe deadly pathogens), for every species that becomes extinct, a priceless amount of knowledge is lost in biology (which later on may be used to further our technology, many advances in civilization owe itself to biology).

Global warming is happening, we can't prove its from human activity because we don't know the quantities needed to cause it. But I think your almost naive to think pumping billions of tonnes of carbon each year into the atmosphere, while simultaneously reducing the surface area of earths forests, will not have any effect. Its proven that CO2 retains radiation, recently there has been a correlation between CO2 levels in the atmosphere and temperature with a non correlation between solar radiance. I'm not saying correlation equals cause, but its quite convincing to me.

The small degree of temperature increase predictions may not sound like much. But I know enough about biology to know it may shift the balance or even destroy food chains. Lots of life use temperature to determine when to reproduce, smaller breeding numbers on lower steps on the food chain is enough to produce potentially catastrophic results to lifer higher up on the food chain.

Also farmerbob you don't really sound like a conservationist because your supportive of unsustainable sectors. Not that a complete sector alteration wouldn't be catastrophic to many economies, that is not a justification for inaction. Also why has no one mentioned geothermal? It seams like a promising energy sector, which may be able to compete with fuel dependent energy sectors (also solar plants in space sound promising for the future). Also to all you fat arse Americans. Stop fucking consuming so much, its not like an eating competition, what will you ever do when there is nothing left to consume?

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 11:51 am Click here to edit this post
"we should try out best to never cause extinction to other life"

99.9% of all life to have ever lived on Earth are now extinct. The deck is stacked even against us. Climate change is inevitable. It has happened naturally several times. We may, however, Help it change quicker.

"It seams like a promising energy sector, which may be able to compete with fuel dependent energy sectors."

Responsibility would greatly reduce the demands for fossil fuels and such. I.E. Don't leave your lights, TV's and computers on all day. It also means that maybe you all should walk or ride a bicycle instead of driving. For most people, a 1 mile ride to the store won't kill you.

"Also to all you fat arse Americans. Stop fucking consuming so much, its not like an eating competition, what will you ever do when there is nothing left to consume?"

Australia is now the fattest country in the world. The U.S. is a close second. Percentage wise of course. The consumtion is a Global catastrophy. It is linked to a corrupt and greedy global capitalistic society. Capitalism is fueled by consumtion. The more you buy, the more money the people who OWN EVERYTHING make. No one is innocent. Even Me. Greed is one of the seven deadly sins for a reason and if your religious or not, you can agree that it is bad. It is Greed that prevents proper regulations from being enabled because "Their too expensive" (Please read that quote in the high pitched tone of a spoiled fat kid).
Greed will always double cross us and we igore the fact that we can't take the money with us when we die.

Once again, the world will only improve if everyone takes the steps to improve it. If not, this whole conversation is pointless.

Jo Jo Hun (Fearless Blue)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 06:50 pm Click here to edit this post
Geothermal is great, nuclear energy (heat from Earth's core) without the waste problem.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 07:53 pm Click here to edit this post
Sigh

The Malthusian disciples are in great supply.

You have no idea how depressing it is for an old guy like me to see so much lack of imagination and narrowmindedness in todays youth. Your failure to grasp history and science can easily be forgiven as your educational system has failed you miserably, filling your minds with trans-scientific garbage and historical propaganda.

You are victims of a generations long misinformation campaign to indoctrinate you politically. You repeat the platitudes and attitudes that you have been drowning in for all your lives and congratulate yourselves on your erudition.

You echo the smallminded philosophies that Malthus proposed that we are doomed by our very natures to self annihilation. We will procreate, eat, heat, drive, entertain, work, or war ourselves to oblivion.

Depite thousands of years of human history that proclaims exactly the opposite!

We grow wealthier, more efficient at providing every resource we require or desire, and live longer than ever before.

And because we do, we posess the means to address the only real economic scarcity that matters to the environment:

the scarcity of wilderness.

I speak of those wild areas removed from the economic sector whose existence is justified by their own beauty, be they forest, wetland, or desert.

Allow the words of the original American Conservationist to express my meaning.

"In these geatest of the world's hunting grounds there are mountain peaks whose snows are dazzling under the equatorial sun; swamps where the slime oozes and bubbles and festers in the steaming heat; lakes like seas; skies that burn above deserts where the iron desolation is shrouded from view by the wavery mockery of the mirage; vast grassy plains where palms and thorn-trees fringe the dwindling streams; mighty rivers running out of the heart of the continent through the sadness of endless marshes; forests of georgeous beauty, where death broods in the dark and silent depths.....
There are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness, that can reveal its mystery, its melancholy, and its charm; the silent attraction of the silent places; the awful glory of sunrise and sunset in the wide waste spaces of the earth, unworn of man, and changed only by the slow changes of the ages through time everlasting."

-Theodore Roosevelt, on his African travels

That is appreciation of the natural world.

Not the embrace of all the pessimistic, self loathing prophecies of impending doom that define the soft green agenda.

Not the mindless slavery to computer modeled holocausts that potend disaster in every trace molecule of pollution, every minute shift in the gobal climate, every additional scap of food grown or product consumed by human kind.

You blithely ignore your own history when you spout this nonsense of the evils of consumption that will exhaust every resource we have.

Your ignorance is exalted when you ignore the driving force of human history: Human creativity and innovation.

That force that has created wealth and comfort beyond imagining to our forebearers for even the poorest among us as evidenced in your participation in this, the most providential of human creations to date, the Internet.

You sadden an old heart when you demonstrate your failures to think and analyze the world around you. To even grasp the reality in which you live.

But alas, Malthus would be so proud of his intellectual children.

nix001

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 09:29 pm Click here to edit this post
FarmerBob, you said, 'You have no idea how depressing it is for an old guy like me to see so much lack of imagination and narrowmindedness in todays youth.'

I say that peace of mind and freedom creates the time for this imagination and openmindedness that all should have. But when I look at the world and the threats that befall upon us, I do not feel any peace of mind or freedom to allow anykind of imagination to distort the information I receive.
For all youth openmindedness will be used, up until the point where information becomes reality. Then the mind has no need to question the information and the mind then concentraites on dealing with the reality. Which in it's self requires an openmind.
I think the only thing the youth lack is imagination, which has come about from/with the over load of information that they/we all receive. Creating a situation where the only way to cope is to just focus on the day and not the future.
What do you think going to happen in the next 20 years FarmerBob?
If you where 15 and you saw all the worlds problems, not just your own towns or state or countrys, but the whole of the worlds problems, would you want to think about the future?

Imagine all the people living life in..........

Hope only comes when you face your problems.
And it is quite clear we have a problem with the enviroment. How big a problem will only be known when it happens, which we can't allow to happen, so we will never know.
But now is the time to do the things to make sure we don't find out. We'll, 40 years ago would have been the better time, but hey, no point crying over spilt milk. We just need to make sure we don't spill any more.

General Dirt (Golden Rainbow)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 09:46 pm Click here to edit this post
"but hey, no point crying over spilt milk."

Bullshit! Have you seen the price of milk these days?! It costs more than beer and gas!

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 09:56 pm Click here to edit this post
Given the limitations of this medium, I will endevour to keep as brief as possible the expression of the tenets of conservation that promise to protect and preserve the environment, as opposed to the presciptions of centralized planning and inefficiencies of the soft greens.

SCARCITY

Economic Scarcity

There is no inherent scarcity of food, fuel, metal, mineral, or space to bury our our trash. We will undoubtedly exhaust some goods, some day. But our history has proven beyond all doubt that we will grow, find, or invent other things, means, or methods to replace them. No Law of geophysics, biology, enginerring, or economics decrees: So far, but no further. With ordinary economic goods, free markets and human ingenuity transcend all limits.
To avert any economic scarcity, we need only do as we have always done: unleash markets.

Green Scarcity

The one real and growing scarcity is the scarcity of wilderness and the wildlife that dwells there. Scarcity of forest, lake, and river. Scarcity of marsh and shoreline. Scarcity of places undeveloped by markets and untouched by the hand of man. What grows scarce is not the land and livestock man can tame, cultivate, or exploit; but, the land and life he chooses not to.
The one true scarcity is not economic, it is un-economic.
We must commit to the maintaining and expanding of uneconomic forests, lakes, shores, wetlands, and wilderness.

HARD PATHS OVER SOFT

Hard Agriculture

A pest-resistant corn that doublesthe farmer's yield per acre saves something that is environmentally important: land itself. So is a growth hormone that delivers more cow and milk on less pasturage. Fertilizers, pesticides, packaging , and preservatives are the chemical keys to the best solar-powered systems in existence today. They permit us to capture more energy from the sun, more efficiently, using less land. In return for the modest investments of energy and materials to create them, they substantially boost the performance of the finest solar power engines on Earth: green plants. Hard agricultural practices create more edible calories using much less land. Soft alternatives like "organics" are inefficient and wasteful, requiring much more acreage for the same useable produce; thus, it is much less green.
The rain forests can be saved by modern agricultural practices in the third world that will obviate the need to carve out the biodiverse wilderness for new farmland, just as it did in the industrialized world.

Hard Power

Hard power extracts more energy from less of the Earth's living surface. The smaller the footprint, the greater the benefit for the land. Therefore, nuclear power is greener than oil or gas, which is greener than coal, which is greener than biomass and soft alternatives that require use of living spaces to provide corresponding less energy. The greenest of energy sources are those that provide the most energy per acre of land covered, cultivated, paved, or stripped. Per unit of power produced, softer sources consume more materials, labor, and worst, land. Policies that promote soft energy do not protect the natural world, they hasten its destruction.

Hard Technology

Per init of output, large, centralized industrial plants are usually much cleaner and efficient than the decentralized, low tech alternatives they displace. It is far more efficient to burn oil in the huge, meticulously maintained boiler of a central power plant than to burn it in the furnaces of thousands of homes, even after we allow for losses in the transmission of electricity from the plant to the end user. It is more efficient, cleaner, and greener to burn fuel and distribute electricity than to refine fuel and disribute gasoline.
The technology of the atom is the greenest of all.
The soft objections to hard technology revolve around the irrational fear of Sand Pile Theory disasters. The real complexity that is inherent to biodiversity and championed by softs its denounced by them in man's activities. Their models are built around the phenomena of the positive feedback loop that will always show the pile of sand building slowly until that last critical grain causes catastrophic collapse of the pile. Unfortunately, despite the attractiveness of the metaphor, and its appeal to certain atavisms in human psychology, reality is not a sand pile. Negative feedback is the norm and balances and stabilizes complex systems. The popular Sand Pile Theory only describes pile of sand, little else.
Therefore, despite our imaginations, technology provides green solutions.
Nuclear power is superior because it provides massive amounts of power for relatively tiny amounts of raw material. Irradiation of our food is an excellent preservative because it disrupts the chemical bonds we want disrupted, the ones salmonella need to live. Improved genes in rice or the lettuce leaf substitute for a chemical plant producing phosphates and fertilizers which substitute for thousands of hectares of land which need not be cultivated. Hormones that promote bovine growth or pesticides that target hormonal systems of insects are efficient and safe because they are so specifically aimed at such pricise molecular targets. It is the peasant fear of the lightning storm that fuels dire, soft predictions of disaster by our use of technology.

Living In Three Dimensions

Hard technology saves the Earth because it enables us to live in three dimensions rather than two. We do not favor gathering our fuels from the living surface, spreading out our activity unnecessarily as soft green policies encourage. We promote the conservation of wilderness and species by scraping less for our biosphere and living more from its sterile and lifeless depths. We believe in digging for our energy, closing the carbon loop and burying our wastes, and leaving more of the surface undisturbed by man.

Wealth Is Green

Wealth, not poverty, supplies the means for the preservation of wildlife, forest, seashore, and ocean.
History proves unequivocally that the rich societies are not the depoilers, the exhausters, the expropriators of the planet's biological wealth. Environmentalism is a phenomenom of the industrialized West, not the Third World or the former Soviet Bloc.
Poverty does not limit population, it causes its explosion. Look no further than world birth rates. Affluence allows parents to raise fewer, healthier children. The negative birth rates of our western societies confirm this. Therefore, attacking the mechanisms of wealth creation and the means by which we so abundantly feed ourselves is the height of stupidity in addressing environmental concerns. We must look to increase the prosperity of our less affluent neighbors rather than make the causes of their poverty as our own.
The rich man has the means to remove land from economic activity and thus ensure its posterity. The poor man can only struggle to use whatever means are readily at hand to feed himself. Most often, as history demonstrates, at the direct expense of the natural world.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Saturday, January 3, 2009 - 11:01 pm Click here to edit this post
Continued.

Pollution

Much progress has been made,(depite media and political hype to the contrary), with some of the worst sources of pollution: industrial smokestacks, car emmisions, industrial effluents, sewage, and home combustion of dirty coal and wood. But, there is still much to be done, as our societal definitions and acceptance of pollution is ever evolving.
Formulating effective abatement strategies that promote real green ends is not easy in this political climate, however. Simple-minded approaches that feel good superficially often fail or backfire. The reality is that human pollutants are by-products, externalities of the market. Therefore, they cannot be any more preditable in the long term than the market itself. Only rational solutions that reinternalize market externalities promise to reduce our levels of pollutions without causing greater damage to the environment through ill conceived,wealth destroying, or even more wasteful measures.

Turning Pollution Into Prosperity

Serious pollutants are best addressed in ways that neither expand the inefficient public sector nor undermine established private property rights. The issuing of permits in quantities that mirror established patterns of activity and use has proven to be the most effictive and economically effective way to proceed. It is also the greenest. By establishing limits to acceptable levels of pollution and permitting smaller amounts of new pollution, we reduce the overall quantities produced. The market creation of direct competitive subsitutes for this "permitted" pollution is new pollution abatement technology. The more people can buy, sell, and trade pollution and permits, the more pollution we abate. Government and private parties participate in these markets as well, purchasing permits for the purpose of retiring them. The successful use of this strategy has been conclusively proven.
The limits of such an approach are not with the markets, but the politics of those who unrealistically believe that we can somehow legislate all real and perceived pollution out of existence overnight, or attemptimg to define such products of nature, eg. carbon, as pollutants subject to regulation. Whereas, sulfur dioxide is a easy to identify and measure from man made sources, chemicals produced by nature all around us, and in quantities that dwarf our own, are beyond regulatory grasp and common sense. Thus, Cap and Trade is effective at reducing man made pollution but not applicable to reducing global carbon levels.
Privatizing pollution works.

The Micro-Environment

Some micro-pollutants are conclusively established to do real harm. When such harms are reliably identified, their sources should be contained.
However, we reject the casual presumption of guilt before innocence in the micro-environmental realm. Most of the time, pursuits of the extra part per billion prove to be more wasteful that the pollution itself. Most consume more energy, material, time, endanger more lives, generate more real pollution, dissipate more value, than the thing pursued. Chasing after the micro threat should have a clear stopping point where fears begin to outweigh scientific evidence of harm. As a geberal rule, we are far better off putting our money and efforts to uses where clear environmental returns can be directly realized. How much more environmental good could have been done by buying up green spaces, riverbanks, watersheds, and forests with the tens of billions that were poured into the bureaucracy of superfund?
Better to direct environmental spending away from the trans-scientific pursuit of micro-environmental phantasms and toward the conservation of wilderness.

Natures Role

Spending our wealth on visible green objectives does more to advance invisible ones, as well. Nature has a power to cleanse, detoxify and regenerate that dwarfs our own. Sufficiently dispersed in space and time, most pollutants are, in fact, harmlessly dissipated, broken down, and biologically recycled. The planet is vast, and nature immeasureably robust. History, again, shows us that nature has extraordinary power to recover and recapture landscape leveled by man, or nature itself.
Wilderness conservation is the cheapest, most effective, and greenest way to cleanse the micro-environment. The most beautiful way to purify water is probably the most effective too. Maintain unspoiled watersheds. Plant trees.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 12:24 am Click here to edit this post
Continued.

ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Takings

Where we have market externalities in the form of pollution, we must also acknowledge the existence of governmental externalities, as well. In Anglo-American Jurisprudence, this takes the form of uncompensated takings.
When individual producers dump some of the true costs of production onto the environment, they produce the illusion of prosperity while they impoverish society as a whole. When governments dump some of the true costs of government on our private economies, they create the illusion of good government and "doing something" while they impoverish society as a whole.
In markets and governments, alike, returns don't just diminish, they go negative.
Rational Policy must begin by defining and permitting a status quo, in a manner that does not destroy our societys' lines between public and private activity that are vital to maintaining civil society and economic health.
From that starting point, wilderness areas should be preserved and expanded, pollution abated responsibly through market principles, and trans-scientific hysteria resisted everywhere it rears its head.

Honest Bookkeeping

Government and the private sector, alike, must maintain honest green accounts. Environmental markets, markets for pollution and its abatement, require honest accounting, just as every market does. That means keeping track of credits aw well as debits. Growing new trees, for example, removes carbon from the air. So does mummifying organic and plastic waste in landfills. If we are serious about green objectives, we must keep honest books, with due allowances on both sides of the ledger. Absolutist positions, inflamed by hysteria, that prevent us from doing so block all progress, whether through markets or conventional regulation.

Private and Public Conservation

Private conservation is, by a large measure, the most important form of conservation we have. It allows for small scale removal of land from economic activity that adds up to great deal of new wilderness. Conservancy Trusts in the US are the largest growing source of reclaimed land.
We must recognize, however, that the vastness of the Everglades or the Sequioa National Forest, of river archipelogos and coral reefs, the sheer scope and scale of the most ambitious conservation projects require a government's reach.
Private fences cannot always conserve the value of the wilderness. Great, wide open spaces are valuable because they are great and open. A vital part of Yellowstone's grandeur is that it belong's not to Wall Street, but to all Americans. Value that is inherent to citizenship, nation, and patriotic pride. Such values cannot be contained or conserved in private markets. To privatize here is to destroy.
Government can play an essential role in husbanding and expanding the wilderness. The point of conservation is to be economically inefficient and unproductive, but within well defined spaces, set aside for that specific purpose. Government can and should advance that purpose, but recognize its limitations and leave economic purposes to the market.

Government Ends

Taking control of the "environment", literally that which surrounds, is an enormous political opportunity that many political opportunists are eager to embrace. It is an opportunity to be bureaucratic, manipulative, and pervasively intrusive into people's everyday lives. From our lightbulbs, toilets, hair care products, cars, and reproductive choices, nothing is too small or personal for these types to wish to regulate. For them, environmentalism and the reach it promises is political ambrosia.
However, so long as people of that mind-set are given control, the environment inevitably suffers. Look no further than the environmental devastation wrought by the central planners of the defunct Soviet Empire.

Environmental GeoPolitics

America can and is controlling pollution in its own rivers and air, whatever happens in China and Brazil. We should save our cougars whether or not brazil saves its jaguars or China its tigers.
But there is only one global climate, and there is, increasingly, only one global market for steel, petrochemicals, aluminum, and many other energy intensive, potentially polluting industries. Relocating factories to China and Dubai that are escaping absolutist environmental regulations will not help the environment. It will harm it. Overfishing of the oceans, a serious problem, will not be solved by substituing Japanese dragnets for American ones.
It a fraud to set about solving a collective problem piecemeal, here but not there, north but not south, west but not east, one industry but not another, and importantly, debits, but not credits. A commons problem arises because it is a shared resource with no single actor with the ability to address it alone or in small groups. Solutions that aren't universal and uniform are a complete waste of time and resources.
Environmental resources need to be transformed into universal property rights under the jurisdiction of existing national government authorities. Specifically, responsible, democratic governments that affirm and support the rule of law. Then, perhaps, small progresses may be made on environmental issues.
However, negotiating our environmental future with the many thieves, liars, and bandits who call themselves statesmen and crowd the halls of the UN is worse than useless. These nations cannot be trusted to affirm property, regulatory norms, or anything remotely related to the rule of law. Therefore, hobbling our own productivity voluntarily only accomplishes our own impoverishment to the benefit of nations who don't give a damn about us or our environment.

nix001

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 01:55 am Click here to edit this post
FB. You have no faith in common sense. Just because these thieves, liars, and bandits who call themselves statesmen and crowd the halls of the UN, act the way they do in the name of power, survival is a different matter. Instead of going home and looking at the life they have created for their children through their underhanded ways, they look at their children and know that for them they have to do what they can. If the USA had not dismissed the KYOTO protocall out of hand, by now there would be an understanding through out the world on what needs to be done and who can do what. Instead of now trying to work out what the USA wants to do. If the USA worked with the UN all would be well. But as the USA is run by big business and remains to have a overwhelming ego too GO GO USA! The enviroment will remain a problem being solved by single actors.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 03:43 am Click here to edit this post
nix. Your naivete is truly amazing. On every issue that crosses these forums, you express the Leftist party line to the letter.

Had you been born in 1920's Germany, you undoubtedly would have become a die hard NAZI under ReichsErzeihung. In Soviet Russia, a believing Leninist under Party doctrine.

The Great Lies of history have always required a populace too afraid or lazy to think for themselves. Now, another great lie is being perpetrated before your very eyes, the evidence is right before you, plain to see. Yet, you prove to be a shining example of how effective propaganda can be.

You prattle about common sense, use some.

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 06:53 am Click here to edit this post
Bob I agree with the majority of your points. And no I do understand and agree that industrialization is a necessary evil. I wouldn't want to try and argue that 3rd world countries shouldn't try and develop. Its if the planet is capable of supporting 6 billion American style consumers. I wasn't referring to food with my food metaphor, you consume around a quarter of the worlds oil production and only have reserves for 3% of the world's oil production that the point I'm making. Stop being so wasteful just because you can.

Godwins law Bob, come on you should have better points then resort to that. Nix does make a valid point though, why hasn't the US ratified Kyoto?
At the very least its tarnished America's reputation with the international community (spose Bush couldn't have damaged America's reputation any more even if he wanted to). For you that say there is nothing to be done about global warming and we shouldn't risk economies to try and fix it. Well alight if there is nothing to be done then my countries economy is fucked anyway so whats your solution to that?

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 08:30 am Click here to edit this post
Thank god. An honest opinion based on thought.

Your first point, Angus. Oil is the first scarcity of which we are dealing with the need to restructure our technologies. Granted that the US is the prime consumer of petroleum products, but we are also the prime producers of goods at a higher rate. By per capita use of petroproducts, we are among the most efficient.
However, consumption is not particularly relevant to the issue. Our historical economical data demonstrate that economic growth is directly tied and proportional to energy consumption. We can't ungrow. That is economic recession and depression. As I postulated above, wealth creation promotes environmental health in the long run. We will consume more as we grow, but that needn't be a negative. Getting hung up on attacking demand side consumption isn't really relevant to supply side issues. We can't conserve our way to economic or environmental well being by forcing artificial frugalities on the market. Oil price will force the improvements in efficiencies and shift to alternate supply all by itself. Attempts to force the issue only result in economic dislocation and increased inefficiencies.
We are impatient and expect to see changes overnight, but the scarcity of oil is already forcing changes in millions of decision vectors across the market. That is the invisible hand at work.
It can't be forced by central planners who only make the problems worse.
So your exhortation to stop being so wasteful doesn't really hold water. We have the production to justify our energy consumption and the efficiencies to lecture most of the world about their wastefulness.

As for Godwin's law, the Third Reich is a perfect metaphor and case study for the disastrous political indoctrination of an otherwise educated, cosmopolitan population. My reference was to nix's blind obedience to leftist dogma despite having more than sufficient resources to develope independent thought , not a direct comparison of him to Hitler.

Kyoto was and is a farce on multiple levels. Foremost, the basic science behind global warming is problematical, at best, egregious trans-science at worst. Therefore, the need to "do something" is politically popular, but for reasons of politics, not science or what's good for the environment.
The premise of the GreenHouse Effect is entirely theoretical.(No one has built a scale model of the earth to test it). It actually depends on water vapor and cloud formation that must be ignored to get any kind of sense from the models. Trans-science at work. See above posts.
By extension, the role of carbon in this theoretical exercise is also largely a collection of guesstimates. However, for sake of argument, let's look at the basic numbers as best as we can calculate them.

Plants, the green kind, breathe out around 50 billion tons of carbon dioxide and absorb back roughly 100 billion in photosynthesis. Soil organisms emit 50 billion. Around 100 billion more physically diffuse into the atmosphere out of the oceans, and about 104 billion diffuse back in. That's Mother Nature's contribution to the "problem". We evil, rapacious humans emit around 6 billion by burning fossil fuels and another 2 billion through deforestation. The bottom line guestimate: around 3 billion tons in excess carbon annually.
Here's the rub and the one we don't talk about.
What the cumulative margins of error in these estimates?
If you have any science education, red lights should be flashing in your brain right now. We know that we can't physically measure these numbers or test them, so how much faith are we supposed to place in them?
This is trans-science at work. Despite the arrogance of politicians and "scientists" who damn well know what crap this is, the carbon cycle is just too large for us to measure to have any confidence at all with what we are dealing. Of course, that kind of honesty doesn't get votes for the politicians, share rating for the media, or grant money for the scientists.
But there it is. we just don't know.

To continue the argument, let us grant that the numbers are dead accurate and the effects of carbon on the perfected Green House Effect models are exactly as theorized.
So what does Kyoto propose to accomplish?

To reduce by 5.2% of 1990 levels, greenhouse gasses in the developed countries over a four year period.

How?

Regulatory processes and "Cap and Trade." Cap and trade works though, right? We've used it for years on man made pollutants, haven't we?

There is a big difference here though. The real pollutants we currently regulate are easily identified and monitored at their industrial sources. We can test for compliance at the Acme Paper Clips plant to determine what pollutants they produce and how much. But Carbon? It's everywhere. Where do we put the scrubbers? Do we make employees breathe less? What if we are coastal and oceanic co2 production rises? Do we blame everyone downwind? We could on and on and on.
It is utterly unworkable, wasteful, and fraudulent.
What is does do quite well is place new regulatory authority into the hands of a new supernational bureaucracy with the granted authority to override national sovereignty in the signatories. Now that's some pretty cool power. Exactly the sort to give politicians of a certain bent a big, fat woody.
However, let's say we do it and it all works perfectly as planned. Are we saved?

No. It would take 30,000 Kyotos to have the desired effects using their own numbers, if the basic science is valid.

So no measurable benefit to the environment, at the expense of billions of dollars running to trillions for what, exactly?

Then there is the little publicized fact that North America is a carbon sink. That's right, campers. Atmospheric CO2 levels are lower off of our East Coast than our West Coast, especially so up in Canada's airspace.

Can we charge Europe and Asia for reducing their carbon?

Or what if we put that money to use buying equatorial rain forest?

nix001

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 06:47 pm Click here to edit this post
Hi FarmerBob. So let me get you straight. You think the only way to save our kids enviroment is for us to conserve land, trees and wild life and let the ones who are destroying land, consuming tree's and poluting wild life to just get on with it and hope it all balances out in the end?

BorderC (Kebir Blue)

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 08:17 pm Click here to edit this post
What if we just melt the polar ice caps down and plant trees there to replace the ones we are already chopping down! Why has nobody thought of that?!??!? It's flawless!

BC

FarmerBob

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 11:32 pm Click here to edit this post
Take a deep breath and read, nix. Pollution, the real man-made kind, is being addressed and abated in the Western nations. You may embrace your trans-scientific prophecies of macro or micro doom, but the world continues to spin and all the indicators of human health and wealth continue to rise. Your prophecies are much more intersesting as a study in abnormal group psychology, than anything to do with actual science or the natural world.

A central feature of your argument always hovers around a notion than modern human existence is at direct odds with the well being of the natural world. That is a philosophical/religious point of view, not one supported by any kind of scientific discipline.

Deforestation is a Third World problem. We can either:
a. help those countries modernize their agricultural practices to reduce the need for farmland.
b. conquer and recolonize them in the name of the environment, preventing destructive practices by force.

And yes. What the hell kind of environmentalist doesn't give a damn about actual wilderness?

Your kind. The modern kind. The ones who are much more concerned about dictating how people should live their lives than anything to do with the actual natural world.

Nature for you people is an intellectual concept or a computer model.

This is why environmentalists are a huge threat to nature.

Thank you for making that clear to the others here.

FarmerBob

Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 11:35 pm Click here to edit this post
BorderC. You are aware of course, the US has undertaken massive reforestation since reaching our low point in the early 1920's. Today's timber reserves are greater than at any point since European colonization, as near as we can tell.

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 12:44 am Click here to edit this post
Reforestation isn't what you think Farmerbob. It's all the same tree, planted in straight lines. Like a tree farm. So "reforestation" is really "Replanting a certain type a trees in a style that will allow easier harvesting in the future". That 's the long and the short of it.

Now, if you look at a picture of Yellowstone 100yrs ago, then compare it to a modern picture, you will notice A LOT more trees.
Essentially turning it into a tinder box. Which directly leads into the point of this post-

"Enviromentalism" like anything else has it's appropriate place and time. If it wasn't for the Enviromentalism in our society, they would still be dumping Mercury in our rivers. On the other hand, PETA is a joke. A money drive.


Now, lets take a step back and look at what we've learned today.

If someone is dumping toxic chemicles into rivers, stop them. When humans can get quickly harmed, then enviromentalist views serve a good purpose.

When a crazy, unshaven hippie chick yells at me for wearing leather boots- That's were I draw the line. They don't understand that we can't save every animal and Humans, in fact, are omnivores. That's why we have the teeth we have. our systems are set up to eat meat among other things.

So, in my opinion, Peta can go choke on a lamb.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 01:28 am Click here to edit this post
Yes. Tree farming does represent a fraction of reforestation efforts. Natural regrowth on public and private lands represents more. And Conservancy Trusts represent the largest growing sector of removal of lands from economic exploitation.

I'm sorry, but I missed your point in there Poobah. New growth of any sort is the most effective carbon sink we know, so I fail to see the relevance of differentiating between organized harvesting strategies and other efforts. More trees is a good thing.

The discussion of practices of the US Forest Service and their spotty record is another issue entirely.

There seems to be a reoccurring theme is some responses that somehow questioning modern environmental trans-science translates into advocacy for unregulated dumping practices?

The Clean Air Act of 1963 as well as the Clean Water Act of 1972 were passed and the EPA chartered before environmentalism went off into the realms of trans-science and professional politics.

No one, least of all me, is calling for the repeal of this legislation or the abolishment of the EPA. Tightly monitoring industrial effluents, mercury,etc., was addressed long before soft greens annointed themselves the sole spokesmen for Nature.

Allow me to repeat.

NOONE IS ADVOCATING DUMPING MERCURY INTO RIVERS!

This is typical of the difference between hard and soft greens. The hard green acknowledges that is impossible to reduce our environment to the sterility of a surgical suite and that there are logical stopping points to pollution abatement efforts where returns don't just diminish, they go negative. Soft greens acknowledge no such stopping points and lambast any calls for reason as somehow excusing or championing real, observable, measurable pollution.

As I continually try to remind people at every opportunity, the world is not black and white, all or none. Absolutist thinking in environmentalism or any other subject is incredibly corrosive to free societies.

General Dirt (Little Upsilon)

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 01:47 am Click here to edit this post
"Today's timber reserves are greater than at any point since European colonization, as near as we can tell."

This is absolutely false! The US old growth forests are at 10% of what they were at the turn of the 19th century. Most of the trees that are replanted are varieties that are scientifically altered thru gene reconstruction/manipulation that maximize growth. These newer breeds, mainly the Planter Pine, are very suseptable to disease and moths...the population of both have exploded and are now threatening entire forests of old-growth. Not to mention the new fire danger added by this dryer variety tree.
Also, the harvest cycle of these new planters is 25 years avg, which SOUNDS good to us, but the truth is that it takes the forest at least 80-100 years to completly heal from clear-cutting. 4 harvests per century hardly helps the eco-system any.

To me there are very few options as far as a pollution turn-around goes...short of a mass-human die-off of 3 billion, we are doomed.

Dirt


PS-FB, you are pretty damn smart, wish you were not such an optomist! We could use an advocate like you on our side. hehe

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 02:09 am Click here to edit this post

Quote:

This is absolutely false! The US old growth forests are at 10% of what they were at the turn of the 19th century. Most of the trees that are replanted are varieties that are scientifically altered thru gene reconstruction/manipulation that maximize growth. These newer breeds, mainly the Planter Pine, are very suseptable to disease and moths...the population of both have exploded and are now threatening entire forests of old-growth.
Also, the harvest cycle of these new planters is 25 years avg, which SOUNDS good to us, but the truth is that it takes the forest at least 80-100 years to completly heal from clear-cutting. 4 harvests per century hardly helps the eco-system any.




Dirt. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Trans scientific garbage without the slightest evidence to support it. If you want to look at carbon absorbtion, it's exactly backwards.

You are looking at a very small sample of timber industry practices, in some areas, in compliance with Federal Regulations and falsely expanding it to encompass the entire argument.

I've heard this over and over again. The Old Growth/New Growth debate has been raging for decades. It also typifies the frustration inherent in trying to deal rationally with soft greens. Yes. I am an optimist. History gives me every reason to be. Soft greens are Malthusian pessimists. It is a misanthropic, sociopathic viewpoint that is nearly impossible to reason with. We hard greens reforest and encourage the preservation of our natural world and softs whine that it isn't the right growth. It never will be to you folks. You have no stopping points. We are all doomed and you have your trans-scientific mysticism to bolster your faith in Apocolypse NOW.


Quote:

To me there are very few options as far as a pollution turn-around goes...short of a mass-human die-off of 3 billion, we are doomed.




Why 3 billion? Why not 3 million? or 3? what kind of response do want to that nonsense?

Jesus is coming back and will fix your ass?
Shiva will destroy us all?
Allah doesn't care about trees?
The Aliens will fix it when they return Elvis to be king of the World?

Religious views have no place in this discussion. Something I can't seem to get through nix's thick head either.

The bottom line is simple enough. You don't need degrees in Environmental Science to get it.

For those who actually care about our natural world, any growth beats the hell out of new malls and suburbs.

It isn't the trace chemicals in asphalt that destroys wilderness, it's the steamroller.

General Dirt (Golden Rainbow)

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 03:24 am Click here to edit this post
"Jesus is coming back and will fix your ass?
Shiva will destroy us all?
Allah doesn't care about trees?
The Aliens will fix it when they return Elvis to be king of the World? "

My stance isn't any of the above. A 3 billion die-off is what Mother Nature does to species that get out of hand, no? No species is allowed to thrive TOO much. Just ask a lemming. Balance.

"Trans scientific garbage without the slightest evidence to support it. "

Once again, this is a debate on our veiws that really shouldn't be cluttered with long, boring statistics and studies. This should be a collection of what we see and believe.

Once supper is done I will answer to the aove quote and say why I'm not wrong. My Ag studies have taught me much about both sides of the fence.

Dirt

FarmerBob

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 03:44 am Click here to edit this post
Save your time, Dirt. You are going to hit me with trans-scientific garbage about a very limited practice that is barely relevant to the larger environmental issues.

Should certain species of trees be succeptible to certain pests in certainly important to the timber industry, whose livelihoods are dependent on the health of their products.

Gypsy Moths are a recurring problem in the NorthEast.

What of it? We are reforesting, we are headed in the right direction.

Nitpicking minutae does not advance the argument and it never ends.

I respect your education and perhaps you have a point, but again, what of it?

If these trees are a problem, they will be harvested and another species planted.

Or is this another harbinger of doom?

Get to some evidence for the 3 billion number.

I say it's 15.654893 billion. At least 3.832% who must be redheads. Otherwise, the aliens will return in their mother ships and kill us all. :D

The Grand Poobah

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 07:49 am Click here to edit this post
I agree with Dirt. Us humans cannot continue thumbing our noses at mother nature. There IS a set order in which things work and humans think we can create our own order. To think we can do what we want is ignorant. The truth is, in the eyes of the universe we are all insugnificant.
I do respect your opinions, but I must disagree. We are made of this earth. In a sense, it is that which is our creator. It is what gives us life. Maybe some respect is in order?
Also, to completely discredit any religious or spiritual beliefs is extremely ignorant. FB, you are an intelligent person. I can easily tell, but can you, with all of your knowledge and education, tell me what created the universerse? What created the very first Atom? What pushed energy from basic atoms to a living cell?
Untill Science can answer that, Faith can never be fully discredited. I believe, personally, that the truth is infact a merge of the two. Faith and science.
Poo-bah

P.S. Peta still sucks

FarmerBob

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 01:33 pm Click here to edit this post
Fair enough, Poobah.

However, your metaphors aside, we live in a free society with religious freedom as a key part of the foundation. Therefore, any religion based belief has no proper place in our national policies. Yes. I am fully aware of how much of our jurisprudence is wrapped up in Christian dogma, but that doesn't excuse creating more.

Environmental issues are relevant to our society, for hard, applicable reasons. Reasons that are founded upon, or supposed to be founded upon, valid scientific principles. We don't pray for clean drinking water. We engineer the means to ensure a clean water supply.

Metaphysical arguments are good intellectual exercise and entertainment, but of little value in formulating rational public policy and regulation.

I may respect everyone's religious views, fully acknowledge their right to have them and practice them as they will, but don't expect me to accept them as argument or basis for government or societal decision making.

FarmerBob

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 06:08 pm Click here to edit this post
As a further note, I would like to thank you all who have been participating and very gracious with your praise.

This thread, at least, is meant to be conducted in good spirit and without indulgence in personal animosity.

We differ in views, but the exchange is healthy and informative. Please keep it up.

nix001 (Little Upsilon)

Monday, January 5, 2009 - 09:22 pm Click here to edit this post
'personal animosity.'

You are one lucky puppy FB. I read your last post last. I was scrolling down to tell you that you have your big toe over the line.

Anyway. Science only makes sense when you have test results. By the time you get your test results, the Enviroment will be dead. Which makes no sense.
Common sense is just that. You look at the pin on the floor and common sense tells you that it could hurt someone. Now science would require someone to step on it before accepting the fact. Which by then would be to late.

What are you scared of FarmerBob?
Did you make your money in a non enviromentaly friendly way?
Or is common sense just to 'up in the air' for you?

The Grand Poobah

Tuesday, January 6, 2009 - 01:15 am Click here to edit this post
"Yes. I am fully aware of how much of our jurisprudence is wrapped up in Christian dogma, but that doesn't excuse creating more."

I too believe that Christian Dogma is a bit obscene. You may have mistaken my comments on faith for Christian Prophecy. I understand the reasoning, but I am not a Christian. I respect the belief system in it's purest forms, but too much hatred is spawned from religion.
It is actually the Christian Ideal that God gave us the Earth to use as we see fit that has got us into this current enviromental problems.
I agree with the Earth Friendly views of the Druids, Ancient Pagan, Hopi Indians, Buhddists, Hindus and certain sects of the Middle Eastern Religions (Christianity, Judeaism and Islam?)

"Therefore, any religion based belief has no proper place in our national policies."

True, to a point. The problem is the fact that religion is used as the leash to lead the masses. The Core values are often forgotten.
From the 10 commandments to the 8 Precipts to the laws of Karma. All speak of being kind to your fellow man. Not the case in most modern political bodies.

"We don't pray for clean drinking water. We engineer the means to ensure a clean water supply."

True, I do, however, pray that the engineer didn't cheat on his college finals. That's the way I look at it.

FarmerBob

Tuesday, January 6, 2009 - 02:25 pm Click here to edit this post
Poobah, I will repectfully decline to get into religious discussion. I have no issue at all with what you've written, but wish to keep this thread related to environmentalism. We will probably touch upon the subject again as the rebirth of Gaiaism bears some relevance to the discussion, or the the similarilities between soft green belief structures and religious convictions, but for the moment let us stick to topic.


Quote:

We are made of this earth. In a sense, it is that which is our creator. It is what gives us life. Maybe some respect is in order?




A very interesting point. The difficulty in attempting to answer such a question lies in one's defintion of "respect".

What does it mean?
How do we measure it as societies?
How do we translate it into laws and regulations that govern our lives?
Does environmental "respect" outweigh human life?
Or human welfare? To what degree and under what circumstances?

My humble answer to such a question as a Conservationist would be that "respect" is to preserve as much as possible, unexploited by human activity.
To embrace rational policies that minimize the footprint of man while respecting the principle that we will seek to survive as will every other product of nature.

Since no other species will voluntarily limit its activities for the good of a higher concept like "Nature", the folly of ignoring our natures to survive, reproduce, and seek our own happiness should be incorporated into our views of modern man's responsibility to the world.

It really begs the question: What is Man?

That leads directly back into the religious discussion, and I don't believe it's one we can ever really answer conclusively.

Therefore, at some point, we must set aside the philosophical introspection and look for rational answers to the question of how to respect nature while ensuring our own survival within the confines of our own natures.

For rational answers, we have turned to science to explain why things work as they do, and engineering to apply those explanations into things which benefit us. Both are founded upon mathematical principles that govern their use.

Human individuals, much less our societies, are immensely complex. It is fair to say that we don't have the mathematical knowledge to accurately describe anything that we do. That includes our behaviors as individuals or groups.
The artificial constructs we have created over millenia, economies, governments, religions, are very real parts of our daily existence; but, also beyond our means to quantify mathematically.

Therefore, incorporating those constructs into our relationship with Nature cannot be accomplished in a scientific manner. We have to use the less precise means of trial and error, which we have been doing throughout our entire existence as a species. We study our recorded history, examine every aspect and combination of factors that go into human existence and seek patterns and answers. Do we have many conclusions?

Collectively, not really. For every objective conclusion one might claim to have, there will be many who argue against it.

We can only then look at what and how we have done things in the past, try to determine if any really bad things occurred as an obvious result, and change our behaviors as necessary.

So what does all this mumbo jumbo have to do with anything?

The principles I went on about in the very long three posts above, seek to answer that question of how to balance respect for nature with our own human needs. They seek to incorporate as many of the lessons of what we have learned of what works and what doesn't into a rational pattern that meets both goals.

Will many argue against part or all of those principles?

Of course. We can't agree on economic systems, forms of government, or religion, can we? So principles based upon choices within those spheres aren't any more likely to achieve universal concensus.

Depsite that fact, those principles are based upon Regulated Capitalism as the most efficient and beneficial economic system, Representative Government as the best form of government, and Religious Freedom as the best form of religion.

Should you agree with those three choices, framing a coherent body of ethics for interacting
with our natural world, balancing its needs, as best we can scientificly understand them, with our own needs, as best as we can scientificly understand them, becomes much less difficult.

Reread those principles with "respect" in mind and see what you think.

FarmerBob

Tuesday, January 6, 2009 - 02:33 pm Click here to edit this post
Nix,


Quote:

What are you scared of FarmerBob?
Did you make your money in a non enviromentaly friendly way?
Or is common sense just to 'up in the air' for you?




1. Alzheimer's and losing my wife before me.

2. I imagine that a professional military officer's job would not be described as "environmentally friendly", nor an executive's within the private logistics industry.

3. "Common Sense" is virtually undefinable and even less applicable. One man's common sense is another's idiocy.

nix001

Tuesday, January 6, 2009 - 06:44 pm Click here to edit this post
In reply to number 3. This is why nothing is being done on the scale that is needed to ensure our future has an Enviroment to live in. The destroyers say theres no proof. The healers say when we get the proof it will be too late.
I know that your way is to spend the money you have made on land and let nature be, but do you buy land that has been destroyed and heal it? or do you buy land that has'nt been destroyed?
Also, with countries getting poorer, how many healers are going to be able to buy the land to balance out all the destroyers?

General Dirt (Golden Rainbow)

Tuesday, January 6, 2009 - 11:43 pm Click here to edit this post
.

The Grand Poobah

Tuesday, January 6, 2009 - 11:47 pm Click here to edit this post
@FB- Bravo man. Great response.

"A very interesting point. The difficulty in attempting to answer such a question lies in one's defintion of "respect"."

I was refering to personal respect and responsibility. No laws and regulations will work if the people guided by them don't care. I was refering to the people who dump garbage in the mountains. People who dump meth labs in lakes (Oh yeah, that happens around here). Even the average person who throws a soda cup out their car window.
The Definition of respect I was refering to was "Personal responsibility to help keep our home clean and healthy".
Of course, most people don't practice such values.


@Nix- Life on earth has come near to extinction several times through out history. Volcanoes, asteroids, solar Flares and other various hazards have caused such great kill offs. Life, however, always bounces back. I talk about a clean enviroment because I'm tired of beer cans in my streams. I'm tired of random crap crammed into the street gutters. I'm tired of Dumb asses burning tires and other petrol based products out of pure laziness.
Mass kill offs on earth are inevitable. To use a Rose farmers analogy- You snip the old and dieing heads to promote healthier, thicker growth. Think of Earth as a rose bush and us as the flowers. Sooner or later a lot of us will get cut.
The truth is that we may not have a say in what happens when it comes.

nix001

Wednesday, January 7, 2009 - 11:35 pm Click here to edit this post
What if the truth is that we are having a say?

John R

Thursday, January 8, 2009 - 02:12 am Click here to edit this post
I would call that an ephemeral truth. In the truth market, it would be worth two rolls of toilette-paper.

FarmerBob

Thursday, January 8, 2009 - 03:22 am Click here to edit this post
lol Laguna. Cheap, scatchy paper. I will return to this thread soon.

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Thursday, January 8, 2009 - 12:00 pm Click here to edit this post
please let me clarify-


FB- Your a rationalist. A comendable quality.
Most of the world doesn't see the world through such speculative eyes. It's a shame it's not so.
You must know that us humans, as a society, tend to have a "if it's not broke, don't fix it attitude".

For example-
Man A- "Pumping Carcinogens into the Air MAY cause severe respiratory disorders."

Man B- "Sounds like we should do something? Huh?"

Man A- Maybe someday, but untill people start dropping like flies in the streets, nothing will be done. We wouldn't want to waste money on something that might happen? Would We? What if we fix it and nothing happens? We would be wasting valuable Yacht money."

This might be a bit extreme, but It serves as a possible template to how most political matters are handled. If you dig down through the BS you will find various parties involved with everything.

Someone pays for the Green energy adds. Someone pays to keep gas guzzlers on the road. Someone paid to start wars. Someone paid to end them.

That is capitalism. In the "Wealth of Nations" it straight up and down says that Greed fuels Capitalism. I do not think a greed fueled economic system would be planet friendly.

Now lets take that mess and throw a wad of respect in there. The company producing the carcinogens stops and feels a "moral obligation" to prevent damage to people and nature. Side stepping personal greed.

Several religions state that one should strive to gain personal success with out harming any person or thing. Including the Earth

All this boils down to-
We can argue on an online forum or we can do something about it. Words not followed by actions are just words.

FarmerBob

Thursday, January 8, 2009 - 01:58 pm Click here to edit this post
Wonderful, Austia. You are thinking and applying outside learning to the questions at hand. I do not mean to sound condescending, but its refreshing to get past ideology.

Back to your point.

I will quote myself, my apologies.

Quote:

Some micro-pollutants are conclusively established to do real harm. When such harms are reliably identified, their sources should be contained.
However, we reject the casual presumption of guilt before innocence in the micro-environmental realm. Most of the time, pursuits of the extra part per billion prove to be more wasteful that the pollution itself. Most consume more energy, material, time, endanger more lives, generate more real pollution, dissipate more value, than the thing pursued. Chasing after the micro threat should have a clear stopping point where fears begin to outweigh scientific evidence of harm. As a geberal rule, we are far better off putting our money and efforts to uses where clear environmental returns can be directly realized. How much more environmental good could have been done by buying up green spaces, riverbanks, watersheds, and forests with the tens of billions that were poured into the bureaucracy of superfund?
Better to direct environmental spending away from the trans-scientific pursuit of micro-environmental phantasms and toward the conservation of wilderness.



The issue comes down to perceptions of threats. I refer you back to the definition of Trans-Science.


Quote:

The first quarrels arise from the underlying facts of the issues. One might suppose that rigorous scientific investigation and disciplined economics would settle any such disagreements, but they don't and won't, and here is why:

Let us begin with Soft Green science. In a classic 1972 essay, nuclear physicist Alvin Weinberg used the term "trans-science" to describe the study of phenomena too large, rare, diffuse, or long term to be resolved by scientific means. Those means used by chemists, physicists, engineers, et al. that revolve around rigorous testing and controlled experimentation under the strict principles of the Scientific Method. The phenomena of trans-science are epistemologically "scientific", and yet, for strictly practical reasons, unanswerable by science.

One of his examples would be that it would take eight billion mice to perform a statistically significant test of radiation at levels the EPA deems "safe" using traditional, accepted scientific methodology. The computer model used instead to set that official threshold may by exactly right, or it may be way off in either direction. The only certainty is that no billion mice experiment will ever be conducted. Even if it did, countless other critical components of the model would remain unverified.

For example, both hard and soft green agree that pollutants in well-defined populations, where exposures are high, and effects strong and quick are certainly bad things in need of immediate remedy. The tough part comes when we attempt to scale out and down from that scenario. From high exposure to low. From short time frames to long, from small, highly exposed populations to huge ones that are hardly exposed at all. Infinite scope and zero effect can be multiplied out to quite a bit or nothing at all. It all comes down to the model.



Hard science is quite cpable of identifying the threats to human health. The CDC is extremely proficient with tracking health trends and tracking causality. Should you have genuine concern for such threats, the most likely biological killer of man would be the deliberate or inadvertant release of an effective man- made bio-agent, something we created to destroy ourselves.

Allow me to resort to analogy as well to place it in perspective for you.

Man A. Tornado wiped out Harry's place last night.

Man B. I heard. I'm on the way to bank to get a $20,000 loan to buy steel cables. I'm gonna strap my place down tight.

Man A. Good idea. I heard that Mable down the road will come by and a do a chicken dance on your property that keeps the tornados away for only a hundred bucks a month.

Man B. Really? I'm gonna give her a call.

I trust you get the point.

I am not a big advocate for trusting the government in all things, but the Federal Agencies are competent at their jobs. Beware the politicians who are speaking for them.

As to your other point, continue your studies of economics. The costs and benefits of various "doing something just to be on the safe side" measures should become more clear. That company dumping carcinogens in your example is largely fictional in the US. In reality, the EPA would crucify any such transgressor. There are thousands of pages in the Federal Register regulating pollution. Frankly, more than can be scientifically justified. Beware political scare tactics. Think for yourself. Are you reading headlines of actual, documented public health problems, or threats of them?
Are common ailments like allergies, what we used to call hayfever, suddenly being attributed to unnamed pollutants, without supporting evidence?

There is also the small catch that most of the proponents of these measures are advocating the surrender of freedoms, not just money.
No conspiracy theories, but have you noticed how the "solutions" typically require that new powers be granted to some central authority?

To your last point. Continue your education. Acquire the means to become a steward of the land yourself. Must you have a bureaucrat tell you how to protect your piece of the Earth?

Should you ask, there will always be those who will tell you exactly how you should be living every aspect of your life. Should you listen?

nix001

Thursday, January 8, 2009 - 06:43 pm Click here to edit this post
The Grand Poohbah. I like your anology.
Your anology FarmerBob is lame.
How many fences have you got FarmerBob?
Is there anything in life that you will make a stand on?

'Acquire the means to become a steward of the land yourself.'

And how would you suggest we do that without using up more of the futures resources and polluting more of the futures enviroment to make the money to buy the land?

And steeling land from someone else is not an option anymore.

nix001

Thursday, January 8, 2009 - 09:10 pm Click here to edit this post
Yo FarmerBob. Please ignore my comment about Is there anything in life that you will make a stand on?
I've not been getting any sleep over the past couple of nights and I was in a bad mood.
Sorry Bro.

Nick.

The Grand Poobah

Thursday, January 8, 2009 - 11:40 pm Click here to edit this post
'Acquire the means to become a steward of the land yourself.'

And how would you suggest we do that without using up more of the futures resources and polluting more of the futures enviroment to make the money to buy the land?

--------------------------------------------------------------------

I actually understand what FB was saying. You don't need money to practice good enviromental measures.
Nix, As an enviromentalist, do you know how much power your computer pulls? Unless it's made from alternative sources, it is harmfull to the enviroment.


on another note, I heard that most of Europe wants 50% of their power to be produced by wind within the next 10 yrs. Is this true?

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Friday, January 9, 2009 - 12:03 am Click here to edit this post
FB's talking about conservation. Which I agree with. But how do you get the money to buy the land in first place is what I'm getting at.

I also know you don't need money to practice good enviromental issues. I earn just enough to survive. I buy second hand cloths, I recycle everything that I'm allowed too. I only use my 950cc van for work (gardening), I grow some of the food that I need. I desire no material wealth. Most of what I own has been given to me by people who would have thrown them away. I switch off any light that I'm not using. I don't leave anything on standby. I only use my computer to play this game to get my point about the enviroment accross. I don't use the heating (I just put on an extra jumper).

My point is that regardless of what I do, I know that unless big business stops the destruction of our enviroment for which they are doing in the name of profit then my sacrifices will be worthless. Unless people just live for what they need instead of for what they want, our future will not have a natural world to live in.

The Grand Poobah

Friday, January 9, 2009 - 10:49 am Click here to edit this post
But that would mean giving up our material realm of safety. You know most people can't handle the responsibility of personal accountability.

nix001

Saturday, January 10, 2009 - 06:40 pm Click here to edit this post
:)

I should have also added that this is why conservation will not be enough to ensure our kid's and grandkid's etc will live in a natural enviroment (as we have) and that this is why we need an enviromental movement to stand up for their rights. (For they are not yet here to do so for themselves)

Alexander Platypus (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 03:46 am Click here to edit this post
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_opinion_on_climate_change

nuff said

read it and weep "skeptics"

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 04:30 am Click here to edit this post
a skeptic can merely point out that Wikipedia isn't a reliable source. Anyone can post edit or lie.
Show me a more reliable source.

zapadka (Fearless Blue)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 05:26 am Click here to edit this post
I dont live in a natural enviroment.

The indians did. An look at em now.

Though taking into account Emmersons essay on

nature maybe I do live in a natural enviroment.

anywho-I have to use words when Im talking to you-so I am going to stop now.

Jo Jo Hun (Fearless Blue)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 06:51 am Click here to edit this post
Nix, join The Nature Conservancy. It's a non-profit organization (and I know you like that "non-profit" part) that pools people's donations to purchase environmentally critical lands. They try to be very smart about their purchases, and try to leverage their money as much as possible. Few people can buy and set aside lands as individuals, but many people working together can.

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 07:15 am Click here to edit this post
"Untill Science can answer that, Faith can never be fully discredited. I believe, personally, that the truth is infact a merge of the two. Faith and science". -Poo-bah

lol god of the gaps.
Faith: complete confidence in a person or plan

Science (Latin for knowledge): the effort to discover, understand, or to understand better

Sound like those two things are incompatible. If you have complete confidence that the Murry river in southern Australia was carved by a giant serpent, or the grand canyon was carved by a global flood, or the earth is a flat plate resting on top of four elephants on top of a turtle in space. Then your not going to want to learn any more, as you already have the answer.

Johanas Bilderburg (Golden Rainbow)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 07:24 am Click here to edit this post
The Earth is flat as dictated by the Flying Spagetti Monster. May his holy noodles bring us all a little peace and tranquility.

And he says Global Warming is a good way to scam suckers out of cash. Err I mean save the planet by raising awareness about the imagined real warming as dreamed up by con-men proven by hard scientific data.

Environmentalists: Oh noes. The planet is too hot. All the polar bears are dying. Who will save us from the evil carbon dioxide.

Me: I will take care of all that evil Carbon dioxide with my magic beans...And it will only cost twenty five billion dollars and some hotties able assistants.....And a 12 pack.

Environmentalists: I totally dig your groove man..Its great you are saving the planet....Want to smoke some herb and have a drum circle?

Me: No I must go forth and save the planet from warming.

Environmentalists: Ok here is a fat sack of cash. Let us know how the polar bears are doing.


Me: I would like to see that Ferrari in Red please. And I would like the upholstery to be lined in this polar bear fur..Its really pimp.

The End.

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 07:32 am Click here to edit this post
"My point is that regardless of what I do, I know that unless big business stops the destruction of our enviroment (environment?) for which they are doing in the name of profit then my sacrifices will be worthless. Unless people just live for what they need instead of for what they want, our future will not have a natural world to live in". -nix001

And environmentalism reveals itself. Its more about anti corporate movement then protecting the environment. At the end of the day corporations will only do what society will tolerate, and a corporations goal is simple: make the most money as possible, while I advocate a more socially responsible corporate model (pass profits all employees, shareholders, and clients). But I don't want to be a communist and impose these conditions, and besides the incurred costs of this regulation would outweigh the benefits (probably). I do think executive pay increase should be somewhat proportional no all employee pay increase, and if business is performing bad they should NEVER receive a pay increase.

Getting back on topic. I'm not exactly sure how making business operate inefficiently will reduce waste, and rampant destruction of the environment (your view not mine). Yeah minimal destruction and poisoning of the biosphere and atmosphere is an obvious goal, only a short sighted and selfish person wouldn't agree with that. But we didn't get from coal transportation, with little regard for human rights and health to a society where we have enough money to look after the disadvantaged, regulate environmental controls, provide a much higher standard of living education and healthcare (less wars, affordable healthcare Americans) in a day.
I'd assume you'd rather have a standard of living where you can communicate with people all over the world, then being an ignorant mud farmer with little food, virtually no healthcare, and no human rights (with no guarantee that you would cause less destruction to the environment). But I do agree somewhat with environmentalists that we are progressing much too slowly, but I don't really have any comprehensive solutions to speed up the process.

Jo Jo Hun (Fearless Blue)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 07:33 am Click here to edit this post
AP, the Wikipedia article lists organizations that support a relatively mild statement about global warming. Many people who could easily be called "skeptics" would agree with that statement, and yet still be skeptical about some or much of what is generally assumed to be conventional wisdom about global warming.

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 07:34 am Click here to edit this post
Depends what your faith is, Angus. That's the amazing thing about spoken language, one word can have various meanings. I was refering to faith in "Spirituality". The belief in a higher power and in one's own spirit.

Did random elements bond just perfectly to form a living cell through random chemicle reactions? Lets go back further.
What created the first Element? Nothing exists forever. At one point there was nothing, now there is something.

Science helps us find answers, faith guides us.
Understand my abstract concepts now?

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 07:51 am Click here to edit this post
Well yeah there are scams from green guilt. But I think think life adds stability to the planet, although one species won't do anything, whats stopping you from making that rationale again and again until it actually has an effect, also life on top of the food chain are less important then life on the bottom (if you want to actually prioritize importance of life, guess I can't talk I eat meat). My view for protecting life is for preserving knowledge, life is a library which we have only begun to read, we wouldn't destroy books just because there is so many others (stupid metaphor I know).

Jo Jo Hun (Fearless Blue)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 08:08 am Click here to edit this post
"Life is a library which we have only begun to read"--Angus, did you make that up? It's good.

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 08:17 am Click here to edit this post
"What created the first Element?"

Well first you assume that it must have been created, but that assumption shoots itself in the foot because what created it also needs a creator by that reasoning the process of creation continues indefinitely with no conclusion to be reached.

Then you implement anything abstract as a way of somehow explaining a non explanation? Sure nothing wrong with abstract concepts. I enjoy music, stories, philosophy. There is a serious problem when it is treated on the same grounds as the objective, or has any effect on the objective then there is a problem. Especially so when many people are not given the choice to follow the abstract, organizations of the abstract demand special privileges simply because their abstract concept is special.

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 08:18 am Click here to edit this post
Yeah I made it up Jo Jo.

The Grand Poobah

Sunday, January 11, 2009 - 08:58 am Click here to edit this post
I never said that nothing created the creator of the first element. I said "What created the first Element?"

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Monday, January 12, 2009 - 06:04 am Click here to edit this post
And again you make the assumption that it must have been created.

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Monday, January 12, 2009 - 06:42 am Click here to edit this post
no angus. I'm saying that things have always existed. With no beginning. it's just here. Always has been. Never been created.

(see sarcasm)

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Tuesday, January 13, 2009 - 01:37 pm Click here to edit this post
What I'm trying to say is- Nothing comes from nothing. Everything comes from something. Something must lead to the creation of something else if something is to exist.

A + B = C

You assume that I was implying "Higher Power" or "Big Bang".

I will smartly reply with "What lead to the creation that higher Power?"

Or

"What created that little ball of matter that blew up and created the universe?"

and

"What created the thing that created that little ball of matter that blew up and created the universe?"

You understand what I'm getting at.
Untill science can answer that (Which it can't) belief in higher power, can and will never be discredited.

I am not saying "I believe in God. Suck my Toes"

I am not saying "The universe just exists and your a dumb bible thumper"

I AM saying "we don't know what's really going on.
In the eyes of the cosmos, we are all insugnificant, so Lets Strip naked, get drunk and then see what happens. Who's down?"

nix001

Tuesday, January 13, 2009 - 05:54 pm Click here to edit this post
I get into fights when I'm drunk. :( so I'll leave you lot to it.

I think nothing is the other half of something and only occures when a atom loses, through degradation, either its postive(+)energy or it's negative(-)energy and has'nt yet come across any more opposite energy to make it something again.

I also think that the Big Bang happens time and time again because :) over time, one type of energy, either positive or negative, gets broken down to the point where there is not enough of that energy to stabalize anymore atoms that lose that side of their energy, creating lots of fast moving unstable atoms.

Lets say our atom has lost it's negative(-) energy, so it's pure positive(+). It will be attracted to the nearest (-) energy and like magnets will travel to that source.
At the same time weaker pure atoms of (-) energy will be attracted to our pure (+)atom.
In todays life pure atom reactions occur every milli second of the day, but as there are plenty of opposite atoms everywhere, our pure atom wouldn't have to be un-stable for long or travel far before it would find or be found by it's opposite energy, meaning there are no noticable reactions.

But if our pure atom had to travel a long way(due to the shortage of negative energy near by) to reach what it's attracted to, by the time it gets there, it would have built up that much speed that it would slam into it's opposite creating the Big Bang.

nix001

Tuesday, January 13, 2009 - 06:59 pm Click here to edit this post
I guess life is a balance and alot of the time the best place to be would be on the fence. But to me, there is no other side of the fence, let alone a fence when it comes to the Environment. For the simple reason that I will not even take the risk with something so precious.
People spend so much time looking after and protecting what they own. Cleaning and polishing things because they wont even risk the on set of rust. Covering and protecting things so as not to risk them getting damaged. Yet when it comes to risking damage to the future generations natural environment there is'nt the same concern. Why is that?

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Tuesday, January 13, 2009 - 11:06 pm Click here to edit this post
native american tribes believe Earth is Sick (see medicine wheel). This because the Yellowstone Caldera is showing scary signs of activity.

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, January 14, 2009 - 03:44 am Click here to edit this post
Heh use the agnostic argument, thats come a long way from we must merge faith and science. Yeah no one really knows, but some have a better idea then others. Spirituality is a cultural phenomena, it proves things the same way music proves things. The problem is when people claim that it until some proof to the contrary comes along, their idea is true.

It comes down to the thousand monkeys at a thousand typewriters, any made up story based on nothing might be true, its it is almost infinitely likely that it isn't true. Treat is like fiction.

There's no real problem with spiritualistic heritage (unless you have dogmatic ideas connected with it) until facts are presented to the contrary, then their are two reactions, acknowledge it and understand your spiritual heritage is a cultural affair only (many pagans have this attitude), or ignore it and get defensive (totalitarian based religions usually have this kind of dilemma). I'm indifferent to non-totalitarian/brainwashing based cults.

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Thursday, January 15, 2009 - 12:05 am Click here to edit this post
Actually, I don't ignore info. No matter how "out there" it may be. My point is merely- We don't have a clue of what's going on.

"t comes down to the thousand monkeys at a thousand typewriters, any made up story based on nothing might be true, its it is almost infinitely likely that it isn't true. Treat is like fiction. "

If we were to utilize the most powerful force on Earth- The human brain, we could actually get somewhere. 6 billion brains taking shots into the dark, someone's bound to hit something.
Is it so hard to believe that there is a higher power? (not necessarilly a "God")

I don't claim to KNOW. I use such words as MAYBE and POSSIBLY. To say that there is NO higher powers is just as ignorant as saying that YOUR God is the almighty, omnipotent creator of all.
If we don't know, we don't know.

"But why do you talk about so many religious beliefs and writtings?" You may ask.

I'm a student of Global history. If you haven't noticed already, history and religion stroll hand in hand and have done so for thousands and thousands of years. I am well educated in the field which leads to a better understanding.
Once again. Not saying it IS going to happen. I'm saying I UNDERSTAND why they say it's going to happen.

nix001

Sunday, January 18, 2009 - 07:54 pm Click here to edit this post
Helloa FarmerBob. Hope all is well, long time no see?

Just a quick question. In England, the government has given the green light to a third runway to be built a Heathrow Airport, London. Now, this is against all government ministers Environmental concerns, but PM says that if we can't compete we will fade away.
Which means everyother airport that wants to compete will also build another run way, making the price to travel by air cheaper, meaning more flights , meaning more polution.

My guestion is:
In your eye's would there be any reason to become an Environmental Warrior? Fighting the forces of consumption, who fight in the name of material wealth, face to face? :)

Or do you think that regardless of what we see around us, we should just sit back and hope Mother Nature, from her fenced off areas, can keep the balance of life alive?

Daconia

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 08:34 am Click here to edit this post
I haven't posted on this thread in a while...so I figured I would throw my $.17 in. (Inflation you know)
I'm a GREAT believer in economics and technology. To answer the airport question...let them build it..when air pollution from planes because an
ECONOMIC hardship..the technology will be created to fix it and someone will profit from it. Yes there will be suffering of the individual and local environments until there is sufficient profit motive to fix the problem...but it will never reach a level to threaten MANKIND, because that would not be profitable.
Same is true for deforestation and pollution in general.
A great example of this is the "ozone hole" theoretically caused by freon and other chlorofluorocarbons. Alternatives to these have existed for a long time but were not as economically viable. When the cry got loud enough and governments put enough pressure on manufacturers, the viability of these alternatives was profitable. In this case legislation and international treaties sped the change....but profit was still the motive for change.
No one discusses the ozone issue anymore.

Anyhow...thats my thoughts on it...and why I don't get too excited when some new "trendy" problem comes to light.

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 10:18 am Click here to edit this post
Sumone going to become a corporate lawer wouldn't, would they? ;-)

"theoretically caused by freon and other chlorofluorocarbons"

Now...theoretical...yes...

"alternatives to these have existed for a long time but were not as economically viable. When the cry got loud enough and governments put enough pressure on manufacturers, the viability of these alternatives was profitable."

So, we stopped using them in the U.S. and developed countries and sold them to developing nations. It's called having your cake and eating it to.
Come on, what else would they do with their stockpiles of freon and other chlorofluorocarbons.
A common corporate world tactic of product disposal.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wg-52mHIjhs

Your right about the Profit issue though.

FarmerBob

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 01:46 pm Click here to edit this post
LOL. Molecular weight of air: 29 Average Molecular weight of a typical CFC: 129

Hypothesis: Heavier than air CFC's rise 6 to 10 miles into the stratosphere and chemically interact with the 3ppm ozone molecules at the poles, destroying them. Hence: Ozone Depletion.

Curious questions:
1. How do these CFC's cross the equator, much less through the latitudal convection systems, when the air currents, themselves, do not?

2. By what mechanism are these HTA molecules transported into the stratosphere, which is several miles above the highest convection currents of our global air circulation system?

3. Why were low tropospheric ozone levels (bad ozone) increasing at the same time as stratospheric (good ozone) levels were decreasing?

4. Ozone is O3, regardless of where it is located. So why weren't the CFC's destroying all ozone in the atmosphere, particularly at lower altitudes where CFC concentrations should be higher?

Trans-science, anyone?

The alternatives to freon and other refrigerant chemicals are much more economical, for industry, not the consumer. The efficiencies they provide are much lower, requiring more frequent servicing at lower cost to the provider. Why were the refrigeration and HVAC industries lobbying for the mandated replacement of freon and other CFC's in the mid 90's?

Daconia (Kebir Blue)

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 02:58 pm Click here to edit this post
Bob,
I completely agree with you, hence the "theoretically"... Doesn't change the economics behind the "solution". In 10 years people will be laughing about the "global warming crisis" in the same way. They gave a Nobel out for what????

Austia,
I can't speak to other countries, but exporting freon became illegal in the US in the late 80s. The US military uses up the stockpiles we have, as the ban on CFCs doesn't apply to them.

Daconia (Golden Rainbow)

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 03:51 pm Click here to edit this post
A moment of silence as we all watch Alfred Nobel roll over in his grave.

Alfred Nobel was a Swedish inventor, chemist, industrialist and when he had reached the end of his life of incredible achievement he left a legacy of philanthropy directed toward the awarding, year in and year out, of the greatest possible merit in the physical sciences, literature, and diplomacy. The Nobel Peace Prize, since its establishment after Nobel's death in 1896 (the first was awarded in 1901), has since becomes one of the pinnacles of modern human glory (even enshrined for board game players everywhere as a seminal lifetime achievement in the game of LIFE). Unfortunately, the process for choosing who wins the prizes, particularly the peace prize, has always been open to wide latitudes of opinion and standards for what constitutes sound peacemaking. Often it is awarded to whoever can steal headlines in any particular year for a peace treaty or accord, hence it was awarded to American President Theodore Roosevelt, and to heads of states and even terrorists who decided to try to make peace (or fool those desirous of peace of their good intentions) the world over. It has also occasionally been awarded to a dissident suffering under an oppressive regime who is trying to create a civil society, one that will not be prone towards aggressive war making. These were all, whether properly awarded or not, the precedents and largely accepted ways one could earn a once prestigious prize.

I use the word "once" because the most recent winner, former Vice-President Albert Gore, Jr., has "earned" the prize in a novel and problematic way. The Nobel committee awarded him the most recent Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to raise global awareness to an alleged problem which supposedly promises, if unchecked, to promote global conflict and war over resources. The alleged problem is, of course, what Gore has been crying wolf over ever since 1992 when he published his alarmist book, Earth in the Balance. Gore is being awarded a prize for advancing world peace without actually having done anything at all to advance world peace. This has been true of former winners in far different contexts, i.e. Yasser Arafat won through his own duplicitous efforts to achieve peace (some saw through him at the time), and dissidents in oppressed countries are working for internal peace and long-term international peace, but usually aren't achieving anything in the short-term.

However, Gore's "peace-making" achievement lies mainly in frightening the non-scientific community with dire predictions of worldwide doom and making absurd causal linkages between variations in global temperatures and weather phenomenon (like Hurricane Katrina which was cruelly used like a piece of propaganda in his sleazy ad campaign for An Inconvenient Truth). Actual temperature measurements, by this I mean actual day-by-day measurements of the actual temperature on earth, don't even go back two centuries which is not only a blip in human history but an infinitesimally small speck of a blip in the history of the earth. To attempt to generalize from current data and make claims, knowing full well that the earth has had numerous temperature fluctuations over its history without the involvement of any human beings (both to much much cooler than present temperatures, and to much much hotter than present) is not scientific caution, but criminally reckless scaremongering.

I say this not because I think it impossible for what Gore and his supporters assert is true to be true (though I think it is absurdly improbable) but because they are more concerned about political activism inimical to liberty than about the problems in their causal reasoning and the problems with computer modeling based on imperfect data and equally imperfect assumptions. Scientists do not shout down opponents and declare debate on questions is dead. Certainly, some issues are "put to rest" empirically or due to a preponderance of evidence, or because nothing else makes as much sense, but Gore and no other proponents of man made global warming have come anywhere near that standard of evidence. Asserting that one's opponents are either nuts or bought off by the "evil corporations" allegedly most responsible for the supposed problem is not an argument, but a pathetic combination of several logical fallacies.

So back to the related but different issue of Gore winning a Nobel Peace Prize. With this action, the Nobel Committee has merely taken a further step towards making a once sought after and prestigious prize a trapping of political orthodoxy. This is fine if that's what the committee wishes the prize to become, but do not continue to refer to it in the memory of fine man or refer to it as an award to promote a noble goal. Call it what it is, something like "The Prize awarded for being in line with a select group of Swedish leftists" because that is, unfortunately, what Alfred Nobel's legacy is becoming.

FarmerBob

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 05:26 pm Click here to edit this post
For Dac.

"If you want something said, ask a man...if you want something done, ask a woman."
-Margaret Thatcher

"If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State."
-Joseph Goebbels

"All of us who are concerned for peace and triumph of reason and justice must be keenly aware how small an influence reason and honest good will exert upon events in the political field."
-Albert Einstein
:)

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 08:45 pm Click here to edit this post
FarmerBob. Wot No Answer?

Daconia. The evidence you appear to be looking for will only be found in the future and by then it will be too late to do anything about it.

Anyways peps, I see some light.
The collapse of capitalizum will help the future's environment in a massive way, as people are forced to tighten their belts, reducing the amounts that they will consume :).
The down side is that most environmental projects will be suspended, due to the lack of money governments, industry and households are going to experience. (Which is point I was getting at FarmerBob on the other thread)
Alot of you seem to think that economy determins environment. Some of you even think that that is the only way it can be.
Economy is about hedging your bets (have I brought/sold at the right price/quality?). Economy (as shown with the credit crunch/polution)is not about doing the right thing(unless theres a profit init)
Are you telling us to put our faith in people that only care about making a profit.
The Earth is'nt something that you can fix when it breaks.
And waiting for these people of profit to decide they should'nt make a profit for the sake of the future seems just plain dum.
But I'm thinking life has been taken out of their hands and put into ours to do our bit(Be conciderate. Be green)
As long as you don't burn tyres and cars when you riot, the environment might just stand a chance :)

The Grand Poobah (Golden Rainbow)

Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 11:22 pm Click here to edit this post
I was trying to point out that Corporate bigwigs don't necessarily have to follow the law.

A Business student told me that when a Corporation is worth X amount, it can use WHATEVER MEANS NEEDED to increase profit. Including the Import Of Opium.
/the Mujahadeen took over all the Opium fields in Afghanistan in 1999. Ultimately controlling 80% of the worlds opium production. The U.S., now in control, controls 99% of the Worlds opium production.


So saying that the U.S. Corps didn't dump their toxic chemicles into third world countries is a fine and dandy example of a sugar coated, peachy existance. I'm sure there is also a law prohibiting the export of Aids tainted medication?
I'm sure there is a law against U.S. Oil companies dumping excess waste in Ecuadar.
Don't forget those fancy Waste Credits. That you can BUY!!!!

Dac, you will be a good corporate lawyer, just don't forget you conscience when you packing to leave. Money is temporary, good deeds last forever.

Angus88 (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, January 21, 2009 - 09:10 am Click here to edit this post
Yeah I agree with nix on this one. To clarify I think you mean consumerism not capitalism. On some issues profit should not be an influence.

"Are you telling us to put our faith in people that only care about making a profit."

Thats actually quite a good argument against privatization. When it comes down to it, economic benefits don't always overrule moral factors, more often then not they don't.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Sunday, March 29, 2009 - 10:16 pm Click here to edit this post
We have lost the first part of the thread.
It was started by FarmerBob.

I have copied this from the Desireless thread so we can discuss Miles points.

The Quotes are what I wrote on the Desireless thread.

Miles Prower (Kebir Blue)
Sunday, March 29, 2009 - 09:59 pm
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Thank you, Petra. Very much appreciated.

Nix, for a moment there I was almost convinced that you understood the point I was trying to make, either consciously or without realising it.

Bravo on expanding your horizons just a little bit.

But again, your narrow knowledge base seems to be letting you down in regards to the extrapolations you make, simply because you appear to be limiting yourself to one side of the argument.


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Quote:
How much more pollution has man created over the past 50 years compaired to the millenium before do you think?


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I refer you to the global dimming scenario.

What you take as the "destruction" of the natural world is simply yet another step in the fluid nature of the environment.

The idea that the environment is a static entity appears to be a mainstay in the argument most "environmentalists" put forwards. It is a very dangerous one in theory, and downright disastrous in practice. Nature is change. Life is change. Preventing life from adapting and evolving to fit the ever-changing environment would result in far greater catastrophe than anything we see in the present.


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Quote:
It's also not just about CO2. It's about chopping down the rain forests, killing all the animals, polluting our seas, destroying the soil and the overall destruction of the Natural world.


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You put it all down to human activity, but as has been mentioned before there are numerous factors which have influenced many of the points you bring up - some natural. I would be more than happy to open that can of worms should you so wish. I believe you will find it very enlightening.


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Quote:
As for the economy. Man does not have to be payed to come up with solutions. We don't need to swap money with aliens for the new technologys and materials. The ways and means are already here. The economy has nothing to do with it. It's due to the economy that all the solutions have been bought and shelved by the big companies.

We need to shoot ourselves in the foot to stop us from walking down the path of self destruction. For desire seems to control alot of people.


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You're missing the point here, mostly because you appear to be looking at the issue from the wrong side.

I'm not saying that people have to be paid to solve issues. What I am saying is that the single biggest innovator is the private sector. Without private investment important research into the green technologies that I assume you wish to see progressed to replace the more polluting ones would simply not exist.

A prime example being the likes of British Petrolleum or Royal Dutch Shell, two big private oil companies which have invested far more in green technologies than most governments.

Or the car company, Toyota, which have pioneered some of the first commercially viable hybrid and hydrogen cell vehicles.

The point I was making is simply that these companies - the ones which can be most readily assosciated with "dirty" industry are the ones who will pave the way to your green paradise.

Shoot them in the foot, if you will. But I would rather let them get on with their jobs and free us from this reliance upon a finite resource.


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Quote:
Would you put your kid on a bike for the first time without a helmet?
They might not fall off. And if they did, they might not even bang their head. But would you risk it?


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The point here is that if they fell off, the resultant head injury would be a more or less forgone conclusion, so yes, I would.

Applying this logic to the environmental issues you raise suggests to me that you would remove the proverbial helmet by stemming the single largest source of technological innovation, and thus remove the only means by which we could escape your doomsday scenario.


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Quote:
Do you know what will happen if the gulfstream fails due to the melting of the ice caps?


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May I suggest that you do a little research into paelioclimatology so that you actually understand what would happen if there were no gulf stream?

May I also suggest that you look into the major known factors in keeping the world wide ocean currents flowing, and the gulf stream's place within said system?

Also, turn off your DVD player. The Day After Tomorrow was terribly erroneous in several ways.

But rounding things off, I'll return to the core point of my argument: The single largest threat to life - human or otherwise - remains the natural environment of the earth itself. The processes are there to see, if you will only let go of the social guilt long enough to open your eyes.

--------------------------------------------------------

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 12:55 am Click here to edit this post
My information does'nt come from films. It comes from scientists and government bodies.
If you get your take from films, that will explain alot.

If there is no gulf stream in the Atlantic, Britain will have the same climate as Iceland.

And no. Human activity is becoming more of a problem than volcanos and astoroids. We are killing the fabric of life it's self.

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 02:27 am Click here to edit this post
Nix, how can you possibly be so convinced that the only way we can solve our environmental issues is by destroying all or most of our industry and lowing our consumption drastically?

Firstly, a disclaimer: Unlike alot of the people that argue with you, I'm not going to resort to insults or anything offensive. I have several things I would like to hear your opinion on. I believe that everyone is entitled to their own opinion, even if I don't even remotely agree with it.

Before I get going, I should point out that I am a capitalism loving republican. BUT, the republican party generally takes a foolish and ignorant stance on environnmental issues. So it's very rarely that I agree with them in that area.

I feel it's ignorant to deny the fact that man-made CO2 emmissions have not had a negative effect on the environment. I agree that our current rates of pollution and enviornmental destruction can not be maintained for all eternity.

Note that I avoided the term consumption in that sentence. I believe that people can maintain a massive amount of consumption without negatively affecting the environment. All it requires is intelligent managment of the resources available to us. I look forward to hearing your counterarguement.

I think it takes an unbelievable amount of ignorance to deny that mankind has been responsible for a very large amount of environmental destruction. (PLEASE, nobody give me a smartass comment about how an asteroid or meteor hitting the earth would do far more damage; that goes without saying.)

Regardless of whether you believe CO2 emissions have caused the temperature of the earth to rise, it is undoubtably increasing the acidity of the oceans. That has a very negative effect on fish stocks and coral reefs. Look that up, there is definite proof of it. Sure, volcanic eruptions put CO2 and other types of gases and particulate matter into the air, but what makes you think people don't have a negligable effect on the makeup of our atmosphere? Contrary to what some people seem to think, the oceans don't just magically suck up greenhouse gases and make them disappear. It is damaging to aquatic ecosystems.

Nix, in some ways I think just like you, but in others I believe the opposite. You think that shunning technology and making a harmonious living with the earth is the proper approach. I believe that technology is the answer. Technology will make the shift to more green methods of power propagation, transportation, farming, logging, and a billion other things people do. It's just going to take a little while. Capitalism, which you seem to shun, offers a very real incentive to making this shift. The greatest motivator in people is the desire for money (which represents material goods). If there is money to be made, people will do it, much to the benefit of the rest of society and the planet.

Any major natural disaster can and will be avoided or dealt with through the right scientific knowledge. There is several threats to the earth and humanity that will never be stopped by "back to the earth" ideals. Let's use the situation other people have presented; an asteroid. The effect on the environment would be cataclysmic at best, easily making up for any damage to the environment humanity avoided. With the right knowledge and technology (and a healthy bit of capitalist incentive, seeing as you can't make money if your dead) you could deflect that asteroid, thus saving humanity AND the environment. In a "back to the earth" society both the former and the latter would be destroyed.

In conclusion, are we damaging the environment? Yes, without a doubt. Can it be repaired and dealt with? I think so, yes. Do I agree with your approach to dealing with the problem? No.

One last example; the sun will expand in a few billion years, the earth will be destroyed along with it. I would like to think that humanity will survive after that event. A "back to the earth" approach will not accomplish that.

Miles Prower

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 02:18 pm Click here to edit this post
It's nice to see a well thought out argument added to this debate.

nix001

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 03:07 pm Click here to edit this post
Hi MasterOfAll.

About consumption. To consume takes time and resourses. If people did'nt feel the need to have material wealth they would mave time for other things. Fathers would have time to grow their families food, meaning there would be less demand for open land to grow crops. Which in turn might stop the destruction of the rain forests, grass lands and wood lands. Mothers would not have to work, which in turn would allow them to be at home to look after the family. Meaning that their children would be less likely to turn to crime and drugs, which in turn would mean the governments would spend less money on the police force, fire brigade and health services. Giving them more money to invest in green projects.

Consuption also creates alot of waste. If people bought what they needed there would be little need for packaging(alot of packaging is used to sell the product by making it stand out from the same products sold by different firms). I also know that alot of people by what they want but end up never using it. Or already have what they need, but due to the culture that capitalisum has created, they feel that if they don't buy the latest product they are some how not fulfilling their requirements for a happy life(keeping up with the Jones's). This also creates alot of waste as the alot of the items (which there is nothing wrong with) will be thrown away. These land fill sites are a waste of land and ticking time bombs of polution.
I think that this would create the 'intelligent managment of the resources available to us'
People have produced, bought and sold since the beginning of man. This will never change. Unfortunatly that is not what capitalisum is about. Capitalisum is about selling you what the company has made you believe you want/need.
If we got rid of apitalisum we would get rid of 85% of the waste.

Technology is what man/woman creates through knowlege and need. If people had more time then the amount of new ideas created would give us the technology. I'm not against technology. Quite the opposite. Look at the technology created over the 1000's of years with out capitalisum. If anything capitalisum destroys the ability of new technologies. Big companies buy new technologies and then shelve them so their own products don't get compramised. Or they drop the price of their products so the new ones can't compete.
Only when the big bosses are effected buy climate change will they see the need to spend millions on changing their production lines to make the new products.

Dam is that the time :(
I have to go out. I normaly re-read what I have wrote and change things that need changing.
I'll be back.

Peace&Hardcore..................Nix001
Mother Natures Army

nix001

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 05:14 pm Click here to edit this post
Over the past month I hav'nt had much sleep due to my battles.
Soon these battles will be over, and I'll be back on form with this disscusion.

War&Hardcore...........Nix001
MNA

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 07:05 pm Click here to edit this post
personally i find philosophy .. it has to be broken, so it could be fixed .. not efficient ~ silly.

its true that if we pollute a river for example we have to and probably will come up with tech, thus (business) opportunity, to clean it up. assuming our faith in tech - ourselves - is not delusional or overly optimistic.

now the question is .. does it have to be that way? is this the only, most efficient, or the best way?

i can imagine i have a house with garden. will i throw garbage into my garden so i could pick it up later, to keep me busy, or will i try to dispose of garbage in a way that i would not have to deal with it later and instead will devote my time and energy to something else like .. watching birds?

yes watching birds will not make any profit, will not consume any resources, will not produce any garbage, but thats kinda the point.

edit: to be fair .. if we never broke anything, we would never need to fix anything, we probably wouldn't know how to fix something in case it would break.

in other words the famous .. what does not kill us, makes us stronger.

still, and this is more a philosophical question than environmental, how strong we really wanna be? coz if we wanna be really strong, lets .. nuke the planet eh?

Johanas Bilderburg (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 09:18 pm Click here to edit this post
The only question I ask is who gains by our loss of money, freedom, and soverignty to "save the planet"...

People like Nix.

Marxist dogma has little to do with nature and everything to do with controlling others.

The post from Nix is a perfect example of that political philosophy. We should all eat twigs and play hackysack and be equals..... in poverty.

The only people who hate Capitalism are the ones who have nothing, offer nothing, and lack the drive to risk personal assets in order to achieve something.

Profit is not a dirty word. Its a reward for sacrifice, planning, and hard work.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 09:46 pm Click here to edit this post
out of curiosity, as im not going to argue Nix nor Marx nor profit, how does what you call environmentalism restrain you Johanas Bilderburg?

some practical examples would be nice.

Johanas Bilderburg

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 10:45 pm Click here to edit this post
1. Price of gasoline increases.
2. Price of manufactured goods increases.
3. Price of electricity increases.
4. More governmental controls.
5. Higher taxes.
6. Less personal freedom.
7. Devaluement of private property.
8. Wealth transfer.
9. Being forced to hear treehugging bastards speaking is bad for your mental capacity.

Thats off the top of my head.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Golden Rainbow)

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 11:16 pm Click here to edit this post
1,2,3,5 are practical examples 4,6,8 are not 7 i dunno where you get that from and 9 is well .. no comment

now i will give you examples of how increasing consumption, and what you seem to be standing for influences me:

1. price of gasoline increases
2. price of electricity increases

the higher demand the higher prices ..

3. every time i go out im in danger to be killed by car
4. being forced to breathe polluted air and listen to noise
5. instead of watching birds being forced to watch parking lot
6. being imposed on my various marketing schemes
7. being forced to buy garlic from china, which is not nearly as tasty as local one to me, only because the chinese one somehow made it to every market in vicinity
8. being forced to live with the fact that every day several species die out, despite i like having them around
9. being forced to hear the opposite of hippies is bad for my nerves, my mental capacity stays intact

now ..

we have the same rights, dont we? so who is right and who is wrong? which one of us can have it his way? you or me?

you see, as i said before, society is run by majority, and if majority decides, or rather representatives of majority decide, that you or i will not be allowed to do this or that, thats how it will be whether we like it or not.

in conclusion. anyone is free to believe anything s/he likes. anyone is free to campaign for any ideas and thoughts. anyone is free to think whatever s/he likes.

at the end its about what the society will decide.

so what? so nothing. there is as many reasons for the so called environmentalism as there is against it, there is as many reasons for what would be the opposite of the so called environmentalism as there is against it. and that is that. rhetorical exercises on virtual forums are neat, however, they wont change a damn thing.

Johanas Bilderburg (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 12:19 am Click here to edit this post
No we do not have the same rights.

I live in Texas.

You live in Europe.

You ride a bicycle.

I live 80 miles from a store.

You look at birds.

I look at cattle.

You own some garlic.

I own a ranch.

You have a brilliant mind for debate.

I have people who depend on me to pay them to feed their families.


So no we don't have the same rights or responsibilities.

You do and should have the rights afforded by your nations laws.

I have the same.

Thank God I live in America.

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 12:57 am Click here to edit this post
Hi Nix,

I have several more questions for you based off that post, but I have to start with just one.

"Fathers would have time to grow their families food, meaning there would be less demand for open land to grow crops."

Curious about this line... Is there some deep meaning I'm not noticing? Or is the lack of sleep getting to you?

You see, to me reading this line, it seems counterintuitive. If everyone grew their own food, wouldn't it be more damaging to the environment? Afterall, large scale farming is far more efficient and effective than the type of farming a single person would use.

In my mind, capitalism allows for more efficiency, not less. Sure, people throw things away, and resources are wasted on flashy ads and whatnot, but a large company can generally produce things more efficiently that a single person could.

The pooling of large amounts of capital is a necessity for any major research or development. A single person or family cannot possibly amass that amount of resources on their own. The only way a single person could do that is in a capitalist system where their ideas could find support and money to back it up. Venture capitalists and whatnot. Wouldn't you agree?

Where you say new ideas are shelved to squeeze everybit of money possible out of old ideas, that may be true in some rare cases, but companies generally have competitors (unless they are a monopoly, and obviously those are bad). Almost every corporate buyout I can think of occured when one company was eager to gain a knowledge, interface, or technology that they felt would give them an edge over the competition. They try to integrate new technologies into their preexisting ones to create a better product.

Also, a lot of technological and production advances help the environment, while making the people who thought of them a lot of money. Let's look at the world of computers. As things shrink, they provide several benefits to the environment. Modern processors do far more with far less electricity than their seemingly ancient anscestors. It takes less raw materials to produce the product. In alot of ways, companies are rewarded for becoming environmentally friendly. They cut production costs, and, as they love to point out, your electric bill. Capitalism is the perfect system for encouraging these advancements.

Socialism, communism, and any other form of extreme social welfare ignores one very important thing: Human Nature. People are greedy! There's no denying it. We crave power, money, pleasure, and everything else that makes us feel good or in control. I would recommend that if you haven't already, you read Mark Twains "What is Man". If you do read it, you will discover that you are in the position of the "young man". Although I don't agree with everything in the book, he is spot on when he explains that people don't do things just to be nice. They do things because they derive enjoyment out of it in some way. Capitalism is the one system that acknowledges that fact and is designed so that one persons greed is helpful to somebody else. It rewards people for coming up with ways to better other peoples lives. That is why capitalism is the only viable system by which we can live.

I look forward to your answer, I love a good debate.

Ben

Revival (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 01:06 am Click here to edit this post
Of course nix would post here, Something that has to do with "Environmentalism" will attract him.

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 01:25 am Click here to edit this post
What is Nix's main country? I've been kind of curious after reading all these threads were he seems to be the center of attention.

nix001

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 02:23 am Click here to edit this post
Ok Ben. I'm..............Stuie's already given away my location and the last thing I need is a brick through my window. :(


Instead of the introduction I'll get straight to the point.

Unless you live in flats, you will have a garden. Instead of a bed of Hostas you could grow cabbage. Instead of Phalaris arundinacea you could grow beans. Sure, keep the Buddleja for the butterflies and the Lobelia for the bee's. Did you know that in the 1960's builders in the UK had to include fruit tree's and enough land for the garden so the family could be partly self sufficient? Why have slab's when you could grow food? Time. That's why the farmer was created.

I'm a little pissed.
I've been down the pub to watch England beat Ukraine. :)

I'm gonna say that the government should come up with the solutions?
And that capitalisum is also the perfect system to let some people's human nature flurish.

Are most companies not part of a monopoly?
You buy one make of car but it's built from another makers parts.
I know thats just one example, but I'm sure theres loads more. My brain is numb.

And that those who don't care will reach the top.
And those who do care will end up being something they are not.

And that one persons greed is only helpful to someone else if the greedy person has morals. But like we know, morals is low on the list when it come to a job interview or getting some one to invest in you.

Sorry Ben. The words are alittle bit blury and I've got to spend the next couple of hours setting up my forward divisions.

I should have probably left my answer till tommorow/later. But some times I'll come back and there's been 11 posts after the question and it's hard to bring something back up thats already past.

What do you think?

Did you know that the rich nations say that the only reason why the poor nations are poor is because they hav'nt put their women to work?

And that some big cats don't care about Nature because they think that they will be living in space when the shite hit's the fan.

I should leave.

Peace. Nix
Mother Natures Sim Army.

Did you know that the embodiment of capitalisum was created in 1903?
It's a kind of magic.
We'll, manipulation.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 07:05 am Click here to edit this post
jesus christ ..as human beings we have the same rights. you and me, in my post, could be any other two people.

are we gonna try to understand what the other one says or are we gonna pick on words and phrases? are we 11 year old, or can we understand metaphors and read between the lines?

the times i was arguing silly are long gone. so .. hasta la vista! cry me a river about environmentalism, i could care less.

FarmerBob

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 01:58 pm Click here to edit this post
The irony is that most of the so-called "sustainable" practices espoused by soft green environmentalists are in fact the practices of the past that wrought so much environmental damage for centuries.

We have climbed a long ladder to reach this point where we can plant more trees than we harvest, overfeed ourselves from a small fraction of the arable land available, and power our societies without having to destroy our natural spaces.

Yet foolish voices clamor for a return to the ways that destroyed much of the Northern Hemisphere's original habitats.

"Sustainable" is anything but, not from biomass and recycling, which destroys nature and disrupts the carbon cycle.

Doing more with less has gotten us to this undreamed of standard of living. Yet, while we are poised on the brink of even greater exponential gains, viable fusion power and the unlimited potential of genetic engineering for examples, fear mongers want to roll back the clock and embrace disaster for both mankind and the environment.

There is only one real environmental concern: the preservation and expansion of natural spaces, unexploited by man.

The path of progress in keeping as much as possible of this planet in its natural state lies in living from the resources found outside the biosphere, not in it.

Soft Green Environmentalism is merely the rebirth of the Gaiaist religion swaddled in the failed philosophies of marxism.

Nix provides shining proof of this with every regurgitation of this pop-culture, pseudo-science nonsense.

BorderC (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 05:46 pm Click here to edit this post
nix = http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfiS-lQrOYo


And why in the world is my post at the top?

Just so it's abundantly clear... I did not start this thread.

nix001

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 06:08 pm Click here to edit this post
I know BC. I've already said that we have lost the beginning of the thread. FarmerBob created it.

As for your youtube clip...................These people feel my pain. But the future will scream out "why did our parents generation not care?" "Why have they left us with this mess?"(I liked your analogy of the green house Zde).

FarmerBob. You talk like the world is not about to go into financial melt down.
Do you know how long it takes for a tree to mature? And how much of our arible land is worthless without the aid of fertalisers?
Do you know how little of the world's natural spaces has not exploited by man? In England, even the green belt is now being built on.

Who are you putting your faith in to sort this out FarmerBob?

When people are fighting a losing battle, sometimes they have to be a bit extreme. If everyone agreed that we need to stop the destuction of these green spaces and the environment, I and others would'nt feel the need to be so extreme.

You still hav'nt answered my quetion from months ago. You said on another thread: 'As nations prosper, concern for the environment will follow in due course.'

And I asked: 'as nation's become poorer, what happens then?'

MasterofAll

Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 07:30 pm Click here to edit this post
Nix,

What makes you think nations are becoming so much poorer? China is gradually rising from a third world country to a modern economic powerhouse. Sure, they aren't treating the environment very nicely while doing that, but I think it will change over time.

Africa (and other poor nations), in my opinion, is struggling due to receiving too much of the wrong kind of aid. Charities give them end products, they don't help build industry in these countries that would hire workers and ultimately make a more long lasting success. The lack of a good, uncorrupted military is a major issue also. Some military force (NOT the UN, don't even get me started on how worthless they are) needs to stand up to the warlords and people who want nothing more than to exploit people for their own gain. They lack a solid government that actually stands up for the people and works actively to improve conditions in their country. The aid they receive is exactly the wrong kind.

Did the US receive aid? The UK? Russia? No, all of those countries improved because somebody saw a way to make money and improve their quality of life. Be that method revolting on you folks across the pond or whatever. That is the glory of capitalism! It makes it impossible for someone to improve their quality of life, most likely improving someone elses. Sure, Britain lost out when the colonies revolted, but a lot of other people benefited. It's nature embodied in society. Everybody can't win every time. You appreciate nature; are you going to say that everyone wins in predation? The death of say, one rabbit, might leave space for another rabbit to live, but the rabbit that got eaten certainly didn't win in that exchange.

Capitalism allows for human nature AND nature. It has benefited society. There are plenty of people that have lost in the capitalist system, but far more have benefited. Never make yourself too dependent on some other entity, or else their mistakes affect you as well as them.

I like the idea of eventually expanding out into the stars, but we can't burn the bridge behind us, only to realize we left something important behind. Anyone that thinks we'll be off earth by the time these things come and bite us in the ass is a fool.

On the whole "countries are poor because they don't make they're women work", I think there's far more things at fault than that. However, if you believe women are equal to men (which I do), they can't put themselves in a position where they depend on another person and expect to live a great life. You need to be capable of being independent, be it financially or otherwise. Women certainly could help a country by working and helping to lift their country out of poverty.

There are very few people with no morals. Only a sociopath finds themselves in that situation. Capitalism allows for morals, it just makes a point of not forcing them on people. You exist in a capitalist society; you have morals don't you? Capitalism doesn't represent the shunning of morals, it acknowledges their exist and the right of a person to choose how much bearing they place on them.

Ben

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Friday, April 3, 2009 - 04:23 am Click here to edit this post
Ben,

Capitalism: 'An economic system in which the means of production and distribution are privately or corporately owned and development is proportionate to the accumulation and reinvestment of profits gained in a free market.'

Thats all it is. There is nothing else to it.
I love money and money loves me. Nothing else matters. Like you said, you can make other things matter if you wish. But thats up to you. No-one is forcing you to do anything apart from to work within the system. And if don't, you'll become an out-cast. Even an out-law to some.

The problem is when you take a part of life and make it all of life. Like with communism, Islamism, socialism, environmentalism etc, etc capitalism has become a way of life with no reasoning for anything else.
Which in a world where everything has something to do with everything else is doomed for failure.

Capitalism has come to the end of the road. There are no-more profits to be made, meaning no investors will invest, meaning no more products to be sold, meaning no more money.
Unfortunalty the west needs money to pay of it's debts. And unless China gives up saving and starts spending, were are F&$£@.
But why would they do that? They can see the only reason we are in this mess is because we spent all our money. And then to keep our system going, we were encouraged to get into debt(going on the never never, to my grandparents generation) or spend/invest any savings.
I know China needs us to spend money for their own economies sake, so they might lend us the money????????????? But what I can see happening is china just tapping into the third world market that will be funded by IMF money while they wait until we are well and truly messed up and then pick up the pieces. While at the same time telling us to turn towards communism.
Maybe now China does'nt have to compete with us they will start to look at the environmental issue. And hopefully we will learn our lessons and realise that theres more to life apart from money. Fingers crossed.

Nix001
Mother Natures Sim Army

I ask on behalf of the future that if any of you end up on the streets protesting or rioting..........Please don't burn tyres.

MasterofAll

Friday, April 3, 2009 - 07:15 pm Click here to edit this post
Nix,

I know this sounds harsh to environmentalism, but as long as other countries have natural resources, they have money.

And I'm not so convinced that there is no more money to be made. As long as people need (or want) stuff, and have a source of income, there exists profit potential for someone else.

China buying up other countries debt is hardly a serious threat to capitalism. If Obama would wake up a bit, it wouldn't even be a threat at all. If anything, I think it's funny that they think they can use currency to corner a nation/economy. The simple fact is, the US will just print more money, making China's investment in us a huge mistake. As the actual value of our debt drops, Chinese investors get screwed. Sure, the US will hurt in the process (as inflation goes up), but it's what we'll do either way. Currency has no real value, it's value exists in the idea that it's worth something. Raw materials and products have real value, and China would have a tough time buying all the planets raw materials.

Also, money is not the central issue in people's lives, it's simply a means to an end. I wouldn't say money has become the basis of people's lives. It can get that way when people don't have enough, but once people have enough they don't worry about it as much or even at all.

If it isn't clear, I live in the US. I'm assuming you live in the UK? So your perspective and mine are bound to be a bit different. As a yank, I'm inclined to say China can go to hell. But they are clearly the biggest threat to the US economically and, if they aren't already, militarily.

On a less serious note, those riots were a bit crazy that one day there. It's a good thing the police stepped in and stopped the vandalism. I'm curious; Do those rioters represent a minority over there? Or do a lot of you folks actually approve of what those people were doing? The news here tends to just show us the footage of that one guy with blood running down his face and a bunch of people attacking riot police, and then talk about how bad it is. I would like to know the reasoning these people have.

Ben

Miles Prower

Friday, April 3, 2009 - 08:43 pm Click here to edit this post
Nix,

First and foremost, you are a hypocrite. You talk about giving up our wants and desires, and do only what we have to in order to meet our basic needs in order to avoid "wasting" resources. In order to convey this message you participate in an online game, using countless products of the free market aimed solely at meeting the wants and desires of their consumer base. Your means contradict your own desires.

And you wonder why nobody takes your seriously?

Secondly, I have to concur with FarmerBob. Millennia of suffering have been abaited by the betterment of technology and technique in specific relation to agriculture alone.

But beyond this, I think it is important to point out that I do not wish to grow my own food. You see, my skills and my employ are oriented quite heavily around the creative industries, most notably writing, publishing and the such.

The one thing that elevates humans above the rest of the animal kingdom - in my opinion - is our ability to imagine, to postulate and to innovate. Humanity has a distinct penchant for creativity.

Now why, pray tell, should I give up one aspect of my very nature - one which I find fulfilling - in order to become a full-time food grower or gatherer - a task for which I am not suited, nor do I hold any interest or skill in - when there are plenty of people out there who do enjoy it, are willing to provide this as a service for a small degree of compensation with which both they and I are happy?

Why should I surrender my creativity in order to do a job which somebody else would rather do for me?

You talk of capitalism as a wasteful process. And yet the free market is the most effective means of getting required resources to the locations where they are needed most.

The nature of the free market is very much like that of the natural world. Resources and products flow according to supply and demand. Niches are filled through the evolution of mechanisms in order to fill and exploit gaps. Every process has waste - it is just a question of finding a secondary process where this waste is a valuable resource. It functions much like a food chain.

And nature is far from energy efficient.

There are some residual aspects which are not always nice on a very local scale. But when it comes down to it, the free market has proven time and again that it is far more efficient than any other proposed model of economy. If is far less wasteful and produces far fewer excesses than previously tried methods.

But I digress. This topic is supposed to be about the environment.

Here's a question for you, Nix. How many species of plant and animal now thrive thanks to human activity? Go on. Go learn something.

nix001 (Fearless Blue)

Saturday, April 4, 2009 - 06:51 pm Click here to edit this post
Miles.

Rats, bine weed and algae.
Not many compaired to the ones that have died out. 1000's a year.
I know thats only three. But the ways things are going we will have just a couple of dominant speices and the rest will die. Not good for the Bio diversity needed to sustain life.
Quote from you 'Now why, pray tell, should I give up one aspect of my very nature'
Does your nature not also tell you to protect the future generations?
Sometimes we have to go against our natural instinct do what is right by others.

About you growing some food. I write on here, grow food on my alotment, work as a tree surgeon and gardener, keep up to date with current affairs, make sweet love to the women, catch up with my friends, cook some good food, help out my family, walk the dog, do a work out and my chores all in a day, so why can't you? All you need to do is dig some soil, plant some seeds then water.

If your a writer you might also get some insperation. You know what they say: The garden is the closed place you'll get to God.
What kind of things do you write?

FarmerBob

Saturday, April 4, 2009 - 09:55 pm Click here to edit this post
And you harm the environment from inefficient use of land, nix.

The environment would benefit much more from building a high rise apartment building on your allotment.

Leave agriculture to the efficient professionals who produce much more per acre than you could ever dream.

If you must play in the dirt, use planters and sillboxes or roof top gardening that requires no use of actual land.

To do otherwise is the hieght of hypocrisy for a so-called "environmentalist".

I've explanined this to you many times before. London, Tokyo, and Manhattan are more eco-friendly than your suburban, back-to-nature nonsense.

Johanas Bilderburg (Little Upsilon)

Saturday, April 4, 2009 - 11:41 pm Click here to edit this post
How big is an English allotment?

What is the cost per acre to grow vegetables vs buying from a farmers market?

What vegetables can be grown in the UK?

What is the growing season?

Fertilizers or compost?

Greenhouse would make sense for the climate.

Lots of variables to include.

I don't think they use arable land in the UK for this purpose...I believe its leftover from WWII when gardens prevented starvation.




Miles Prower

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 12:28 am Click here to edit this post

Quote:

Rats, bine weed and algae.
Not many compaired to the ones that have died out. 1000's a year.




Once again, nature is all about change - the passing of species and the thriving of others.

Robins, blackbirds, red foxes, silver foxes, rabbits, cows, pigs, sheep, pigeons, goats, chickens, geese, ducks, dogs, cats, mice, goldfish, ferrits, guinea pigs, hedgehogs, hamsters, raccoons, skunks, doves, bettas, guppies, koi, turkeys, zebu, donkey, horse, emu, ostrich, bison, llama, alpaca. The list goes on, and each one has benefitted from human civilization.

You display quite readily a misunderstanding of the mechanisms of the natural world, and I find it quite pointedly distressing for one who would choose to preach to others.


Quote:

All you need to do is dig some soil, plant some seeds then water.




But why? My garden is home to innumerable plant, insect, avian and mammalian species as a horticultural wilderness. To hack it all up for the sake of a few vegetables - which can be grown elsewhere in a more readily adapted environment - would surely prove counterintuitive to the very point you are trying to make?

No. I will stick to farmed food. I will allow those with the time, knowledge, inclination and passion for such things to pursue their lot in their life. And I will do the same in my own.


Quote:

If your a writer you might also get some insperation. You know what they say: The garden is the closed place you'll get to God.
What kind of things do you write?




I have no place for your God. My garden is where I will be close to the kami.


Quote:

About you growing some food. I write on here, grow food on my alotment, work as a tree surgeon and gardener, keep up to date with current affairs, make sweet love to the women, catch up with my friends, cook some good food, help out my family, walk the dog, do a work out and my chores all in a day, so why can't you?




Simply put, Nix, I do not want to be you. I do not want to live my life in a manner dictated by somebody who does not know nor understand me, my family or our collective needs.

I will not subscribe to the uneducated ramblings of a man with such openly and blatantly hypocritical views.

I will read my books. I will write my fiction. I will continue to learn, educate and develop as a human being. I will continue to work har to provide for my family and care for them in a manner that negates the rambling dictations of ignorance, and I shall feel absolutely no guilt in doing so.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 02:32 am Click here to edit this post
Miles.
Quote from you 'Here's a question for you, Nix. How many species of plant and animal now thrive thanks to human activity? Go on. Go learn something.'

Do you have any idea just how many there are? You talk like you might also know the ratio between those that have died over the last 100 years and those that have thrived. If you do. Will you tell me.
You also seem like the kind of person that would'nt care less if all there was in life was you and your cat.
Thats not life. Diversity is life.
Can you not remember being a kid?
The wonder of life?
How sad would it have been if the only life that you saw was a human or a rat?

Sure we can live without it. But do you really want the kids to?

Anyway. Good for you for having a garden wilderness. Not many people have gardens like that. They have lawns and slabs and decking. So they would be the ones who I was talking to. You should'nt take things so personal. Especialy when someones not talking to you.

Stuart Taylor (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 02:35 am Click here to edit this post
/me enters thread, burns tyres and leaves.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 02:51 am Click here to edit this post
What leaves are you burning Stuie?

Stuart Taylor (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 02:54 am Click here to edit this post
lol nix - the most polluting ones :)

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 02:59 am Click here to edit this post
:)

Johanas Bilderburg (Little Upsilon)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 03:27 am Click here to edit this post
/me slaps Nix around with a cabbage and points him back to this....



Quote:

How big is an English allotment?

What is the cost per acre to grow vegetables vs buying from a farmers market?

What vegetables can be grown in the UK?

What is the growing season?

Fertilizers or compost?

Greenhouse would make sense for the climate.

Lots of variables to include.

I don't think they use arable land in the UK for this purpose...I believe its leftover from WWII when gardens prevented starvation.


Miles Prower

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 06:24 pm Click here to edit this post

Quote:

Do you have any idea just how many there are? You talk like you might also know the ratio between those that have died over the last 100 years and those that have thrived. If you do. Will you tell me.




You're the religious sort of person, right Nix? Do me a favour. Go down to the oldest church near where you live and take one thorough look over the ancient stones which comprise its walls. Tell me what you see.

Up to 25,000 different species of lichen.

Open up your fridge, your freezer, your cupboards. How many different species - all domesticated - are there represented in your kitchen? Alone, how many species of grass go into meeting your dietary needs? I can think of at least a dozen cereals.

And these are just a handful of the domesticated species of plant.

I know you'll just rephrase this question and ask it again. I look forwards to answering it over and over and over.


Quote:

You also seem like the kind of person that would'nt care less if all there was in life was you and your cat.
Thats not life. Diversity is life.
Can you not remember being a kid?
The wonder of life?
How sad would it have been if the only life that you saw was a human or a rat?




You're welcome to your interpretations. As many of us are seeing they're based more upon personal belief and assumption than fact.

I've addressed your issues, offering statistics and facts. Yet when the time comes for you to do the same you simple regurgitate the same old rhetoric again and again. Ignoring facts, you rely instead upon the gaps in your own knowledge to try and prove your points.

Extrapolations are drawn from factual evidence, my friend. Try to keep this in mind when you draw your conclusions.


Quote:

Sure we can live without it. But do you really want the kids to?




Life is change, Nix. The environment it not static. Species come and species go. Trying to hang on to them is ultimately more harmful to the ecosystem than to allow them to die out.

Look at the extinction of bears, wolves or wild boars from the woodlands of the United Kingdom. Did it cause irreversible, irreparable damage to the ecosystems or the environment?

No. Life moved on. Ecosystems adapted.

The world did not end.


Quote:

Anyway. Good for you for having a garden wilderness. Not many people have gardens like that. They have lawns and slabs and decking. So they would be the ones who I was talking to. You should'nt take things so personal. Especialy when someones not talking to you.




You told me rather specifica;;y tjay I was destroying the future, Nix. So once again you're being a hypocrit. But then, I've grown accustomed to it. It does tend to go hand in hand with narrowmindedness. It is people like you who will ultimately harm the future.

I hope your god will forgive you. The kami and I coexist in peace.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 07:05 pm Click here to edit this post
Miles.
I was'nt talking to you about growing your own food. That was said in a reply to MasterOfAll. It's also something that I've kept on bringing up over the past 10 months. (Maybe Miles, you could get an old metal drum and grow some potatoes?)
You talk of now and then, but not of the future. Tell me some environmental facts about the future. Especially as thats what the threads about.

Miles Prower

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 07:26 pm Click here to edit this post

Quote:

I was'nt talking to you about growing your own food. That was said in a reply to MasterOfAll. It's also something that I've kept on bringing up over the past 10 months. (Maybe Miles, you could get an old metal drum and grow some potatoes?)




You're missing the point entirely Nix.


Quote:

You talk of now and then, but not of the future. Tell me some environmental facts about the future. Especially as thats what the threads about.




Past and present set the precedent for the future. Where else do we gather the facts to interpret the future? Or would you care for me to explain temporal mechanics to you as well as environmentalism?

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 07:29 pm Click here to edit this post
Yes. Then I might understand where your coming from.

Miles Prower

Sunday, April 5, 2009 - 07:39 pm Click here to edit this post
Well, you see, Nix, by comparing past and present data and observations we can compile various mathematical models which allow us to predict - to a certain degree - the manner in which certain quantative inputs will or may effect the eventual output.

The issue you appear to be having in your arguments is a willingness to overlook the inconvenient inputs and data in order to manipulate the outcome in such a way as benefits your position, rather than making any clear cut attempt to remain objective.

That clear enough for you?

nix001

Tuesday, April 7, 2009 - 07:21 am Click here to edit this post
Never in the history of man has so much input been added to the balance of life over such a short space of time. Your mathematical models cannot predict anything due to the variabilty of the facts used to make up the equations.
In some equations using certain assumptions of the unknown facts, the environment will be slightly affected from the 50 years of capitalist encouraged consumption and globalized destruction of the Natural World. But when other assumptions of the unknown facts are used, the models show a complete shut down of the earths eco system.

Surely, through our instinct for self preservation, we should be striving to get the optimistic models to show that human input is helping the environment and the pesermistic models to show human input is damaging the environment to the extent todays optimistic models are predicting?

And the only way we can do that is to accept we have a problem and make it our own responsability to do something about it.

Miles Prower

Tuesday, April 7, 2009 - 07:18 pm Click here to edit this post
I refer you back to the statistics and facts I offered in the other thread.

You, however, have yet to respond with anything other than personal opinion.

I would also like to know what exactly makes your own models of the future accurate enough to predict the future if mine cannot, given the same base data - assuming you have any, of course.

nix001

Tuesday, April 7, 2009 - 08:12 pm Click here to edit this post
I have looked back through your posts on all threads and I can't see one proven fact about how 50 years of capitalist encouraged consumption and globalized destruction of the Natural World will impact our environment.

I work with all the models available. Read what I wrote again.

Miles Prower

Tuesday, April 7, 2009 - 09:10 pm Click here to edit this post
Ah, omission of convenience. Seems quite the common occurance for you, Nix. Its all there. One of my first posts I believe, quoting information regarding the last 150 years - comparing specifically nature vs human activity. If you cannot find it, that is your shortsightedness.

I shall contain my amazement.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Tuesday, April 7, 2009 - 10:00 pm Click here to edit this post
Whats the last 150 years got to do with anything?
Mans biggest input has been over the last 50 years.
Evidence of this input will only be available over the next 50 years.
Mans input over the last 150 years has had a negative effect though would'nt you argree?
So you can just imagine how bads it's going to be due to the last 50 years of mans activities.

Nature could take us out in one swipe. I have no problem with that. But for man to mess things up is just plain stupid.
Let alone man knowing he's messing things up and still do it. Thats just plain animal.
Do we not have the ability to determine our own survival, within reason?
If I am wrong, no bad will come to anyone. If you are wrong then life might die.

Did they not say that there was no evidence that Hitler had intentions of ruling Europe?
Sure, the writing on the wall will never be fact, due to the future being unknown. But when it comes down to the protection of our future generations we need to use every tool available. And that includes the writing on the wall.

117000 (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - 01:50 am Click here to edit this post
150 years ago is important. It was the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Huge amounts of coal was being burned in factories, while the cities and those factories dumped sewage into rivers with little or no regulations. 50 years ago was when we recognized the problem and began trying to treat it. So the last 150 years has everything to do with it because we can see the change over this time to determine the effects of pollution on a larger scale.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - 01:58 am Click here to edit this post
I know it's like a chain reaction. But what happened 100 years ago is just affecting us now. We don't yet know how nature will react to what we have done over the past 100 years.

Quote '50 years ago was when we recognized the problem and began trying to treat it.'

On a world wide scale (include every country) do you think man has polluted and consumed more of the world than they did 50 years ago or less than they did 50 years ago?

117000 (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - 02:58 am Click here to edit this post
Yes, it has increased but using the past pollution effects, we could get some kind of idea of the effects more pollution will cause. It gives us something to go on.

Miles Prower

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - 05:53 am Click here to edit this post
Facts and figures, Nix. Facts amd figures.

FarmerBob

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - 02:20 pm Click here to edit this post
Nix is a Sand Pile Theorist. See Perk Bak and the amazingly humble title "How Nature Works".

An extension of this erroneous application of a psychologically appealling, but wholly inapplicable, modelling technique to natural systems is the "chain of events" thinking.

In Nix's warped perception, every small event in the natural realm impacts negatively and snowballs throughout the food chain and greater biosphere, and of course, always with deleterious and catastrophic effect. But to the rational mind, only a moment's thought is required to expose the utter fallacy of this line of thinking. It is simply a reworking of the Malthusian Dooomsday scenario that is based upon the presumption that mankind is a separate entity from the rest of the world and cannot exist within it in perpetuity, that we are destined to extinction from war, famine, disease, etc. regardless of our "temporary" progress.

Like Thomas Malthus, Nix's belief system betrays a fundamentally misanthropic worldview more revealing of his own psycholgical predilections than any application of objective, rational analysis of the world.

Nix, like so many of his predecessors and contemporaries, is uninterested in facts and figures, only ideology.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - 09:57 pm Click here to edit this post
Helloa FarmerBob.
Quote 'In Nix's warped perception, every small event in the natural realm impacts negatively'

No FB. Can't believe you wrote that :(
But for some reason you did. I would like to know why.
The Natural world, to me, is a balance. You should know that about me by now???/. Every action there is a reaction. Some good, some bad.

MMmmmmmmmmm. FB????????I'll finish reading what you have written.

What?????'mankind is a separate entity from the rest of the world and cannot exist within it in perpetuity,' We are Animal. You know I think this. No God. Life is life, man is progressed animal.

Facts and Figure come at the moment of discovery.
Fine if your betting on a horse race. Gambling with your facts and figues to determine the out come.
But the environment is not a horse race.
It's the futures way of life. Without it, no race.
We have already gambled away our futures inheritance. But as money is'nt everything, they'll get over it.

FarmerBob, you are a self confessed conservationist. You said on another thread months ago: 'As nations prosper, concern for the environment will follow in due course.'

And I asked: 'as nation's become poorer, what happens then?'

Please answer me :)

Johanas Bilderburg (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 9, 2009 - 04:04 am Click here to edit this post
Nix does not see the avalanches of life. However humans are limited by 100 years of life to witness how the sand pile changes.

As I told you before Nix...251 million years ago the planet died. Everything above the size of a rat on land or sea went extinct. All plants but mold and spores went extinct....over a 15 million year period give or take a few hundred years.

Did we kill the planet?

No. Homo Sapiens is only a measly 100,000 years old. Our entire history and societies are but a minor drop in the bucket when considering geological time.

If we blast each other off the planet with a total nuclear exchange. Or if we are hit by an asteroid or viral outbreak.

We will be replaced by a new dominant species.

I would wager rats or cockroaches.

Its inevitable.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 06:12 pm Click here to edit this post
Your argument is so thin that I find it hard to see the point.
I'm not bothered about what happened 251 million years ago. It's what man is doing to the natural world today and the impact it will have on the future generations that I'm concerned about. I'm not to sure why you dont care and why you are willing to take the risk by sticking your head up your arse (are you from the future?). But I know your not the only one (unless you are from the future). It's people like you who can't/wont look further that you own self well being that will mess things up for my nieces and nephews and their future children. I will not allow your attempts to convert carers into non carers to succeed. It costs nothing to care, but it might cost the Earth if we don't.

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 06:27 pm Click here to edit this post
Any facts and figures to back up your assumptions, Nix?

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 06:38 pm Click here to edit this post
As I said. When we get the facts and figues and they show we have damaged the Natural word beyond repair, it will be to late to do anything about it.
It's all about preventing the facts and figures.
I think the biggest problem is that people feel the big picture has nothing to do with them. They either leave it upto God, Government or Queen. How can one person change the world? Unfortunatly if there is a God he is testing us, Government won't do anything that might upset us and the Queen........well she can't say anything if Government wont back her by telling us what to do.
This then leaves it up to each and every one of us to do what is right by the future. But to do that you have to care and be willing to sacrifice for something that you will hopefully never know if there was a need to.
Mans purpose in life is to be willing to sacrifice for the future. Come on Lads, grow some balls. In the wars they sacrificed there lives for the future. All we need to do is sacrifice our desires.

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 06:53 pm Click here to edit this post
Ah, but surely there must be some indication that this is happening? Care to share the basis of your conclusions with us, assuming it extends beyond your own mere delusions?

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 06:59 pm Click here to edit this post
If you care you will see all the indications around you. At the end of the day it's just common sense. Pollute, destroy, and consume and there will be nothing left for life to live.

Miles Prower

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 07:20 pm Click here to edit this post
Common sense and the way the world and wider universe works are not comfortable bedfellows. Any A-level physics/science student could tell you that. Just delve into the quantum or the macroscopic and you'll soon realise this.

I've done my research, and drawn my own conclusions. I've even been kind enough to share my sources and explain how I've reached my extrapolations.

Now its your turn. Give your assumptions some basis other than your narrow-minded "I believe it, so it must be true."

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 07:29 pm Click here to edit this post
Your not still going on about what happened 150 years ago are you? Life has changed dramatically since then. If that is what your on about then there is nothing that I can say to you. Your stuck in the past. Look at the here and now and tell me what you see.

Miles Prower

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 07:41 pm Click here to edit this post
I'm not going on about anything other than your lack of facts. You've offered nothing to back up your arguments, and it all amounts to what you believe rather than what is.

You fail to grasp the underlying principles of prediction or even logical reasoning, and I feel truly sorry for you.

So I ask once more, prove your assumptions with something other than "Because I believe it to be true."

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 07:53 pm Click here to edit this post
You don't dare predict. All you do is state things that happened 150 years ago. What use is that to the future generations?
Go on. I dare you to predict what will happen to the Environment if people all around the world continue/increase to do what they are doing.

I predict that the current destruction/pollution and consumption of the Natural world (you do know that man is doing all those things to the Natural world dont you?) will cause major problems for our futures eco system.

FarmerBob: 'As nations prosper, concern for the environment will follow in due course.'

And I asked: 'as nation's become poorer, what happens then?'

Please answer me FarmerBob.

FarmerBob

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 08:54 pm Click here to edit this post
I have answered you repeatedly, Nix. We have always propspered over the long run of history and advanced in our technology and techniques to do more with less.

I will stand on the mass of thousands of years of human history.

You may stand on your delusions and prejudices.

At least have the guts to admit what it is that you advocate: misanthropic nihilism- worship nature and destroy man.

You aren't the first and are hardly alone in thinking this way.

The logical conclusion of your reasoning always leads inexorably to one simple conclusion:

Most of mankind needs to go away.

This is the central premise of Gaiaism which you are proseletyzing whether you admit it or not. Facts and figures?
You've blatantly ignored those at every turn. You aren't discussing real Environmentalism or Conservationism applied to societies and public policy.

You are arguing religion.

For the ridiculous methods of energy and food production championed by you soft-green types are utterly incapable of meeting our needs, as anyone with a decent high school science education should be perfectly aware. We have spent centuries leaving those techniques and systems behind in favor of the more productive and efficient. Most of the serious ecological damage in the world today is being done in the Thirld World through use of these antiquated practices.

The modern, industrialized West is how to save the natural world, not a return to the past that destroyed so much of it.

Only a deluded ignoramus could think that our industry and lifestyles cause more pollution now than 150 years ago. We have been curbing and reducing real pollution for so long and so successfully that you Marxists in sheep's clothing are now forced to identify naturally occuring substances as "pollution". Man's contribution to carbon in the biosphere is barely measureable. Methane and other so-called greenhouse gas contributions are proportionately so small that they can only be tracked in theoretical models.

Those are the facts, Nix.

I have written thousands of words in this thread giving you the data and the sources, as well as the reasoning for responsible Conservation as the only rational, workable approach to preserving our natural world.

And,of course, we are not going to go away, so deal with it.

Miles Prower

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - 09:21 pm Click here to edit this post

Quote:

I have written thousands of words in this thread giving you the data and the sources, as well as the reasoning




A recurring theme, and I mirror these sentiments.

I've explained my position quite clearly Nix, and how past data and present trends reflect upon future preditions.

You, however, continue to dwell within the realms of ignorance and miscalculation. You base your own predictions upon nothing more than what you believe to be the case without posting any reasoning whatsoever, or even indicating a single iota of factual foundation for your views.

You've done such a thorough job of making past trends completely unrelated to the present and future that you've worked yourself into a corner; you cannot now pose any facts to support your argument without contradicting your position that the past has no impact upon the future.

Congratulations. And you were so worried that it was I who would make you look the fool.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 03:34 am Click here to edit this post
FarmerBob. That is not an answer. Still you stay on the line 'As nations prosper, concern for the environment will follow in due course.'
Have you not seen, read or been told about the problems the world is having with this economic crisis?
'The modern, industrialized West is how to save the natural world, not a return to the past that destroyed so much of it.'
I'm not saying we should return. I'm saying people should consume less.
I'm also not just talking about the wests impact on the environment. I'm talking about the whole worlds impact. China, Africa, India, Russia ect. Dam the USA would'nt even sign up to the Kyoto protacall because it would hurt the economy. So don't give me all this 'We have been curbing and reducing real pollution for so long and so successfully'. Over all pollution is on the rise from the USA and with the economic crisis it will get alot worse as people stop investing in green technology and keep what they have.
US business is also responsable for more than 1/2 of the worlds pollution and most of it's destruction.
Time for the USA and the world to wake up and realise we can't continue like we have been doing.

But the biggest problem is the rest of the world is doing what we did 150 years ago.

Miles. The facts of mans influence on the planet are there to be seen if you want to see them. The destruction of the rain forests, barren lands due to chemicals, pollution increases from the developing world and no decreases from the developed world, green belts being built on, 10 fold increase of air travel, increase in cattle, increase in household waste, increase in land fill sites and the amount of toxins going to these land fill sites, increase in car emissions, year on year increases of global temp, melting of the ice caps, pollution of the seas and air, destruction of the coral reefs, year on year increase of unusual weather patterns, animals and plants dying out quicker than ever recorded, ect ect ect. But to someone like you until the Natural world is dead you wont believe it.

Any data from the impact of what man did 150 years ago is nothing compaired to what man has been doing over the past 150 years and is still doing. It's up to you whether or not you choose to believe what the scientists, government bodies and environmental groups say or you choose to believe what business says. What I'm saying is that for our future's sake we should'nt take the risk in not believing the worst case scenario just incase it's the right one.
We only have one chance to do what is right.

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 04:06 am Click here to edit this post
Nix,

I have a few things to say, so stick with me.

Do you have any idea what the Kyoto protocol would have established? It essentially said; developing nations can not be expected to curb their pollution, but the developed nations should spend billions of dollars to do so. That is one of the dumbest idea's I've ever heard. Developing nations are already the worst polluters per capita, apparently they deserve special treatment because they aren't quite as big as us "developed nations". China signed it happily; It didn't require them to do anything! (not much anyways). It just gave them a nice excuse to pollute even more.

This "economic crisis" is providing you with all of your ammo of late, isn't it? It's a recession Nix, calm down. They happen quite frequently, and, believe it or not, they go away. It's not the end of capitalism, it's not judgement day, it's just something that happens.

Also, do you see the US as some sort of fire belching demon, the very fumes of which destroy the environment? It's starting to seem that way. The US isn't the enemy like you seem to think it is. The anti US attitude is getting annoying. Your glorious Britian isn't the champion of environmental technological development.

FarmerBob has presented one of the best put together arguements I have ever seen. He is clearly extremely knowledgable about these things. Yet, you dismiss everything he says without a second thought. Why? I don't agree with him about global warming being a fictional event, but he takes a very well thought out approach to other aspects that I both respect and agree with.

Also, how will reducing consumption really help conserve our resources. They aren't going anywhere. We aren't jettisoning trees and raw materials into space (not much anyways). It's all still here, no matter what we do with it.

One last thing. Where did you pull the half of the worlds pollution "fact" out of? Your ass? I'm assuming your referring to CO2 emmisions. If so, check out this webpage:

http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/env_co2_emi-environment-co2-emissions

Even you can't delude yourself after seeing this data. So quit with the anti american rhetoric and do a bit more research. It would help you more than all the criticism you keep dishing out.

With all due respect,
Ben

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 04:33 am Click here to edit this post
Hi Ben.
36.1% of world wide greenhouse emissions produced by the USA.
25% of all carbon dioxide emissions produced by the USA.

USA accounts for only 4.6% of the worlds population.

I have alot of respect for FarmerBob. I just wish he would answer my question.

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 05:56 am Click here to edit this post
And I still wish you would post some sources rather than opinion, Nix.

Nature still produces many times the annual greenhouse gasses that humanity does. 30 times I believe, according to a source I posted earlier. So even if the USA is producing 1/3 of all human greenhouse gasses, that is still less than one nintieth of that which nature itself is adding.


Quote:

It's up to you whether or not you choose to believe what the scientists, government bodies and environmental groups say




From those three I think I'll stick with scientists, thanks. You stick with political "science" if you like. The fact remains, I posted information from scientifically credible sources. You still posted opinion.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 06:23 am Click here to edit this post
You have a computer. Google it and you will see.
Do you know that theres more to greenhouse gases than just CO2?
Anyway. You wrote one piece about CO2. What about everything else?
The destruction of the rain forests, barren lands due to chemicals, pollution increases from the developing world and no decreases from the developed world, green belts being built on, 10 fold increase of air travel, increase in cattle, increase in household waste, increase in land fill sites and the amount of toxins going to these land fill sites, increase in car emissions, year on year increases of global temp, melting of the ice caps, pollution of the seas and air, destruction of the coral reefs, year on year increase of unusual weather patterns, animals and plants dying out quicker than ever recorded, ect ect ect.

Did you know that trees and soil also locks away CO2?

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 02:45 pm Click here to edit this post
I will gladly address all of these issues when you post your sources and a brief explanation of how they are applicable to your reasoning.

MasterofAll

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 07:12 pm Click here to edit this post
Yes Nix, I think all of us are aware that CO2 is not the only greenhouse gas. We are also aware that trees and soil lock away CO2. We wouldn't have been able to comment intelligently in this thread without knowing that.

About the US producing such high levels of greenhouse gases; what's your point? So long as Europe expected/allowed us to manufacture, mine, and harvest so many of your products and raw materials we were bound to pollute more. It's happening with China right now, they are taking our pollution. And, based on geographical area, what percentage of the world's greenhouse gases are produced in Europe? After all, the US has far more infrastructure to maintain than just Britian. Our size geographically requires us to have larger road systems, more sewage/water treatment facilities, etc.

Britain is hardly the bastion of environmental responsibility. Germany and France lead the world in solar power use and development. Denmark leads in wind power. Brazil in biofuels. What does Britian really due to reduce it's impact? It pollutes less because it has less industry and infrastructure, not because the British people are so dedicated to protecting the environment.

Quit convincing yourself that you are some sort of environmental god, and so are all your countrymen. Until you can prove to me that you produce no negative environmental impact, or at least an incredibly negligible one, your argument carries very little weight. Is your home powered by renewable sources? Was it built using environmentally sustainable techniques? Do you eat only food created using environmentally responsible techniques? Does your garden use the most modern and efficient farming methods? Is your sewage broken down and processes to keep it from overdosing the environment on certain nutrients? Is your computer one of the most power efficient you can buy? Do you never use air conditioning or fans so as to keep electrical usage low?

I somewhat doubt you answered yes to all those questions.

I'm not really criticizing you, I'm just saying that if you intend to preach what you do, and criticize me and my country, you damn well better be in a position where you can't be criticized yourself.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 10:52 pm Click here to edit this post
I earn just enough to survive. I buy second hand cloths, I recycle everything that I'm allowed too. I only use my 950cc van for work (gardening), I grow some of the food that I need on my alotment. I desire/have no material wealth. Most of what I own has been given to me by people who would have thrown them away. I switch off any light that I'm not using. I don't leave anything on standby. I only use my computer to play this game to get my point about the environment across. I don't use the heating (I just put on an extra jumper).

I know that if I had a woman and children some of what I do would not be possible. But I don't, for the reason that it would not be fair on them. I am sacrificing my desires for the future generations as all men like me should do.

Blue Serpent (Fearless Blue)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 11:38 pm Click here to edit this post
so basically, your a vagrant ^_^

jason (Little Upsilon)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009 - 11:49 pm Click here to edit this post
A vagrant! LMFAO omg nix get a house! get a real job pay and off your game debt!

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 01:00 am Click here to edit this post
Nix,
Check messages on MNA supply.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 02:30 am Click here to edit this post
Excellent additions, Miles and Master.

One note. Global Climate Change is, of course, quite real. Our climate is in constant flux. Change is the only constant.

Man's infuence? That is the scam. Learn some math.

How much energy would it take to raise the GMT, Global Mean Temperature, by one degree celsius?

How much energy does mankind produce in all its activities?

The answers will astound you.

We couldn't effect the global climate if every human in existence dedicated his entire life to the effort.

Life is tenacious, rapacious, and utterly ruthless. "Fragile" is just about the most inaccurate word one could posibly find to describe our world.

Does that mean we rape and pillage the natural world without regard to the future?

Of course not. We do possess the means to drive some species to extinction. We could fundamentally alter the appearance and composition of the biosphere's eco-diversity.

However, responsible stewardship involves not wasting energy in counterproductive, "feel good" measures that actually require more use of the living spaces around us.

Responsible stewardship means using less of the natural world.
Find our energy in the atom, not our forests and open spaces.
Use our arable land efficiently to wring every calorie possible from every cultivated acre, better wild prairie, than enless miles of corn and wheatfields.
Look up and down, into the sky and the cold, dead ground. Skyscrapers better than sprawling suburbs. Mining and drilling better than cutting and clearing.

We have spent milennia developing the means live extravagantly without having to destroy our natural world. Yet those who claim to champion it cry out for the very methods that would bring its destruction.

Humans are the dominant species on this planet. We will eat, and breed, and live our lives just like every other lifeform. Those who think that salvation lies in some sort of self imposed, slow, collective suicide: "Don't consume. Don't advance. Just sit still and try not to use anything," are welcome to remove themselves from the gene pool. That is the way of death.

I will look to the night sky for our future. We are destined for the stars. The Universe will Let us know in no uncertain terms when we overstep our bounds.

Until that day, we are obligated not to consume less, but to produce more with less. More energy from a tiny mass of fissile material. Not miles of solar panels and wind mills requiring millions of tons of materials and vast quanties of energy to produce and maintain. Build our cities high into the sky, not outward into sprawling suburbs with ridiculous, inefficient gardens and stupid green buckets at the curb, filled with waste products that will consume more energy being transported than required to produce new.

Nature is worth preserving for its own sake. Not Doomsday prognostications.

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 03:23 am Click here to edit this post
Very well stated FarmerBob. You basically stated all of my thoughts and opinions. There are wonderful things going on with technology right now. In 50 years I believe we will see the advent of organ printers, fusion power, nanotechnology and all sorts of things that will increase our standard of living by amounts never dreamed about before. Why on earth would you just want to call it quits and stop at this point? I can't find even a speck of my mind that thinks the exact same way as Nix does. I somewhat agree with him on some aspects of the environment, but the whole cut consumption thing just throws me off.

I'm of the opinion that we are nowhere near depleting our resources and likely never will be. There is a whole universe out there, and we're finally taking the baby steps to exploring that vast expanse. I mean, just open your eyes Nix, people are seriously talking about establishing settlements on the moon and mars. Dosen't that invoke a sense of wonder in you? A sense of pride in humanity and what we've accomplished?

@FarmerBob

Although it would would be difficult for humans to raise the global temperature even by miniscule amounts through direct means, the largest nuclear reactor in the solar system could do it for us. I don't really agree with you that all of mankind couldn't cause the temperature to rise even one degree, even if we tried. Lighting every forest on the planet on fire would probably create a noticable effect. Would you dispute that notion? If you do, please don't do it on the premise that the particulate matter created would actually cause global cooling.

And I think you meant "fusable material" not "fissable material" in that seconde to last paragraph. :)

Ben

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 03:48 am Click here to edit this post
Ben. The qustions you posed are ones of time perspective.

Yes, we could, theoretically ,cause temporary and minute changes to the climate if we expended sufficient energy to destroy everything we could as you postulated. After a few years, then what? LOL. Nature would roll right along.

The point is that we are a small part of the natural world. Only our egos delude us into believing we have the kind of dominance over nature we believe. That is not to imply that we do not absolutely dominate our environments. We possess the means to feed, shelter, and support ourselves to some degree barring anything but the most cataclysmic of global events.

I did mean fissile. Fusion is our long term future, but fission is our best short term, practical alternative. The eco types are correct that we need to convert from petrol to alternative energy sources for our motor transport. Of course, for economic reasons, not the garbage they spew. Hydrogen as an ETM produced by large scale desalinization and electrolysis of sea water, powered by fission plants provides a truly workable alternative on the scale we need. Fuel Cells are an expensive, but very profitable ponzi scheme. Platinum and Palladium prices will always make them prohibitively costly for most consumers.

Please feel free to continue the discussion.

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 04:19 am Click here to edit this post
I'll gladly take you up on that offer. :)

I should first point out that I agree 110% with nuclear power as being the most sensible form of power generation. (I can imagine Nix shivering in terror while he reads this :)). In my opinion, stupid radical evironmentalist whining about the waste produced has handicapped the use of this technology for far too long already.

You seem fond of the hydrogen idea. It really makes me wish I could remember the name of the book that clearly and accurately described how the production of liquid hydrogen (as would probably be used in vehicles) took more energy than you retrieve out of the fuel itself. It essentially said, and proved, that using current production methods (namely electrolysis), the only real advantage of using hydrogen fuel was that it would be a portable alternative to gasoline that was considered "eco-friendly".

I'm rather fond of electric vehicles. Although they aren't really at a practical level currently, I believe advances in nanotechnology will improve battery technology to a feasible level. In my opinion, electricity represents the most universally useful form of energy. It can be produced through so many different methods, and can be readily produced nearly anywhere.

I'd be curious to hear your opinion of electric vehichles, it's bound to be a good one.

Ben

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 05:02 am Click here to edit this post
I see you guys are having fun and I will try not to interfere too much, however, few notes:

How much energy would it take to raise the GMT, Global Mean Temperature, by one degree celsius?

How much energy does mankind produce in all its activities?
- FarmerBob

What is causing the global warming, where global warming is not the same as global climate change?

The so called greenhouse gases. Human created energy has little to do with it, the Sun will take care of the energy you seem to be lacking in your equitations FarmerBob.

I don't really know who are the radical environmentalists mentioned in some posts, I guess its Greenpeace or similar groups, and not what nix presents here because kicking him around seems somewhat cheap or how shall I say it, but even the radical environmentalists have right to voice their opinions, have right to lobby politicians, have right to impose on people as any other interest group present in democratic society. Sure, its not required to like them, its possible to bash them, but we all realize thats about it right?

Lastly, I see little if nothing wrong with limiting or lowering my consumption in some areas. I really don't see any reason why I should buy bottled water for regular use, or why I should throw away food only because I can afford it and am careless, or why I should have xy light bulbs on at all time around my place only because Im lazy to switch them off and my electricity bill is non-issue.

Yet again, someone might feel differently, someone might feel that the more consumption the better no matter how much of it is a waste, and despite I wont take any steps towards actually restricting someone like that I reserve my right to think of it what I want to think which is that someone like that is an idiot to me.

MasterofAll (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 05:30 am Click here to edit this post
I would just like to say, I have no disrespect for Nix or anyone else in this thread. I do however consider him fairly radical in his views, but not his actions. I haven't heard anything about him using real life violence to force his views on anyone.

And, Zdenek, I agree that waste isn't something to strive for. In my earlier posts I stressed the importance of "intelligent management of our available resources" and I still feel that way. Waste is just that; Waste. It serves no positive purpose and I somewhat doubt anyone particularily strives to experience a lot of it. That being said, I don't see any value in tearing down industry or shunning technology. I'm assuming you feel the same way.

I'm waiting to see Nix's take on all of this, radical as his opinion may be, I do find it interesting.

Ben

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 05:43 am Click here to edit this post
Maybe I did not make it sound like that, but you guys made very good points about tech. Its our only way "out" is what I think.

Just seems to me nix is not ready to accept some ideas, and some of us are not ready to accept other ideas, while "all vs nix", no matter if deserved or not, does not seem "right" to me.

Thanks for clarifying that Ben.

FarmerBob

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 02:39 pm Click here to edit this post
@Master: The use of electrolysis to extract H2 from H2O is a zero sum game. That is why Hydrogen is at best an Energy Transfer Medium(ETM). What qualities H2 possesses as an alternative to gasoline are that:
-no new tech is required to produce or maintain H2 engines,
-sufficient power can be generated to provide the horsepower to replace diesel engines used in trucking and heavy equipment(a real problem with fuel cells and electric motors),
-the distribution infrastructure already exists(H2 can be transported by truck just like gas),
-the requirements for existing retailers to distribute H2 is relatively easily implemented,
-H2 is available to all nations without shifting the global power balance (mass production of fuel cells would turn Russia and South Africa into the new OPEC as the nearly sole providers of large quantities of Platinum and Paladium)
-even the worst nut case can't claim we are about to deplete our supply of sea water,
-lastly, of anything we could possibly burn to create heat and mechanical energy, H2 is about the cleanest imagineable.

Electric cars have their uses in certain locales, but do not possess the qualities required to replace the family car. Further, the need for massive amounts of new Electrical Power Generation still exists as well as the need to seriously beef up the grid to distribute it. Batteries are still expensive as Hell, limited in performance, and a real pain in the ass to dispose of.

@Zedenek: Of course, the sun is the only source of energy that seriously influences global climate. Your blind accaptance of the GreenHouse Effect is the problem. It is another hypothesis that has been repeated ad nauseum until it has come to be accepted as scientific fact, when there is hardly any evidence to support it. The exact same mechanics used in GreenHouse were used to explain the global cooling observed in the first 3/4 of the 20th Century. GreenHouse popped up in the late 70's. I posted the NewsWeek article from the 70's decrying the impending eco-disaster of Global Cooling on one of these threads around here.
The bottom line is that Trans-Science(See above posts) governs all of this debate, not hard science. The fact that politics has dominated the "scientific" research of this field for nearly 30 years does nothing to increase the credibility of these hypotheses. You are not old enough to remember when these ideas first got floated, shot down by science, and then migrated into the political and pop culture spheres where they finally gained attention and traction. Hard science doesn't support any of this crap, only trans-science which is political and now, very big business.

Real conservation is about natural spaces untouched by the hand of man. You wasting your time with plastic milk jugs and old newspaper is a waste of resources and overall harmful to the environment. Aluminum and steel remain the only two materials that make sense to recycle as the process requires less net energy then to produce new.
Consumption is neither harmful, nor beneficial to the environment. It just is. People should not be made to feel guilty for just living life. It is the attitude behind the message that is insiduous. Live like a medieval peasant or you are somehow evil. It's reworked Marx or Mao, fundamentally an anti-capitalist sentiment rather than an actual expresssion of workable public and economic policy. Reduced consumption as a macro solution is psychologically appealling as is Sand Pile Theory, and like the latter, reality just hasn't proven to match theory. More fuel efficient cars translate to more miles driven. Energy efficient appliances leads to the purchase of bigger appliances that use as much or more power than those they replace. Etc., Etc.

That is not to say that efficiency is not a good thing, that profligate waste is a positive. The use of energy in wiser ways is always sought because energy costs money and the market always looks to cut costs. The point being that the market is a hell of a lot more successful than arbitrary, corrupt government mandate or pop culture fads fueled by special-interest marketing campaigns.

The ultimately revealing trait of the Environmental Movement is that the solution to virtually every so-called issue is the same: central planning. Yet, they ignore (publicly) the fact that the centrally planned nations of the 20th Century were the worst environmental "offenders" by orders of magnitude. Yet, the siren song is always the same: "Just give us control of your economy, culture, and lives and we will save you."

Please. Communism died in the real world and moved to the Greens. The rank and file are well meaning dopes, but the leadership are just power hungry socialists looking for the same end: their own empowerment and aggrandizement. I ain't buyin' it.

P.S. Nix brought the scorn upon himself.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Golden Rainbow)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 02:48 pm Click here to edit this post
Well, what to say?

You can argue against and base your imaginary equitations and arguments on informations going against the scientific consensus, but then I have nothing to say to you anymore.

edit: I see you have some kind of obsession with Marx and communism, kinda like the obsession nix seem to have with anti-Gaians ;) Is that some kind of professional deformation? Dont answer it ..

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 03:07 pm Click here to edit this post
Scientic Consesus? Oh jeez. Do some more reading of something other than websites. Books might be a start.

Obsession? Hardly. People have names, identities, histories, and stated philosophies. When avowed communists start writing and publishing on environnmental issues and espousing clearly marxist ideology, it is what it is.

You seem to forget that socialism failed miserably both economically and environmentally.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 03:23 pm Click here to edit this post
Books :)

Not that I care to read books about this, but out of curiosity, what kind of books do you have in mind? I will just check their authors and their credibility.

Books or studies published by the so called skeptics who are in minority? I did not say they don't exist I just said their opinion does not represent the scientific consensus. For scientific consensus I don't need to read any books.

btw there are books on Intelligent Design for example, but why would I wanna read them when the theory of evolution is scientific consensus is beyond me.

edit: our president, economist by education, writes books like this. one called "The blue planet" as opposite to "green" planet. needless to say hes for laughs when he presents his skeptical and not really educated views to academics.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 03:41 pm Click here to edit this post
Now, for the "imaginary" equations.

Our relatively high global atmospheric temperature near the surface of the Earth, with an average of 14 to 15 degrees C, is caused by heat-absorbing gases in the atmosphere, mainly H2O vapor. Without the Earth's atmosphere the surface temperature would be approximately -18 degrees C.

The Earth receives about 1368 W/m2 of radiative heat from the Sun. The total amount of this heat withheld, approximately 11%, in the Earth's lower atmosphere, has traditionally been named the Earth's "Greenhouse Effect". For a cloudless atmosphere this effect is on the average about 146 W/m2 for the Earth, with an uncertainty of ± 5 to 10 W/m2 due to analytic uncertainties and natural climatic variations. All human activities have been claimed to contribute about 1.3% of this (approx. 2 W/m2), while a hypothetic doubling of the atmospheric CO2 concentration would contribute about 2.6% (approx. 4 W/m2) to the present "Greenhouse Effect" (Raval & Ramanathan, 1989; Ramanathan et al., 1989).

150 year long time series of temperature measurements are covering too short of time spans to be useful for climate prediction, in order to be used as "evidence" for anthropogenic heating(or cooling). The global mean temperature has risen and fallen several times over the last 400 years, with no evidence of anthropogenic causes, although strong explosive volcanic eruptions have caused periodically colder climates (Jaworowski et al., 1992 a).

It should also be noted that clouds can reflect up to approx. 50 W/m2 and can absorb up to approx. 30 W/m2 of the solar radiation (Ramanathan et al., 1989), making the Earth's average "Greenhouse Effect" vary naturally within approx. 96 and 176 W/m2. Hence the anticipated anthropogenic atmospheric CO2 heat absorption is much smaller than the natural variation of the Earth's "Greenhouse Effect" (Segalstad & Jaworowski, 1991).

The oceans act as a huge heat energy buffer, the global climate is primarily governed by the enormous amount of heat stored in the oceans (total mass approx. 1.4 x 1024 g), rather than the minute amount of heat withheld in the heat-absorbing part of the atmosphere (total mass approx. 1.4 x 1018 g), a mass difference of one million times (Peixoto & Oort, 1992). Most of the atmospheric heat absorption occurs in water vapor (total mass approx. 1.3 x 1019 g), which is equivalent to a uniform layer of only 2.5 cm of liquid water covering the globe, with a residence time of about 9 days (Peixoto & Oort, 1992).


The total internal energy of the whole ocean is more than 1.6 x 1027 Joule, about 2000 times larger than the total internal energy 9.4 x 1023 Joule of the whole atmosphere. Note that this energy is defined with respect to 0 degrees Kelvin (Peixoto & Oort, 1992).


Furthermore the cryosphere (ice sheets, sea ice, permafrost, and glaciers; total mass of the continental ice is approx. 3.3 x 1022 g) plays a central role in the Earth's climate as an effective heat sink for the atmosphere and oceans, with a large latent heat of melting on the order of 9.3 x 1024 Joule, a hypothetic energy equivalent to cooling the entire oceans by about 2 degrees C (5.8 x 1024Joule/degree C). For comparison, the energy needed to warm the entire atmosphere by 1 degree C is only 5.1 x 1021 Joule (Oerlemans & van der Veen, 1984).

The total estimated global energy production of 2005? 5 x 1020 Joule (International Energy Agency, 2006).

An order of magnitude's difference.

Any more questions?

And curse you for making me dig this crap up out of books and retyping it here. :(

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 04:06 pm Click here to edit this post
No, not really any questions.

Its clear to me that you, our president, and some others choose to believe in (sources of) informations which reassure their opinions or prejudices rather than contradicting them. That is not shocking, its in a way natural, because thats how our brain works.

The difference is that others, me included, choose to believe in what the scientific consensus is, which is coincidently more probable than what the skeptics believe in.

If Im faced with two theories, hypothesis, explanations and one has 10% probability to be true and the other one 90% I choose the later one, because I like to think my faith is rational.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 04:27 pm Click here to edit this post
As did a significant portion of the German population when presented with the "scientific" certainity of the genetic superiority of the Aryan race.

Those are the numbers, above. If you don't grasp their meaning and implication, I can explain them to you. No interpretation, no opinion. Just data. So who is reinforcing their predjudices?

Here's your "scientific consenus" circa 1975:

NEWSWEEK, April 28


Quote:

There are ominous signs that the Earth's weather patterns have begun to change dramatically and that these changes may portend a drastic decline in food production - with serious political implications for just about every nation on Earth. The drop in food output could begin quite soon, perhaps only 10 years from now. The regions destined to feel its impact are the great wheat-producing lands of Canada and the U.S.S.R. in the North, along with a number of marginally self-sufficient tropical areas - parts of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indochina and Indonesia - where the growing season is dependent upon the rains brought by the monsoon.

The evidence in support of these predictions has now begun to accumulate so massively that meteorologists are hard-pressed to keep up with it. In England, farmers have seen their growing season decline by about two weeks since 1950, with a resultant overall loss in grain production estimated at up to 100,000 tons annually. During the same time, the average temperature around the equator has risen by a fraction of a degree - a fraction that in some areas can mean drought and desolation. Last April, in the most devastating outbreak of tornadoes ever recorded, 148 twisters killed more than 300 people and caused half a billion dollars' worth of damage in 13 U.S. states.

To scientists, these seemingly disparate incidents represent the advance signs of fundamental changes in the world's weather. The central fact is that after three quarters of a century of extraordinarily mild conditions, the earth's climate seems to be cooling down. Meteorologists disagree about the cause and extent of the cooling trend, as well as over its specific impact on local weather conditions. But they are almost unanimous in the view that the trend will reduce agricultural productivity for the rest of the century. If the climatic change is as profound as some of the pessimists fear, the resulting famines could be catastrophic. "A major climatic change would force economic and social adjustments on a worldwide scale," warns a recent report by the National Academy of Sciences, "because the global patterns of food production and population that have evolved are implicitly dependent on the climate of the present century."

A survey completed last year by Dr. Murray Mitchell of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reveals a drop of half a degree in average ground temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere between 1945 and 1968. According to George Kukla of Columbia University, satellite photos indicated a sudden, large increase in Northern Hemisphere snow cover in the winter of 1971-72. And a study released last month by two NOAA scientists notes that the amount of sunshine reaching the ground in the continental U.S. diminished by 1.3% between 1964 and 1972.

To the layman, the relatively small changes in temperature and sunshine can be highly misleading. Reid Bryson of the University of Wisconsin points out that the Earth's average temperature during the great Ice Ages was only about seven degrees lower than during its warmest eras -and that the present decline has taken the planet about a sixth of the way toward the Ice Age average. Others regard the cooling as a reversion to the "little ice age" conditions that brought bitter winters to much of Europe and northern America between 1600 and 1900 - years when the Thames used to freeze so solidly that Londoners roasted oxen on the ice and when iceboats sailed the Hudson River almost as far south as New York City.

Just what causes the onset of major and minor ice ages remains a mystery. "Our knowledge of the mechanisms of climatic change is at least as fragmentary as our data," concedes the National Academy of Sciences report. "Not only are the basic scientific questions largely unanswered, but in many cases we do not yet know enough to pose the key questions."

Meteorologists think that they can forecast the short-term results of the return to the norm of the last century. They begin by noting the slight drop in overall temperature that produces large numbers of pressure centers in the upper atmosphere. These break up the smooth flow of westerly winds over temperate areas. The stagnant air produced in this way causes an increase in extremes of local weather such as droughts, floods, extended dry spells, long freezes, delayed monsoons and even local temperature increases - all of which have a direct impact on food supplies.

"The world's food-producing system," warns Dr. James D. McQuigg of NOAA's Center for Climatic and Environmental Assessment, "is much more sensitive to the weather variable than it was even five years ago." Furthermore, the growth of world population and creation of new national boundaries make it impossible for starving peoples to migrate from their devastated fields, as they did during past famines.

Climatologists are pessimistic that political leaders will take any positive action to compensate for the climatic change, or even to allay its effects. They concede that some of the more spectacular solutions proposed, such as melting the Arctic ice cap by covering it with black soot or diverting arctic rivers, might create problems far greater than those they solve. But the scientists see few signs that government leaders anywhere are even prepared to take the simple measures of stockpiling food or of introducing the variables of climatic uncertainty into economic projections of future food supplies. The longer the planners delay, the more difficult will they find it to cope with climatic change once the results become grim reality.

-PETER GWYNNE with bureau reports




But hey, that was 1975, right? Practically the Dark Ages. Not like today when we know everything there is to know about everything.

Good for you, Z. Just let others do your thinking for you. No harm has ever come from that attitude.

I will continue to use my own brain and education to examine the data and reach my own conclusions, whether they conform to consensus or not.

nix001

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 05:05 pm Click here to edit this post
Sorry FarmerBob. You have already answered my question of what happens if nations become poorer. 'As nations become poorer they become dirtier.' Did'nt see that there.

OK. First off I agree with nuclear power. I would rather 10,000,000 people die from a nuclear catastrophe than the world die from the use of dirty energy.

Second. FarmerBob. You said earlier 'we couldn't effect the global climate if every human in existence dedicated his entire life to the effort.' And now you say 'the energy needed to warm the entire atmosphere by 1 degree C is only 5.1 x 1021 Joule' and that 'The total estimated global energy production of 2005? 5 x 1020 Joule' Does that mean that in 2005, human activity will increase global temp by 1 degree C?

Third. I'm not on about the amount of CO2 the man creates. I'm on about destroying the Earths ability to deal with it.

Since mass consumption of fossil fuels began with the industrial revolution around 1800, the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has grown from an estimated 280 parts per million to around 380 parts per million.

'Today's current level of atmospheric carbon dioxide is only around half of what scientists have predicted atmospheric levels should be, based on estimates that humans have contributed 244 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide to Earth's atmosphere.

"The other half of the emitted carbon dioxide was the so-called missing sink, which was thought to be taken up by either the oceans or the land plants," Sabine said. (Plants absorb carbon dioxide and use it to produce energy.)'

'Trees play a unique role in the global carbon cycle. They are the largest land-based natural mechanism for removing CO2 from the air. (CO2 is also removed by the oceans and ocean organisms.)

Trees are able to store a large amount of CO2 in their structures. An acre of forest will absorb about 10 times the CO2 amount absorbed by an acre of crop land or grassland. One tree absorbs about 13 pounds of CO2 per year, and each one acre of forest absorbs about 2.8 tons of CO2. However, when trees are burned, the carbon locked in the structure is released into the air in the form of CO2. Today, the shrinking world forests are not able to absorb all the CO2 created by human beings while burning fossil fuels. Everyday over 5500 acres of rain forest are destroyed, and over 50 million acres are destroyed every year. Global CO2 levels rise approximately 0.4 percent each year, to levels not experienced on this planet for millions of years.'

It's not just the oceans that absorb CO2 but also the life in them.

'scientists say the sink effect is now changing ocean chemistry. The resulting change has slowed growth of plankton, corals, and other invertebrates that serve as the most basic level of the ocean food chain. The impacts on marine life could be severe, scientists say.

"The oceans are performing a great service to humankind by removing this carbon dioxide from the atmosphere," said Christopher Sabine, a geophysicist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle, Washington. "The problem is that this service has potential consequences for the biology and ecosystem structure of the oceans."'


Which in turn will reduce the oceans ability to absord the CO2. Then what happens?


Hi Zde and Ben.
Ben. I set up Mother Natures Army on all worlds to fight those who insult and threaten people who wish to discuss the environment on threads like this one. As I've completed my mission I have decided to disbanded Mother Natures Army on all worlds except LU until the time when someone else starts up with the insults. This means I can no longer access FB. Could you send the message you sent to FB to my main game messaging service?

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 05:31 pm Click here to edit this post
Thinking for me :)

Yes, spending 1000s of hours, probably 1000s of $ for getting access to sci-journals and acquiring books or visiting conferences, only to become educated enough to have educated opinion instead of layman opinion based on scientific consensus seems like my kind of fun... not.

Nobody on this board is educated enough, not even you FarmerBob, so stop pretending or deluding yourself that you know more than I, or someone else, do.

You've read a book .. well done! It does not change the scientific consensus no matter what you will write here. You choose to believe in what is not scientific consensus, yet you act like you are in possession of the truth. Ok, but as I said in such case I have nothing, but ad-hominem attacks, to say to you.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 05:41 pm Click here to edit this post
You know what, if you have bullet-proof data, if you claim that humans have no influence over global warming, go to some climatologist conference or publish it in journals and force the general scientific consensus to admit they are wrong. Thats how science works and science is open to change of mind if there is sufficient evidence.

I mean wtf?

In your interpretation, every national academy of sciences is politically influenced, which of course you dont have any proofs for but whatever, in your interpretations politicians are more influenced by the radical environmentalists who are not all that rich than by the interests groups from industry who are filthy rich. And that makes sense to you. What can anyone say about this? How can anyone refute your arguments? Its impossible.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 05:44 pm Click here to edit this post
There you go, Nix. You are finally presenting argument.

To answer your question. No. Those numbers mean we did not produce one-tenth of the energy in an entire year required to raise the temperature of the atmosphere by one degree. That is assuming that the energy was stored for that year and suddenly released as heat into the atmosphere, which is even more ludicrous. Do you understand the math?

Setting aside for a moment, that GreenHouse is a BS notion, here are the guesstimates for global carbon levels, per year:
Plants breathe out about 50bil metric tons a year and absorb around 100bil in photosynthesis.
Soil organisms emit around 50bil, the oceans diffuse 100bil out and approx. 104bil back in.
That's Mother Nature's share of the bill.
Humans? we emit around 6bil burning fossil fuels and 2bil through deforestation.
That's a net guesstimated gain of 3bil per annum.

Got that?

3 billion in a carbon cycle circulating hundreds of billions of tons. Most carbon natural production is heavily dependent on solar activity, and curiously enough, the .2%(not .4%) increase in atmospheric CO2 levels in the last few decades correspond to.....a .2% increase in solar activity over the same time period. CO2 levels were similar 150,000 years ago, not millions.

As for the trees? What have I been saying through this entire thread?

Preserve and expand our natural spaces.

Not because we are experiencing a natural global warming period, but because the natural world is worth protecting for its own sake.

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:06 pm Click here to edit this post
Nix:

'5.1 x 1021 Joule' means 5.1x1021 Joules, or 5,100,000,000,000,000,000,000 Joules.

'The total estimated global energy production of 2005? 5 x 1020 Joule'

Likewise, 5x1020 Joules, or 500,000,000,000,000,000,000 Joules.

5,100,000,000,000,000,000,000
500,000,000,000,000,000,000

Just to clarify. Carry on.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:12 pm Click here to edit this post
here, for the 3rd time in this thread, you can start editing and refuting the scam:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_opinion_on_climate_change


go ahead. if you can convince more than 40 scientific societies and academies of science, you will convince me.

good luck :)

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:13 pm Click here to edit this post
Zdenek: That is a completely bullshit response. Do not try to tell me that we do not possess the intelligence or means to fully grasp these issues.

I have a friend that I've known for around 25 years. He was a nuclear physicist and engineer. When I once tried to humbly imply that I was not nearly smart enough to understand some of these complex problems, (we were talking about climate change at the time), he got very angry and told me something that I will always remember. To paraphrase:

"The average high school graduate learns enough math and science to completely understand the basic principles, if not the details, of 99% of all but the most esoteric of current scientific works."

That these issues are just too complex and require too much specialized education for the layman to grasp is just nonsense.

I am a 26 year military professional. Does that mean that you could never comprehend the complexities of military operations? Hardly. I could give you fewer than 2 dozen books to read that would leave with a military education better than most officers in the world possess.

Do not sell yourself short with me. I will kick you squarely in the ass.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:15 pm Click here to edit this post
but i guess you like this one better, because this one is the correct one right?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scientists_opposing_the_mainstream_scientific_assessment_of_global_warming

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:16 pm Click here to edit this post
I dont know if you are smart or not, but unless you have PhD in climatology you are not educated enough to have educated opinion on the issue.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:18 pm Click here to edit this post
Then you make yourself a slave, Zdenek, and I truly pity you.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:20 pm Click here to edit this post
Here we go ... that tells me 26 military professional. To do my own thinking, and not to be slave.

FarmerBob (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:24 pm Click here to edit this post
Believe it or not, Z. Military professionals are encouraged and trained to be independent thinkers.

A rigid and inflexible mind is predictable.

An innovative and creative mind is dangerous.

Don't buy into the stereotypes.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:33 pm Click here to edit this post
Ok .. so have we solved anything except increasing personal antipathies?

FarmerBob

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:39 pm Click here to edit this post
If you get over this apparent awe of letters after a name, and indicate that you are willing to think for yourself and not just blindly accept "consensus" opinion, I will declare victory and be satisfied.

I couldn't care less if you ever agree with me or not.

Daelin (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:39 pm Click here to edit this post
You know what a PhD in climatology will get you? The world's foremost expert on coastal upwelling off the coast of Peru or on the seasonal variability of the Somali currents. A PhD will make you an expert in a VERY specific subfield of the field you're studying, but not much better in the rest of the field. I can't tell you how many PhD candidates I've known who were experts in their specific niche, but you ask them a tangentially related question, and they're at a complete loss.

With a few hours of research time, I agree with FarmerBob that a simple H.S. diploma contains sufficient backgrounding in the math and sciences to understand the basics of climatology.

nix001

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:41 pm Click here to edit this post
The thread is going into over load :( and we need to start a new one. It would be a shame to lose what we have written so I suggest we copy our posts from Sunday, March 29, 2009 - 10:16 pm and take it from there. We should do each one individualy inturn, as I've have copied a number of posts before and it does'nt make easy reading. IE, I copy mine then Ben copies his then miles copies his then I copy mine the Zde copies his ect ect.
What do you think?

Mmmmmmmmm. Thats long.
What to do?

GM. How long do you think we have got until this thread gets deleted due to it's length?

FarmerBob

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:45 pm Click here to edit this post
That wasn't my statement, Daelin. That came from a guy who designed nuclear weapons for a living and could do advanced calculus in his head.

Ever known someone who was "scary" smart?

The greatest threat to a free society is when free men shackle their own minds.


Quote:

Thought takes man out of servitude, into freedom.

-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow


Zdeněk Pavlovský

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 06:55 pm Click here to edit this post
This debate reminds me kindergarten ..

Its not about understanding basics of climatology, its about having access to tons of informations, tons of data, studies, hypothesis, opinions, which then can be analyzed with the understanding of climatology.

I dont know, anyone here really thinks s/he educated enough to argue scientific consensus on global warming?

Raise your hand.

And if you are qualified, if you are educated enough, if you have sufficient data, if you have sound theory, present it, publish it and refute the consensus. How hard can it be eh?

And if not .. stfu or?

I dont get what the problem is. There is scientific consensus, anyone is free to believe in anything s/he likes, but why opinion opposing the consensus should be the right one I dont understand.

Daelin (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 07:33 pm Click here to edit this post
I'm sorry I put words into your mouth, FarmerBob. However, it is my belief. The information/studies/reports are easily gathered from journals at your local university. An "understanding of climatology" can be gathered with a either self-study or a few basic science courses.

As for educational requirements, of course I think I'm educated enough to argue scientific consensus. I have multiple degrees in the environmental sciences, so feel I am qualified both in evaluating the data presented AND evaluating the difficulty level of the material.

================================
You know what, if you have bullet-proof data, if you claim that humans have no influence over global warming, go to some climatologist conference or publish it in journals and force the general scientific consensus to admit they are wrong. That's how science works and science is open to change of mind if there is sufficient evidence.
================================

I'm sorry, but that's NOT how science works. Unfortunately, science has people, and people like their own ideas, prerogatives, and beliefs and are very resistant to change. That is how science works in the long term (50 - 100 years), but not in the short term .

Finally, as to my actual beliefs, I do believe that climate change is happening on our planet. Whether or not it's all directly due to man-made causes or not is still in dispute. Unfortunately, studies like that take a long time, and by necessity, can't be conclusively proven until after the fact. Regardless of cause, however, it certainly appears that climate change is taking place. Given that our species' activities and habitats only thrive within a relatively small band of temperatures/rainfall gradients, it seems to make prudent sense that even if the processes taking place on our planet are complete natural (unlikely though that is), we should be endeavoring to manipulate our climate to maintain it within our ideal band.

FarmerBob

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 07:45 pm Click here to edit this post
That's a great point, Daelin.

I agree with your take.

But here's the question.

Is global warming a good thing, forestalling what scientific consensus claimed just a short time ago was an impending ice age, or are we hastening towards one by not encouraging global cooling, ala the NA Current scenario?

Which leads directly to a second question.

Are we even capable of influencing global climate?

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 07:46 pm Click here to edit this post
nothing like quoting oneself, but in kindergarten it seems necessary:

the only fair thing to say is that we are not 100% sure what is causing the changes we can observe. to claim humans do not influence anything is ignorant. - me, Thursday, March 26, 2009 - 10:16 am

and 3 weeks from this what do I get to read?

Miles Prower

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 08:01 pm Click here to edit this post
Education and intelligence are not the same thing. To be educated you need to possess knowledge. To be intelligent, you need to be able to infer from knowledge in a rational manner.

I posess the ability to infer and extrapolate information from available data. I am able to form opinions based upon facts presented to me. But I cannot speak for any of the rest of you.

But one does not need to be a specialist in any given area to hold opinion, or even debate. All one needs is to be able to explain and back up any given stance with observable facts and figures, as FarmerBob has done several times. As I myself have done also.

It is a fool who disregards information because they do not like somebody, rather than because they possess compelling data to the contrary.

It is the realm of the inately narrow-minded to attack a position simply because it isn't what the majority believes. And ultimately, it retards progress because it dismisses perfectly legitimate alternate views without reason or recourse. It becomes tantamount to a witch hunt, as we now see reguarly against anybody who disagrees with the majority.

But moving back to the environment and current scientific consensus; does a majority vote make it correct? I'm sorry, but I've heard this all before. The twentieth century and prior are littered with "scientific consencuses" of what will happen to the environment, only later to be found completely inaccurate.

The mid 20th century "ice age" predictions and the ozone threat, for example, both of which turned out to be naturally occuring phenomena.

The point regarding the current issue of Climate Change cum Man-Made Global Warming is that it simply isn't what the majority believes. Rather, its the opinion of the most vocal group - the politicians and the media. I'm not going to say that I believe the scientist in favour of man-made global warming are wrong, or even that they're all nothing more than political puppets. I'm simply not that naive. But what I will say is that the media loves a good disaster. Bad news sells.

As far as national governments go, the political ramifications - both domestically and internationally - of green policy are an excellent means by which to force certain controls and constraints upon both the individual and the state alike. Ultimately, I am fined for diagreeing with the government position.

I'm not claiming paranoia or anything. But there is no denying that there is far too much political investment within the issue of climate change. Politics and Science go about as well together as Religion and Science. Debate is most productive when left unbiased of all but theory and fact.

There are plenty of scientific experts, informed non-experts and generally learned individuals who are more than willing to form contrary opinions and debate them. There are plenty on both sides of this argument, legitimate and otherwise.

Personally, I would not limit myself to an opinion simply because it is the "in" thing to do. I would much rather take a look at the data on offer myself, review the opinion of the people who conducted the research into said data, apply what I know and what I can learn and reach the conclusion that seems the most logical. Then I would apply my conclusions and my sources in what I would hope to be an open-minded debate on the topic, with oppositional and supported riposte in return. As long as the opposition is equally well sourced, of course.

FarmerBob and I have both posted data from verious sources for the scrutiny, disection and delectation of all who choose to do so. Could somebody from the other side of the argument please post something other than personal opinion?

Pope Samicus IX (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 09:06 pm Click here to edit this post
All arguments aside our science is inadequate to model or determine the state of non-linear systems with any degree of accuracy.

To use such flawed modeling techniques as demonstrated by the highly politicized scientists from the UN as the basis for spending trillions of dollars and destroying the economy of America is indeed foolish and wasteful.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 09:47 pm Click here to edit this post
I can see it now. Grandpa, why are there no birds and bee's anymore? Well kids, we did'nt want to risk the economy and go without. Anyway, who needs birds and bee's when we have toys and TV's?

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 11:08 pm Click here to edit this post
Still waiting on those sources, Nix.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 11:47 pm Click here to edit this post
Im not sure if some realize it, but there is a world outside of the USA and there politics and science or politics and religion or science and politics don't mix the way some Americans seem to believe.

As there are countries which dont have problems accepting evolution, there are countries which dont have problems accepting global warming.

Its really not surprising to me that many of the global warming deniers come from the USA as its not surprising to me that many of the intelligent design supporters come from there.

That something is or looks like political issue where some live, does not mean its political issue everywhere in the world.

It makes my head spin when some call for facts one sentence and in following they dismiss science just because it does not fit their argument.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Thursday, April 16, 2009 - 11:51 pm Click here to edit this post
fucking useless rhetorical exercises and i really fucking hope i will get banned from the board because this shit is just .. too fucking much for me to handle.

ikiryo Alexiel (Fearless Blue)

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 12:29 am Click here to edit this post
trick is to pretend everyone else in the game doesn't exist and just play for you. :3

and then just come chat in irc for funs.

dun worry lah.

Laguna (Little Upsilon)

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 12:57 am Click here to edit this post
You're all a figment of dull, repetitive imagination! La la la la... Oh! Look! Drugs! And just look at! More drugs! La la la...

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 01:39 am Click here to edit this post
Well its just incredible how some argue here.

They perhaps believe that if they have better command of the English language or that they paste some data they didnt gather themselves but copied them from some site or book that they are right.

When Daelin, who claims to be educated and qualified on the subject, comes and gives her/his opinion they say .. I agree with your take.. and then just follow in their argument as if nothing happened disregarding what he said completely.

We have data we have data!

Theres fucking twice as many data contradicting your data so fucking what? Stick your fucking data to your ass. What do you think they prove? Nothing, nada, niente, nichts, nic.

Not even talking about interpretation of THE data.

Get over it and if you are unable to admit that you could be wrong, that there are other possibilities, then what the fuck is wrong with you? Are we talking about the Bible or something that its not possible to admit other possibilities?

Im starting to doubt some people here are serious and I suspect they do it just to make a controversy, just to troll, because if they are adult, intelligent, educated and serious then I dunno what the fuck is going on here.

Miles Prower

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 01:46 am Click here to edit this post
For the record, I'm not American.

As for data; it proves a knowledge base for your conclusions. If there's so much out there, you shouldn't have an issue supporting other claims now, should you?

This isn't about whether choosing one side or the other. This is about supporting conclusions. But its nice to see you're so easy to agitate.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 01:50 am Click here to edit this post
I can provide you with tons of data Miles. How big problem do you think it is to google some report, supporting the claim that global warming is for 90% certainty caused by humans, and paste the data here? But I wont do it because I know it does not prove anything. I could even make them up and say they are from a book or study in my language and do you think you would know the difference? Please ..

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Fearless Blue)

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 01:55 am Click here to edit this post
But its nice to see you're so easy to agitate. - Miles Prower

I had a bad day I guess and Im glad I could amuse you :) but cmon guys, why is so hard to say ..

I do not know or I am not sure?

Miles Prower

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 02:25 am Click here to edit this post
It would provide an insight into the nature of your reasoning. But I'm not talking about copying and pasting. The whole point of this is that if you're going to hold an opinion and say "Global warming is man made." and so forth as Nix has done then you need to be able to back it up with something more substantial than personal belief - ideally empirical evidence...

When you write a factual book, for example, you write out a bibliography of each and every reference you use to gather information on your chosen topic so that people can see clearly how and why your conclusions are as they are. Your actual opinion could be "Proof that WW2 was a ploy to sell more popcorn from later movie rights" for all I care, as long as you back it up with some references which show a factual basis.

It is simple debate practice.

I'm not saying that I know for sure what will happen in the future. All I've done is stated what I think, why I think it and some of the information and sources used to reach that point.

Surely you've written a paper or two in your life on some subject or other? Any scientific claim, regardless of ultimate certainty, should be backed up with some form of empirical evidence. Otherwise it is little more than opinion.

Zdeněk Pavlovský (Little Upsilon)

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 03:01 am Click here to edit this post
I am not holding that opinion as I stated 3 weeks ago in one of my first, if not first, posts in this environmental "debate", however, if I see someone holding the opposite opinion, then I am left with nothing else but to point out that its not true or its not a fact that humans do not contribute to global warming.

As I have said before, I've done my research and formed my opinion when I became aware of the issue few years back and since my interest in environmental issues is not professional nor even as a hobby, I don't follow reports coming out. To me its enough to watch out for any major shifts on the issue, and I have to say I get to see more evidence supporting the man-made global warming than disproving it.

Even if I would not do any research and went with the .. scientific consensus .. so what? We all do it on daily basis, we put our faith in science simply because its not possible to verify everything by ourselves. It would not prove me wrong.

I do not have problem with Dealin's or Ben's statements simply because they admit to a doubt.


But since you insist, since it seems it would make you happy:

IPCC WG1 AR4 Report

Understanding and Attributing Climate Change

argue this.

This is, for example, what I base my opinion on. It has citations, it has data, it has references, you name it.

And what you gonna tell me now? Its a scam, this source of information is not reliable, its not true.

What can I say to that?

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Friday, April 17, 2009 - 04:06 am Click here to edit this post
Not at all, Zdeněk. This is exactly what I was after.

Thank you.

nix001

Wednesday, April 22, 2009 - 03:28 pm Click here to edit this post
I can't access the link so I was wondering Miles whats in it that made you no longer want to argue?

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 01:49 am Click here to edit this post
It wasn't the content.

The terms of my argument were that I desired somebody from the opposing side to offer sources. That requirement was satisfied, so I know that his opinion is based upon the facts as he sees them rather than unfounded opinion.

So my debate with him has reached the desired conclusion, at least from my side.

Any chance of you doing the same, Nix?

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 03:53 am Click here to edit this post
I see. Your just lazy.

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 04:06 am Click here to edit this post
"You're" nix.

But better than being ignorant, right? I'm assuming, as usual, you missed the point entirely.

nix001 (Kebir Blue)

Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 04:44 am Click here to edit this post
You can look for the information you seek yourself.
When anyone say's something which I'm not sure about, I will look for it to see what I can find out about it.
Whats wrong with you doing the same?

There are also no known facts in this debate. Only opinion on what the facts will be.
My opinion has taken 15 years of information gathering from books, TV documentaries, Web sites, Newspapers, University lectures and Radio shows. I could'nt start to begin to give you reference's to where I get each part of my point of view from. But I can guide you in the right direction to what sort of information you should be looking for to be able to work out the possible scinarios created from mans past and present actions on our future generations planet.

I'm still not sure which points you are struggling on though.
Also where's the links for your information?

Miles Prower (Fearless Blue)

Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 05:23 am Click here to edit this post

Quote:

You can look for the information you seek yourself.




I've offered the facts which support my own argument. Its not my job in this debate to go and seek those which support yours. The way these things work is you back up your own side with references. Clearly, you've never written a report or a book. What you're doing is asking the reader to compose their own bilbiography.

You do understand how debate works, right?


Quote:

I'm still not sure which points you are struggling on though.




Oh, I grasp what you're saying pretty well. I just like to see some foundation other than fiction.


Quote:

Also where's the links for your information?




Try my posts.

Anybody seen a good rolleyes gif around here by any chance?


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