Mountaineer wrote:
moda0306 wrote:
Benko wrote:
"in order to maintain harmony and order".
And the only solution to models predicting the earth will get warmer is--surprise things the left wishes to do anyway.
When you have a hammer the whole world looks like a nail.
The "left" wants to tax carbon emissions or start a credit-trading system... Along with dealing with considering more efficient transportation and residential models.
How is this what the left wishes to do anyways? Maybe (gasp) they actually want to do these things to solve or mitigate an ecological disaster.
May I respectfully suggest if the left really wishes to solve or mitigate, they should consider presenting their ideas in a way that the masses will actually want what is being sold rather than perceiving it is being pushed down their throat. I can't speak for everyone, but it sure seems to me the left is operating without solid science on their side and with the appearance of wanting power and control. If this is not the case, perhaps the left could do a much better marketing job. In other words, why do I think the left is, on the whole, just a bunch of corrupt self congratulatory narsisistic egomaniacs that will not look outside of their elitist circle of friends for input? Convince those of us who see the left that way that is not the case ... what I see when people make statements like I just did is the left trying to deny, divert or otherwise make the oposition look foolish. Come on people of the left, get us on board with you!
... Mountaineer
What level of consensus in the scientific community would you like to see before you're convinced of man-made climate change? Are you stating that the scientists arguing for climate change are doing a poor job, or are not enough in numbers?
There's no likely solution that isn't going to feel like it's being "pushed down the throats" of masses who really don't want to pay a higher utility bill or drive a smaller car or less miles.
We can either suggest something that works, or something that sounds nice... Or, put a nice guise on something that works. A lot of "selling" might have to happen, but if "the left" is the only side trying to come up with a solution, I want them to figure out "what works" first, and worry about the masses and their 2,500 sf homes and SUV gas bills later. Frankly, if climate change is a risk worth taking seriously, government ignoring it is essentially theft from those who don't pollute and a subsidy to those that do. I respectfully suggest to "the masses" to acknowledge that if you want government to recognize your assets (most people advocate for government in this role), then properly accounting for un-captured liabilities is the other side of that coin.
I don't mind the debate, and skeptical attitudes towards new ideas, but this straw-man attack towards "the left" is a bit much. But one if the core issues here is risk-based property recognition. This is one huge point people make against advocates of the Non-aggression Principle. There's no proper accounting for risk. You can say your property is yours til your blue in the face, but if you're polluting, you are aggressing against others. If you're polluting in ways we don't 100% understand, one could very reasonably assert that the risk of loss being created by activity is aggression of well. Any attempt to avoid being held accountable for those costs is "pushing pollution down the throat" of others.
Very few of the masses are interested in anything close to the truth. About investing, economics, risk, pollution, religion, and the list goes on. They're more interested in making their lives as comfortable as possible in the short-term, and appealing to that may be politically necessary, but by no means is it something I enjoy (or will enjoy) listening to as part of the overall discussion. They've made up their mind based on convenience... A lot of nauseating polishing of difficult decisions is going to need to be done before action is palatable to "the masses."
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine