Originally Posted by
Stavros
I think that if there is a simple answer to the original purpose of this thread, it is that we don't really know. Science tells us that planet Earth is dependent on the Sun and the fate of the Sun is doomed, even if this event is several billion years ahead of us, apparently even in the cosmos, nothing last forever. In the interim, a meteor, asteroid or some other object, if large and heavy enough, could in theory whack the earth, change our orbit, and wipe out the human species, much as it is now claimed that meteorite in Mexico 65 million years ago was a cause of the demise of the dinosaur.
I don't see any purpose in thinking in terms of billions of years, other than as part of our understanding of history and the sciences, but what climate change does, is to open a debate about the way we live and the impact that human society has upon the earth on which we depend for food, water and shelter. Although I am disappointed in the quality of the debate opposed to the science of climate changed and advanced global warming -mainly because it is not scientific but a mix of politics and personal prejudice- I find that the larger cause for concern is an apparent indifference to the impact we have on our environment, not so much glaciers in Switzerland or the Himalayas but the places where we live.
Call it Green Politics, Environmental Activism, and so on -these are not new issues. There was a Chinese scholar in I think the 10th or the 11th century who complained that the demand for paper was reducing the forests, and that this could not be good for China. Some of the most powerful environmental groups in the USA, the Sierra Club and the Wilderness Society were formed in the 19th century. It may be that the end of the Cold War has removed one set of antagonisms, and that Green Politics, Multiculturalism and Immigration have become the issues guarnteed to stir a frenzy of vitriolic debate. But none of this is new, but it is as it always has been, important. Because this is where we live.
If we do value our locality, be it a city, town or village, conservation is a given. If conservation if a given, a value, something that both empowers individuals, while imposing obligations on them, standards of behaviour, it also requires monitoring. We are not free to steal from others, we should not be free to pollute. How that regime of law and responsibility operates must be part of what we would call good governance. I can understand the hostility to taxation, not in principle because the principle of paying the state to do something for the benefit of society as a whole is not a problem for me; but I agree, the uses to which taxes are put, and the agencies involved might require better management; but the principle is sound. But as I said before, whatever happens, we will pay for it.
But looking back over the exhanges in this thread, it might be more honest for some people on this board to say, quite simply, as far the environment is concerned, I don't care. Then we can close this discussion and move on.