Re: Strong and effective climate change policy, that doesn't involve a great, big new
Why do we have to? What value is there in making an effort, if as I suspect, the effort will be expensive and futile?
Well if you suspect something is amiss, jennyfromdabloc, then it must be so! Look, there's been sceptics and conspiracy theorists for every major development and event of modern times. Round earth, solar system revolving around the sun, Darwin, moon landing, 9-11, and the list goes on. Anthropogenic global warming is just another one of those divisive realities that generate opposition, I just hope the foolish opposition subsides sooner than it usually does, because this issue has much more riding on it.
The ONLY THING? So I'm guessing you don't enjoy all the wealth that it has provided.
Do you want to part with YOUR money? Feel free to hand it over to some climate change group buddy, don't try and make everyone else sound selfish you hypocrite.
You even admit that more wealth makes us more equipped to deal with it. That's a huge benefit. I'd rather have the resources to erect sea walls, import food and even rebuild urban areas and infrastructure if necessary than to simply say "oh well, we tried but failed, now lets lay back and accept our fate."
Forgive me, but I miss the part where I say I don't enjoy my wealth. It's fairly clear that I was talking in terms of the relationship between wealth and the environment.
Yes, actually. I would happily part with my money to help government initiatives that combat climate change. That's an emphatic yes. While I enjoy having money, I'm not so fixated on it as you seem to be.
What are you on? It's better to prevent than to cure. Yes we should look into both, but the immediate concern is stopping global warming, not figuring out what to do when it does strike really badly. That's the disturbing morbidity of your argument, just resigning yourselves to climate change.
Utter nonsense, unless we have a totalitarian government. If people aren't willing to give their money voluntarily why would they vote for governments that will give it away on their behalf.
Because...
they do.
It doesn't matter what they say, it matters what they do.
The US may claim to be getting on board, but the US is notoriously corrupt and self interested (look at their sickening military record). It's naive to think they will actually sacrifice their own economic interests in any significant way.
You against the world, isn't it. You and your libertarian friends, fighting the universally corrupt governmental democratic system.
While I agree we shouldn't have blind faith in government, sometimes people have to unify behind a common cause, with the government leading that initiative. No one else is going to do it. It's all we have, and it's not gonna change any time soon.
Just out of curiosity, how could you possibly believe that a pure libertarian state would be less corrupt? Without any reason not to, people would jump at the chance to benefit from corruption and self-interest. If you believe people would just think "Oh, no one's watching now, I'll be a good boy as a sign of my allegiance to the universal morals of humanity" then
that is naive.