Dan Emanuel
Active member
I'm not being flippant, I'm being reasonable. I'm not being optimistic or pessimistic but realistic. In geologic history, this planet has been through the ringer a number of time's, if you believe the geological evidence, which I assume you do. So if we think about all that geologic history, all together, a chart, we'd notice on that chart, that would extend back in time billion's of year's, that the magnitude of man-made climate change is on the scale of a speck of dust in a giant empty house. Could something devastating --long-term now, this'd be beyond all our lifetime's --ultimately occur due to man-made climate change, that we could do something about right now, if we work really hard in a concerted effort? Anythings possible, but nobody has a crystal ball, although we do have geological evidence for what has already happened at various time's in our planets past, so we know the scale of the possibility's, and the magnitude of what we're concerned about with man-made climate change is laughable when considered within it's geological context. I.M.O. If I'm wrong, I want to know that, but I'm hearing the word "gamble" thrown around, so we know that we don't know for sure that something terrible is going to happen. Weather pattern's change over the year's. We've adapted before, we'll adapt now. Heck, we caused the dust bowl's --that may have been 1 of the very 1st time's we realized that we can affect our environment's, writ large. We'll figure out how to make the best of thing's. Florida will be submerged mostly, so we'll have a new coast down their. Big deal. It happen's, its happened, and it will keep happening. I'm against ice age's. And I think all the plant's are with me on that 1.I wouldn't say it's about maintaining 'optimal' climate, or 'optimal' sea level. The point, it seems to me, is about the negative effects that scientists are confident will happen if we continue on this trajectory. It's about the real things that we see happening now and can get worse, not about some 'optimal' climate that we want to maintain (whatever 'optimal' climate would mean on a global scale). Why should we simply let things happen and force ourselves to adapt if we can try to do something about it?
Having said that, I don't mean to say that we should completely ignore the potential economic effects of any changes we try to make. We have to be aware of both sides. However, I find it interesting that your concern for the 'world of value-creators' along with your lack of confidence in what the scientists are saying leads you to choose to do nothing when I could flip that around on you. How do you know that the changes we'd try to enact would be a burden that 'value-creators' can't handle? If you're so cavalier in saying that people in a hot climate can simply move, why aren't you just as cavalier in saying businesses could adapt to the new regulations? Do you have some proof that the economy could crash?
Not believing in the coming destruction of climate change is one thing, but I'm shocked at how flippant you are about the possible consequences of our current path.
DJ
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