Khross wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
Species do not achieve homeostasis by themselves. Ecosystems balance themselves out with time but only through adaptation. This is a slow process. The problem is that cultural and technological evolution and adaptation occurs on a time scale which biological evolution and adaptation cannot compete with.
You are aware that international trade and all of the things that bring you the creature comforts you demand are far more damaging than green house gasses? Human beings are responsible for nearly 100% of non-native pest invasions. Human beings are responsible for nearly 100% of invasive vegetation situations. Human beings are responsible for almost all of the diversity problems in our river systems. There are a million and one things we've done to change this planet, but you guys are hung up on the one thing we can't prove, can't fix, and can't reverse.
But, you know ... the HIGCC Debate and any policy action resulting from it is literally pissing in the wind. You're too busy chasing another one of Paul Ehrlich's ghost impacts (we past the world ending 7 billion people mark btw) to fix the things we might actually understand and have a chance of correcting.
....and once again you've somehow assumed I'm espousing a particular policy on HIGCC.
We're talking about green legislation, which you have categorically rejected, which can include any of ten-thousand different areas of anti-pollution measures, up to and including greenhouse gas emissions, but also sulfur emissions, laws about moving invasive species, heat emissions, radiation emissions and other categories too numerous to name here.
As for Can't Fix/Can't Reverse -there are actually some technologies that could reduce greenhouse type effects (see previous post, I'll have to dig out the articles on the technologies.)
but you're still demanding a standard of proof on human climate impact that is not required in ANY situation including a court of law. You're effectively watching someone pull the trigger, watching the bullet impact someone's head and then screaming that "We don't know the victim didn't die of an aneurism a split second earlier!!!"
But lets forget the HIGCC argument for the moment, there are a dozen other reasons to lay down laws requiring greater fuel efficiency, reduced emissions, etc including public health, national security, etc.
But Khross's pocketbook I'm sure trumps all other concerns.