What would you have done had you been Hood or another general in the West?
If I was Hood I would have shadowed Sherman deep into Georgia and attempted to counter attack him near Savannah while his supply lines were at his longest.
My point isn’t limited to any particular technology or nation. I am just saying that investing in (not subsidizing) superior alternatives will be more effective than taxing undesirable behaviors (especially if those behaviors lack practical alternatives).
By superior I mean both long term environmental viability and long term economic viability.
By superior I mean both long term environmental viability and long term economic viability.
Right now, the options fitting both of these categories are few.
No Lhoffman, superior means, “Doesn’t dump loads of carbon into the atmosphere that contributes to global warming.” Destroying the biosphere is not cost effective.
Oh, I beg to differ, destroying the biosphere is very cost effective. All I need to do is unload all of my moms hairspray and burn my garbage; the first costs little and the second costs nothing. Ha-ha but I get your point… the environment is better to preserve in the first place than to wreck and repair. Agreed. Unfortunately, most people are not going to want to radically change their lifestyle and quality of life to combat an invisible and mostly imperceptible (to them) threat. I am not agreeing with them, I am just stating that. I for one do not want to ride my bike 14 miles to and from work every day. Or take a bus. Or a train which does not exist and would be too expensive to build. I think my definition of “superior” is just that compared to yours. Yours is defined by one element, when it is utterly impractical for it to be defined that way. Human civilization cannot be based solely on doing no harm to the earth; to believe so is erroneous and foolish. If you want to throw in the clause “and minimizes adverse effects on the environment” to my definition then good, it was my assumption that was understood as intrinsic to the discussion. The world market today (generally capitalism) cannot run on the premise you take. Even multiple national government controlled command economies could not elicit the change you seek. The base world economic system would have to be altered to the point where some sort of carbon footprint becomes currency… call it what you want, but I call it both impractical and stupid. If you really believe that radical change is the only way to survive, then more power to you and good luck. I will disagree with you the whole way.
I am doing my part by not procreating. :-D The cumulative environmental impact of my (potentially infinite) descendants would dwarf any damage I can do personally.
Also, you still haven’t addressed the Carbon tax….
I thought I had? But I’ll clarify.
You’re right Canuck, we have a carbon tax in British Columbia. Other than increase the cost of living for folks in British Columbia, what has this actually done for the enviroment?
Jack-all. You and I both know it’s a joke, I just dump that extra 5 cents a litre right into the tank of my SUV anyways, without giving a damn. And the government revenue isn’t even used directly on enviromental programs/enforcement.
Canuck, you cannot deny that the carbon tax as implemented is just an excuse for another tax hidden by the guise of making us feel guilty.
Please see this article Published Last year in the Economist (a decidedly right-wing but extremely well-respected news magazine)
http://www.economist.com/node/18989175?zid=311&ah=308cac674cccf554ce65cf926868bbc2
And pay special attention to the following quotes:
“…the law introducing the levy required its proceeds to be recycled back to individuals and companies as cuts in income taxes. […] It seems to be working as planned. Since 2008 fuel consumption per head in the province has dropped by 4.5%, more than elsewhere in Canada. British Columbians use less fuel than any other Canadians. And British Columbians pay lower income taxes too.”
The new tax has not weakened the province’s economy, which has been boosted by high world prices for its commodity exports. Unemployment is slightly below the national average, and growth slightly higher. Because the tax started low and its rises were set out in advance, businesses had plenty of time to make plans to cut their carbon use."
" British Columbia has shown the rest of Canada, a country with high carbon emissions per head, that a carbon tax can achieve multiple benefits at minimal cost."
So it can be empirically shown to have worked.
Yes, we will need much higher taxes in order to get radical change, but you have to start somewhere. And this shows us that a Carbon tax is a good place to start.
You claim it has had no effect on you (you just dump the same fuel into your tank) but consider that business and income taxes are LOWER as a result. Which incentivises job creation and WORK rather than pollution and climate change (seems like a no-brainer to me).
And you also disregard all of the upstream effects. Sure YOU might no actively seek to change your consumption patterns based on the new prices, but you damn-well bet any smart business man will. When you run a budget for a project, especially big projects, every dollar counts and a 5% increase in fuel cost or a 20% increase in emissions cost WILL and DOES change behaviour. Especially when you may be budgeting for $200 000 worth of fuel over 5 years (for example). So though you dont see the direct effects, the products and services you buy have been effected by the tax and when we aggregate over the whole economy we see that there has been a significant change.
What you said about not noticing sums up the tax perfectly. And that’s really the beauty of it: it is efficient. The tax naturally compels people to find the cheapest and easiest ways to reduce their emissions which is why its so much better than subsidising solar power, or Hydrogen (Who ever thought THAT was a good idea) or Biofuels, none of which are efficient answers to how we reduce our greenhouse gasses.
The fact that you don’t notice any change Garg is evidence of how well it works: We manage to reduce our emissions, lower income taxes and no one even notices that they are emitting less CO2.
WIN, WIN and WIN!
In about 100,000 years the sun will be a % hotter than it is now, far outweighing any effect from man. Probably it will be too hot to sustain life anyway. Note also the moon will be farther away and eventually the gravitational tug on the Earth from the Moon will shift to the sun, which will be another disaster. On top of that the earth will go into another ice age, and magnetic north will change to the south. All these matters are of greater importance than this silly business of cow farts or CO2 gas.
Instead of dealing with marginal human effects, it would be better to develop space travel to other stars and or terraforming Mars.
In effect we are fighting the battle with the wrong set of tools. A last resort would be to move the earth further out of its orbit.
Wow. Thanks for chiming in there with a massively over-simplified un-nuanced view of things that completely dismisses the topic and adds nothing to our discussion.
Oh and is really unrealistic.
The scale of the problem is so immense and the sources of CO2 dispersed across so many different political entities that these relatively minor efforts seem unlikely to impact the future in a palpable way (especially when the efforts are localized but the benefits are globalized).
Understanding the problem has not produced popular will to sacrifice for the good of the future. Therefore, in my opinion, humanity needs to gamble on big fixes via research or stoically accept that average quality of human life will decline rather than improve for at least some of its collective future.
@Vance:
North Korea would be better than nothing I guess, but I was hoping more for a full on China-Japan holocaust over those stupid islands they are so worked up about, or maybe an Iran-Israel battle of armageddon kind of scenario with Jesus returning and all that sh!t. Â Come on somebody’ gotta go first! Â Press the button and let’s get the show on the road!!
This is beautiful.
Wow. Thanks for chiming in there with a massively over-simplified un-nuanced view of things that completely dismisses the topic and adds nothing to our discussion.
Right because Humans didn’t cause this change to the extent of which it is portrayed. Obviously, you believe Humans caused all damage and my opinion goes against yours?
Perhaps you care to prove that what i posted is not true? Or you accept the truth but continue to ignore it and just concentrate on making rules against people/nations as your sole solution?
Talk about simplistic.
Obviously, you believe Humans caused all damage and my opinion goes against yours?
Classic troll behaviour by Imperious Leader…
IL, He never stated that. Why must you resort to troll behaviour and make people defend against statements that they did not make.
Perhaps you ought to prove your assertion that ANYBODY has made a claim that climate change is entirely human caused.
I am frankly getting sick and tired of your troll like behaviour.
Thanks Malachi,
Yes, Obviously I believe humans caused “all damage.” (A sentence that doesn’t actually even make sense. What is “damage”? What are you even talking about?)
Please quote whatever it is that made it so obvious that I believe “humans caused all damage.”
And then perhaps you can explain why all your base are belong to us.
Classic troll behaviour by Imperious Leader…
IL, He never stated that. Why must you resort to troll behaviour and make people defend against statements that they did not make.
Perhaps you ought to prove your assertion that ANYBODY has made a claim that climate change is entirely human caused.
I am frankly getting sick and tired of your troll like behaviour.
Please learn how to spell behavior before telling anybody gibberish. Now go back under that bridge. There is nothing even remotely wrong with saying what i posted. It is my opinion and you can have your own. let the person whom my comments are addressed to actually have his rebuttal, rather than you trying to settle some old score with a real troll post.
I said the solutions to climate change should be addressing not what people have done, but the greater majority of the problems cause and that future problems that will severely effect us in the near future. These issues have nothing to do with what humans have caused, and yet the vast majority of the solution is always “fix the Earth by limiting the Humans”.
I will address Canucks comments directly in separate post.
Yes, Obviously I believe humans caused “all damage.” (A sentence that doesn’t actually even make sense. What is “damage”? What are you even talking about?)
Please quote whatever it is that made it so obvious that I believe “humans caused all damage.”
And then perhaps you can explain why all your base are belong to us.
Read the last few posts you made, the solution supported by various tax regimes… e.g “carbon tax” That solution is entirely based on humans paying more. It has no effect on the problem because the problem is much larger and much more having to do with the Sun and various cycles that the Earth goes through like normal cooling and warming periods.
I didn’t see any solution that identifies that anything more than “tax the humans”
I paid $135,000 in taxes last year and we got enough of these pseudo science ideas causing more problems. Half the time the increases just go into a general fund and the money spent on something entirely else.
And that’s my opinion. Don’t ask me to prove nothing. I made very obvious points so just accept/respect my opinion. My first post was not addressed to anyone, just a general truth added from a different perspective.
Calm down people.
Troll boy. Before you shoot your mouth off about spelling perhaps you ought to broaden your horizons to the fact not every nation spells things the same way as your nation. chuckles That is a classic troll comment to point out spelling errors rather than the content of the post. However, this time you merely reaffirmed everyone’s thoughts about you……Can you guess what people think of you Grendel?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_and_British_English_spelling_differences#-our.2C_-or
Derivatives and inflected forms
In derivatives and inflected forms of the -our/or words, British usage depends on the nature of the suffix used. The u is kept before English suffixes that are freely attachable to English words (for example in neighbourhood, humourless and savoury) and suffixes of Greek or Latin origin that have been naturalised (for example in favourite, honourable and behaviourism). However, before Latin suffixes that are not freely attachable to English words, the u:
How the hell you ever got a position of responsibility on this website is beyond me. I wonder how much you cost David in donations? Maybe you ought to try and be a decent sort of chap and help out David rather than being counterproductive for this website.
And pay special attention to the following quotes:
“…the law introducing the levy required its proceeds to be recycled back to individuals and companies as cuts in income taxes. […] It seems to be working as planned. Since 2008 fuel consumption per head in the province has dropped by 4.5%, more than elsewhere in Canada. British Columbians use less fuel than any other Canadians. And British Columbians pay lower income taxes too.”
The new tax has not weakened the province’s economy, which has been boosted by high world prices for its commodity exports. Unemployment is slightly below the national average, and growth slightly higher. Because the tax started low and its rises were set out in advance, businesses had plenty of time to make plans to cut their carbon use."
" British Columbia has shown the rest of Canada, a country with high carbon emissions per head, that a carbon tax can achieve multiple benefits at minimal cost."
Well first off, the tax is not just on fuel gas but on any carbon producing energy source, including electric plants:
One possible reason that the carbon tax has had a negligible effect on economic growth, however, is that British Columbia gets the majority of its electricity from low-carbon hydropower, so electricity prices have been less affected by the tax than, say, they would be in a natural-gas-heavy province like Alberta or a coal-reliant state like Indiana.*
British Columbia has also used the carbon tax proceeds to lower both its local corporate income tax and the tax rates on the bottom two brackets, in order to alleviate the fact that the carbon tax hits the poor a bit harder. �As a result of the carbon tax shift,� the authors write, �BC now has one of the lowest general corporate income tax rates in Canada (tied with Alberta and New Brunswick), and also the lowest personal income tax rate in Canada, for those earning up to $119,000.�
And according to this statement, and if I am not mistaken, the majority of the income tax relief is for lower earners and smaller companies. Yes, you can argue that a carbon tax affects them more and that they need the relief more, but it isn’t fair to the large companies. This is an example of redistribution of earned income via a tax. I am not saying that is the primary goal of the tax, because I don’t believe that it is, but it certainly isn’t “fair”.
But I don’t live in BC, or Canada, so you might have to challenge me if I am making an uninformed statement.
How the hell you ever got a position of responsibility on this website is beyond me. I wonder how much you cost David in donations? Maybe you ought to try and be a decent sort of chap and help out David rather than being counterproductive for this website.
Maybe you should stop hijacking the thread to troll people you don’t like? Maybe you should not try to find ways to pick fights out of nothing with posts of mine not directed to you ( or anybody). Perhaps just sticking to the thread might be a better solution for you?
Be less of a troll and more of somebody who actually responds to posts without calling people trolls out of the blue for bogus reasons ( which is what trolls do).
Wow canuck. Â I’m sure that 4.5% reduction in fuel consumption had nothing to do with the global recession…
And as I stated before, what has this actually done for the enviroment?
Sure we can call 4.5% reduction of fuel consumption a start. Â But I can call my choice to recycle a single sheet of scrap paper at work this morning a start too.
And FRIMMEL
Have you actually read what that website you keep posting actually says when you get to the bottom of it? Â It says that the lack of Ozone over antarctica is what makes it cold and makes the ice grow… Â But that the same lack of ozone is whats making the artic sea ice melt? Â And that all the CO2 we pump into the atmosphere destroys the ozone and is heating everything up.
Whether it’s b.s. out of the left side of their mouth, or the right, something is a bold face lie either way.
Pre-Emptive Strike - No offense but your source is full of Sh*t. Time to find a new one. Or at the very least let me know when they’ve made up their mind which psuedo-science they want me to believe lol.
As for you Canuck
Despite you efforts to find a brush to paint me down with, here’s the sad reality.
I haven’t made up my mind on climate change! That’s why I started this thread, I wanted to see ALL of the information, from ALL of the sides, and test that knowledge to see what holds water and makes sense.
Sure I come into this from a disposition based on my gut, but the fact remains I’m undecided. Â Just because you want to witchhunt and label me as a skeptic/naysayer, head in san denier, doesn’t make it true.
I just want to know the truth, have my questions responded to respectfully, and be aloud to decide for myself, is that really such a bad thing?
I just want to know the truth, have my questions responded to respectfully, and be aloud to decide for myself, is that really such a bad thing?
That is the crux of the entire matter: the Truth. I look for that everywhere because I do believe that in most circumstances, there is a right answer. Regardless if this issue is as bad as some people think it is or not, the solutions that some people offer do not fit into my philosophical/ethical… religious, dare I say it, worldview. I know what truth is in that respect, and it overrides all solutions, and most that people here have offered. Like it or hate it, that is how I am. The ends do not justify the means, especially regarding this topic.
(Garg - You are looking for allowed, not “aloud”. Thought you would appreciate a friendly correction as opposed to unfriendly ridicule from your opposition.)