Moderator: Dictators in Training
The Bush-era rule reduces the mandatory, independent reviews government scientists have performed for 35 years.
It also prohibits federal agencies from assessing a project's contribution to global warming when they evaluate its effect on species.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
It also prohibits federal agencies from assessing a project's contribution to global warming when they evaluate its effect on species.
Drem wrote:Why do you just assume people will abuse everything? It's your type of negative attitude that holds people back from making real progress toward real issues. Like, uh, the fucking planet dying because Americans and Chinese wanna make money with huge, world-ruining industry
And so you don't care about actual scientific appraisal (pretty much as close to fact as you could even get) because you'd rather let random idiot in Arizona do xyz just so he can make money.
You have to be joking
Griever wrote:Drem wrote:Why do you just assume people will abuse everything? It's your type of negative attitude that holds people back from making real progress toward real issues. Like, uh, the fucking planet dying because Americans and Chinese wanna make money with huge, world-ruining industry
And so you don't care about actual scientific appraisal (pretty much as close to fact as you could even get) because you'd rather let random idiot in Arizona do xyz just so he can make money.
You have to be joking
Shouldn't laws and policies be created with the fact in mind that people will abuse them? If you don't to that, then no law or policy will be able to regulate anything.
Like, uh, the fucking planet dying
since humans started running the show
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Lueyen wrote:The planet is not a living organism, therefore it can not die.
brinstar wrote:Lueyen wrote:The planet is not a living organism, therefore it can not die.
wrong
haven't you ever played final fantasy games
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Lueyen wrote:Drem - Are you really that naive, that you believe just because a law is well intentioned that it can be broadly written with a huge potential for abuse and some people won't take advantage of it? By the way, laws regulating what the United States Federal government can use in it's approval or not of a project do not regulate China who by the way isn't even in the same ball park when it comes to environmental consciousness, I'm not sure where that factored in, but I suspect it's just the hysterical ranting of someone who's had their faith challenged much like the following:Like, uh, the fucking planet dying
The planet is not a living organism, therefore it can not die.since humans started running the show
We aren't running anything. We are a part of a very complex system, but we don't by any stretch of the imagination control it. If tomorrow monitoring in California indicated a major earthquake was about to occur, what would we do to prevent it? Why haven't we stopped hurricanes from hitting the south eastern US year after year? Running the show my ass. This complex system is also not as fragile as the global warming charlatans would have you believe. The very first assumption you have to make to believe that this complex system is in any danger of being disrupted by us is that it operates around a condition that is most conducive to survival of current life on the planet. I mean really if the planet as a whole is supposed to maintain a relatively steady current temperature average for all time, and we are somehow throwing that off balance, what caused these types of temperature variations before we arrived on the scene?
And yet you would still have our federal government making policy decisions based on the fantasy that we somehow have the ability to calculate a projects impact on the world climate... Even meteorologists can not predict with any accuracy what a regional temperature will be a year from now, often times they aren't even accurate at a week. Honestly do you really believe we have managed to accurately determine the global affect if any, that any project will have when we don't even understand the complexity of our weather system on a regional level (even from a global stand point) to the point we can determine what the temperature will be in every city in the US on this day next month with precision accuracy?
Now you have Arlos asserting that all of this in the context of polar bears is perfectly sensible. I used polar bears specifically, because they are yet another tool in the arsenal of the global warming hype mongers. The reality of the situation is that Polar bears are not listed as endangered. They are listed as threatened.. I know Bush's fault :P. Really the problem is that no global census data on polar bear populations exists, only regional. In some regions polar bear populations have increased in others they have decreased. In short we don't know, but concerns about the loss of their habitat earned them a listing of threatened.
So you want to base policy and project affirmation on a subjective guess about how it might affect a population of animals that we think maybe might be in trouble somewhere else on the globe?
Arlos wrote:If humans CAN effect the world climate, and we act, then wow, we just saved our asses from famine, coastal flooding from rising sea levels, etc. etc. etc.
On the other hand, if humans CAN effect the climate, and we don't act, we're fucked.
-Arlos
Harrison wrote:I'm half with Lueyen on this one.
I don't give two shits about birds flying towards cities at night because they think it's the rising sun and they die.
Evolution at work as far as I'm concerned. The more intelligent of the species, if there are any, will survive and spread their genetic material onto the next generation, etc.
What are we supposed to do? Shut our lights off at night so stupid animals can migrate?
Just because we are self-aware that doesn't remove us from the "natural order" of things.
This doesn't mean I support massive industrial pollution. I just don't give two shits about tertiary effects on animals from legitimate societal growth. Limits are necessary but if whiny hippies had their way we'd be fucking swamped with so much red tape we'd just end up falling behind as a result.
Harrison wrote:Just because we are self-aware that doesn't remove us from the "natural order" of things.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Tossica wrote:Harrison wrote:Just because we are self-aware that doesn't remove us from the "natural order" of things.
That's exactly what it does, dumbass.
Harrison wrote:Tossica wrote:Harrison wrote:Just because we are self-aware that doesn't remove us from the "natural order" of things.
That's exactly what it does, dumbass.
You're a moron.
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