by emersonbiggins » Tue 30 Aug 2005, 14:20:49
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jenab', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('emersonbiggins', 'I')t's ironic that we're discussing harvesting resources from halfway across the solar system rather than learning to use the resources we already have more efficiently and responsibly.
Extreme conservation should have been practiced from the beginning of the Industrial Age, at least from 1900 on, and better if it had begun in 1750.
Your espousal of conservation
now is like someone's wasting most of his paycheck and then being
real careful about how he spends his last few dollars.
It's often said that anybody has clear vision in hindsight. I'm not so sure that's true. Some people may be blind, or nearly blind, even in hindsight - that's what your comment makes me believe.
In hindsight, if you have the faculty, it's obvious that abandoning the old aristocratic system of government in favor of mass democracy was a mistake. Maybe it made the masses happier, but, on the other hand, maybe it just gave them reasons to squabble amongst each other as everybody tried to live large and make somebody else pay for it. The aristocratic system had people doing that too, but there were fewer of them.
Jerry Abbott
I agree. Conveniences such as air travel on-demand and thousands of miles of free roads to travel on certainly have allowed us to piss away our inheritance of resources at an alarming rate. And I realize that we are all complicit in it, and the actions of our forefathers have come to bear upon us as our actions will bear upon our own children. I think it will be necessary for us to experience PO in order to rearrange our society from one of consumption to one of sustainability. Hypothetical trips to Titan for oil are only going to quell the masses into believing things aren't as they are, and that conquering space would somehow allow our wasteful lifestyle to continue unabated, and without consequences. This is a dangerous notion for the public to have.