by gego » Thu 13 Jul 2006, 03:07:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Elan_Rasa', 'O')bservation: We tend to waste oil and don't use it responsibly (especially the US).
This point can be argued, but when you consider that about 3% of the world's pop is using 25% of the world's oil, I consider most of it's use as wasteful. Consider that most of the oil goes towards transportation purposes and maintaining an infrastructure (suburbia) that is a waste of most of our resources.
I am bothered by this post.
First of all, how do you conclude that resources are "ours"? For the oil in the USA, typically the landowner owns what is under his ground, and then oil companies contract with the landowner to explore, drill, and extract the oil in return for specified payments. Nobody else has an ownership right unless they buy the oil or the products which are made with the oil. The gasoline in my gas tank is mine, not "ours". If there happens to be oil under my land, it is mine.
What superior judgement do others have to evaluate what I do with what I own? I consider that my wife waste money buying some of the junk she buys, but she considers what she buys valuable and useful to her. Maybe you would agree with her or maybe with me, but you have no right to interfer with her decisions, nor do I so long as she and I agree on how much of our money she will spend and how much I will spend.
It may not be wasteful in the opinion of an SUV owner to drive at 15 mpg; that may be your opinion, but we all have our opinions. To someone else, the most recent purchase of clothing by you may be considered wasteful. To you it is not a waste because you got back, in your judgement value equal to what you gave up.
I think that "waste" is a highly subjective and highly critical concept. Perhaps "waste" is just the difference between what you value and what the "waster" values.
There is no collective good or bad, just what is good or bad for specific individuals, and each of us has the greatest interest in representing his own best interest. Perhaps another way to view the fact that 3% of the world population is using 25% of the oil is to applaud the great success of those 3% of the population.