by Ibon » Sun 08 Jul 2007, 19:57:55
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', 'P')erhaps, but I think you are misunderstanding human nature. There is no, absolutely no, guarantee that humans will interpret even catastrophic events correctly unless they have already gotten an big earful of how to interpret it ahead of time. In fact, generally the last interpretation of events that people are likely to come up with is the one that has any relation to the truth.
Isolated events wont cut it. A series of events tied in together with the consequences of depletion could. Look at global warming. Some of the most active hurricane seasons, Katrina, drought in parts of the world, reports of glaciers melting, coastal flooding combined with Al Gores documentary plus the growing frustration over the failed Kyoto protocols did indeed succeed in taking the issue from a polarized one to mainstream recognition.
Society can get the right interpretation with enough momentum. Going from interpretation to actual change however will require ratching up the consequences up to a degree of severity above and beyond what we saw with Katrina and it has to come in series.
Is that a little clearer? I have no illusions that breaking the status quo can be done with idealogy alone. THe consequences have to be up in your face and immediate before we break through the denial.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
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