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So I should consider the systematic dismantling and relocation of western heavy-industry to a totally unregulated asia a gradual transition?StiffMittens wrote:It means that LYR is too polite to point out your analogy of a organ transplant being performed before a donor organ is acquired is a stupid and worthless analogy. Nobody is saying shut everything down until we think of a better way to power civilization. Obviously you'd need the current energy sources and mechanisms to develop new ones. And that is actually happening right now to some degree - but there certainly could be more done. The idea is a gradual transition. Understand now?
Oh-ho... you are not stupid, you are just xenophobic...HapSmo19 wrote:So I should consider the systematic dismantling and relocation of western heavy-industry to a totally unregulated asia a gradual transition?StiffMittens wrote:It means that LYR is too polite to point out your analogy of a organ transplant being performed before a donor organ is acquired is a stupid and worthless analogy. Nobody is saying shut everything down until we think of a better way to power civilization. Obviously you'd need the current energy sources and mechanisms to develop new ones. And that is actually happening right now to some degree - but there certainly could be more done. The idea is a gradual transition. Understand now?
Can you hear me now?
Try to leave the bullshit phobia stuff alone for a minute and look at what is actually happening.LYR wrote:Oh-ho... you are not stupid, you are just xenophobic...
All I hear is you rejecting a good idea on the basis that there are some (admittedly valid) concerns to that idea that need to be dealt with. In effect your stance is: Let's destroy the biosphere before the Chinese have a chance to do it.HapSmo19 wrote:So I should consider the systematic dismantling and relocation of western heavy-industry to a totally unregulated asia a gradual transition?StiffMittens wrote:It means that LYR is too polite to point out your analogy of a organ transplant being performed before a donor organ is acquired is a stupid and worthless analogy. Nobody is saying shut everything down until we think of a better way to power civilization. Obviously you'd need the current energy sources and mechanisms to develop new ones. And that is actually happening right now to some degree - but there certainly could be more done. The idea is a gradual transition. Understand now?
Can you hear me now?
Edit: f*ck you Al Gore

Xenophobic and ultra-nationalist...HapSmo19 wrote:Try to leave the bullshit phobia stuff alone for a minute and look at what is actually happening.LYR wrote:Oh-ho... you are not stupid, you are just xenophobic...
K?
It's a valid concern. There's a lot of people over there who are developing the same sort of technological appetites that we have over here. That's a big carbon footprint. But this would be true whether or not we are transitioning away from carbon emissions. So if we don't transition away from carbon emissions and China continues in the direction they're headed, then we'll have both our carbon footprint and their additional carbon footprint to deal with.LYR wrote:Are you really so scared that the Chinese will actually have an economy after centuries of European imperialism?

That is completely true, I am not denying it.StiffMittens wrote:It's a valid concern. There's a lot of people over there who are developing the same sort of technological appetites that we have over here. That's a big carbon footprint. But this would be true whether or not we are transitioning away from carbon emissions. So if we don't transition away from carbon emissions and China continues in the direction they're headed, then we'll have both our carbon footprint and their additional carbon footprint to deal with.LYR wrote:Are you really so scared that the Chinese will actually have an economy after centuries of European imperialism?
This too is a valid concern, but I agree that Hap seems to adopt a pretty xenophobic posture on the matter. But still, US companies are shipping our industries overseas and we could use a little industry right now.LYR wrote:That is completely true, I am not denying it.StiffMittens wrote:It's a valid concern. There's a lot of people over there who are developing the same sort of technological appetites that we have over here. That's a big carbon footprint. But this would be true whether or not we are transitioning away from carbon emissions. So if we don't transition away from carbon emissions and China continues in the direction they're headed, then we'll have both our carbon footprint and their additional carbon footprint to deal with.LYR wrote:Are you really so scared that the Chinese will actually have an economy after centuries of European imperialism?
However, HapSmo 19 seems more concerned with the fact we are "losing" our industry and the Asian countries are "taking" it away.

So why do we not build new industries, green industries, friendly-environment industries?StiffMittens wrote:This too is a valid concern, but I agree that Hap seems to adopt a pretty xenophobic posture on the matter. But still, US companies are shipping our industries overseas and we could use a little industry right now.
Well, exactly. I think that's an argument that many proponents of green energy are making, and I agree with it. Whole new industries could arise, but you can't make that happen if your economy totally collapses because all the old industries die off before you can implement the new ones.LYR wrote:So why do we not build new industries, green industries, friendly-environment industries?StiffMittens wrote:This too is a valid concern, but I agree that Hap seems to adopt a pretty xenophobic posture on the matter. But still, US companies are shipping our industries overseas and we could use a little industry right now.

Talk about bad timing...StiffMittens wrote:Well, exactly. I think that's an argument that many proponents of green energy are making, and I agree with it. Whole new industries could arise, but you can't make that happen if your economy totally collapses because all the old industries die off before you can implement the new ones.LYR wrote:So why do we not build new industries, green industries, friendly-environment industries?StiffMittens wrote:This too is a valid concern, but I agree that Hap seems to adopt a pretty xenophobic posture on the matter. But still, US companies are shipping our industries overseas and we could use a little industry right now.
OK. Let's do that. Name some 'green' industries and products we can manufacture that will sustain us. I mean, people are just beating down the doors of current 'environmentally friendy' product manufacturers to get their goods right? They must account for at least a quarter of a percent of the GDP right?LYR wrote:So why do we not build new industries, green industries, friendly-environment industries?
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
Why? Do you have said technology in your basement and you're just trying to find someone who prefers it?MeDeFe wrote:Tell me HapSmo, if there are two ways of making a product, the old, established way, and a new way that consumes, say, 40% less energy. Which would you prefer?
Here's one: Stop paying tuition to state-sponsored universities with an agenda.bedub1 wrote:My question for everybody that believes in global warming, is what do we do about it? Specifics please....not just some stupid shit like "go green" which means nothing. I want some hard concrete ideas.
I think that was hypothetical meant to test whether you reject the idea of green technology categorically, or just on the basis of certain practical concerns.HapSmo19 wrote:Why? Do you have said technology in your basement and you're just trying to find someone who prefers it?MeDeFe wrote:Tell me HapSmo, if there are two ways of making a product, the old, established way, and a new way that consumes, say, 40% less energy. Which would you prefer?
If it's 300% more expensive, no.
Be more specific.
f*ck you Al Gore

Why would I categorically reject it?StiffMittens wrote:I think that was hypothetical meant to test whether you reject the idea of green technology categorically, or just on the basis of certain practical concerns.
I can't see why anyone would.HapSmo19 wrote:Why would I categorically reject it?StiffMittens wrote:I think that was hypothetical meant to test whether you reject the idea of green technology categorically, or just on the basis of certain practical concerns.

HapSmo19 wrote:OK. Let's do that. Name some 'green' industries and products we can manufacture that will sustain us. I mean, people are just beating down the doors of current 'environmentally friendy' product manufacturers to get their goods right? They must account for at least a quarter of a percent of the GDP right?![]()
I know, I know. The feds can just mandate that you buy them or just take the money out of your check to keep those industries alive and well while you're not buying that shit.
Follow the fucking money if you wanna know the truth about 'global warming'. American industry is taxed and regulated out of existence, largely due to 'environmental concerns', and at the same time the door is open to have those very same products manufactured unregulated in some far off land with no oversight. Seems to me that if we were "litterally going to be cooked" in thirty years, the drafters of these trade agreements might put a couple things in there about environmental impact regulations. But for some reason they're not there or, if they are, they don't give a shit. What is in there(not in black and white) is a great way for all of these corrupt, treasonous cocksuckers in the US government to get a nice, fat skim off the top by means of cheap labor and without regulation or oversight. And whudaya know, it turns out to be a sweet deal for the chinese government as well. I mean, shit, we're paying them to destroy us.
If you think any of those hypocrits are looking out for you, you're living in a fucking dreamland.
http://southeastfarmpress.com/news_arch ... nomy-0420/
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=22663
f*ck you Al Gore.
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/co2.htmIn the 19th century, scientists realized that gases in the atmosphere cause a "greenhouse effect" which affects the planet's temperature. These scientists were interested chiefly in the possibility that a lower level of carbon dioxide gas might explain the ice ages of the distant past. At the turn of the century, Svante Arrhenius calculated that emissions from human industry might someday bring a global warming. Other scientists dismissed his idea as faulty. In 1938, G.S. Callendar argued that the level of carbon dioxide was climbing and raising global temperature, but most scientists found his arguments implausible. It was almost by chance that a few researchers in the 1950s discovered that global warming truly was possible. In the early 1960s, C.D. Keeling measured the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere: it was rising fast. Researchers began to take an interest, struggling to understand how the level of carbon dioxide had changed in the past, and how the level was influenced by chemical and biological forces. They found that the gas plays a crucial role in climate change, so that the rising level could gravely affect our future. (This essay covers only developments relating directly to carbon dioxide, with a separate essay for Other Greenhouse Gases. For related theoretical issues, see the essay on Simple Models of Climate.)