Sharing Lungs - Deftones Online Community

End of the World Party

Started by lostpilot, Aug 08, 2010, 12:40 PM

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marco j

This town don't feel right...

Variable

Well you have to be able to read above a 2nd grade level to appreciate the conversation.

But long story short.  I think Cory and I agree that if the economy wasn't so fucked up (yes, that is the fault of the government) that we would have more people able and willing to invest in new forms of energy and.............I'm not going to lie.  I kind of forgot what we are talking about.  What does this have to do with the end of the world? 

marco j

^LOL

Another reason that the thread sucks.
This town don't feel right...

blixa

Quote from: Variable on Sep 10, 2010, 07:11 AM
Well you have to be able to read above a 2nd grade level to appreciate the conversation.

But long story short.  I think Cory and I agree that if the economy wasn't so fucked up (yes, that is the fault of the government) that we would have more people able and willing to invest in new forms of energy and.............I'm not going to lie.  I kind of forgot what we are talking about.  What does this have to do with the end of the world? 

i think some countries that didn't go into recession are still not doing enough, but as nicholas stern has said before about the copenhagen summit - it was cold, chaotic, quarrelsome, and disappointing but not nothing. the disappointing outcome of the climate summit was largely down to "arrogance" on the part of rich countries.

i say this as an australian and my country didn't go into recession and we're not doing enough but it's not nothing. although now that the greens have power in the senate, it will be better and perhaps we can get some environmental action through. mexico's got the best climate change policy because of the finance ministry being involved. they're thinking very carefully in a constructive way about climate change.

alvarezbassist17

#44
Quote from: Variable on Sep 10, 2010, 07:11 AM
Well you have to be able to read above a 2nd grade level to appreciate the conversation.

But long story short.  I think Cory and I agree that if the economy wasn't so fucked up (yes, that is the fault of the government) that we would have more people able and willing to invest in new forms of energy and.............I'm not going to lie.  I kind of forgot what we are talking about.  What does this have to do with the end of the world?  

Haha the tangent started off by me seeing the topic and promising myself "oh goddammit, if someone in here says something about the world ending from global warming or something like that i'm gonna flip a shit."  

But yeah, all that, and privatizing everything that either moves or doesn't move.

Quote from: blixa on Sep 09, 2010, 02:12 PM
what the three of you guys have said sound a lot like things that nicholas stern addresses in most of his public lectures that i have heard.

"The Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change was produced by a team led by Stern at HM Treasury, and was released in October 2006. In the Review, climate change is described as an economic externality. Regulation, carbon taxes and carbon trading are recommended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It is argued that the world economy can lower its greenhouse gas emissions at a significant but manageable cost. The Review concludes that immediate reductions of greenhouse gas emissions are necessary to reduce the worst risks of climate change."

No, no, no, no, no.  Goddammit, no. Both absolutely the wrong ways to cure the problem, and a faulty premise.  I just love how they call it climate change these days.  What a hoot these people are.  Seriously, I don't wear tinfoil hats or anything, but you really can't see that the political class is just using climate change to redistribute wealth and nothing more?

Check it out:

"The real challenge comes from the exponential growth of the global consumerist society driven by ever higher aspirations of the upper and middle layers in rich countries as well as the expanding demand of emerging middle-class in developing countries. Our true ambition should be therefore creating incentives for the profound transformation of attitudes and consumption styles."

http://www.citizenlink.com/2010/09/united-nations%E2%80%98new-plan-%E2%80%98redistribute-wealth%E2%80%99-remove-sovereignty-barriers/
Austria Retreat Papers


I know on its surface it sounds like really nice, compassionate and typical hippie talk, but you've been so duped it's insane.  oh and also, carbon trading is legalized pollution (if you consider CO2 to be a pollutant, anyway).

blixa

Quote from: alvarezbassist17 on Sep 11, 2010, 11:19 PM
Quote from: Variable on Sep 10, 2010, 07:11 AM
Well you have to be able to read above a 2nd grade level to appreciate the conversation.

But long story short.  I think Cory and I agree that if the economy wasn't so fucked up (yes, that is the fault of the government) that we would have more people able and willing to invest in new forms of energy and.............I'm not going to lie.  I kind of forgot what we are talking about.  What does this have to do with the end of the world? 

Haha the tangent started off by me seeing the topic and promising myself "oh goddammit, if someone in here says something about the world ending from global warming or something like that i'm gonna flip a shit." 

But yeah, all that, and privatizing everything that either moves or doesn't move.

Quote from: blixa on Sep 09, 2010, 02:12 PM
what the three of you guys have said sound a lot like things that nicholas stern addresses in most of his public lectures that i have heard.

"The Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change was produced by a team led by Stern at HM Treasury, and was released in October 2006. In the Review, climate change is described as an economic externality. Regulation, carbon taxes and carbon trading are recommended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It is argued that the world economy can lower its greenhouse gas emissions at a significant but manageable cost. The Review concludes that immediate reductions of greenhouse gas emissions are necessary to reduce the worst risks of climate change."

No, no, no, no, no.  Goddammit, no. Both absolutely the wrong ways to cure the problem, and a faulty premise.  I just love how they call it climate change these days.  What a hoot these people are.  Seriously, I don't wear tinfoil hats or anything, but you really can't see that the political class is just using climate change to redistribute wealth and nothing more?

Check it out:

"The real challenge comes from the exponential growth of the global consumerist society driven by ever higher aspirations of the upper and middle layers in rich countries as well as the expanding demand of emerging middle-class in developing countries. Our true ambition should be therefore creating incentives for the profound transformation of attitudes and consumption styles."

http://www.citizenlink.com/2010/09/united-nations%E2%80%98new-plan-%E2%80%98redistribute-wealth%E2%80%99-remove-sovereignty-barriers/
Austria Retreat Papers


I know on its surface it sounds like really nice, compassionate and typical hippie talk, but you've been so duped it's insane.  oh and also, carbon trading is legalized pollution (if you consider CO2 to be a pollutant, anyway).

no offence, but i don't appreciate you saying stuff like this. i have not been duped. i have been respectful towards you but you can't seem to express your opinion without using condescending names. this is the exact reason why there has never been a constructive debate on this subject between global warming deniers and scientists who believe that it is happening. whether you believe the likelihood of global warming or not, you will see that the risks are immense - we can't take away the risks, but we can reduce them drastically by the way we do things. we emit 47 million tonnes per annum. we should be cutting that to 35 then to 20. we have to cut emissions by 7 and a 1/2 over a 40 year period. we need creativity and technology to make this story good. the future is dependent on low carbon.

when you have the majority of scientists agreeing on something then it is likely that it is happening. you will obviously not have any other opinion because you've already adopted the denialist approach. i would rather take the option of doing something about global warming than taking a risk and doing nothing.

blixa

also climate change will redistribute wealth around the world, both within and between nations. if and when the transition to a low carbon economy occurs, countries which have been slow to move will find that their high carbon assets are stranded owing to shifts in the full cost of dirty production processes. it is not impossible, given the magnitude of the gains from 'winning' in critical low carbon technologies, that a competitive dynamic will develop where countries race to develop the leading low carbon technology. given the significance of coal to the business-as-usual growth path of the global economy, at present carbon capture and sequestration would appear to be one of these critical technologies.

reaching a new climate agreement is both urgent and important, and will be exceptionally challenging. a new global deal on climate is nevertheless possible and extremely necessary.

alvarezbassist17

#47
Quote from: blixa on Sep 12, 2010, 03:08 PM
Quote from: alvarezbassist17 on Sep 11, 2010, 11:19 PM
Quote from: Variable on Sep 10, 2010, 07:11 AM
Well you have to be able to read above a 2nd grade level to appreciate the conversation.

But long story short.  I think Cory and I agree that if the economy wasn't so fucked up (yes, that is the fault of the government) that we would have more people able and willing to invest in new forms of energy and.............I'm not going to lie.  I kind of forgot what we are talking about.  What does this have to do with the end of the world?  

Haha the tangent started off by me seeing the topic and promising myself "oh goddammit, if someone in here says something about the world ending from global warming or something like that i'm gonna flip a shit."  

But yeah, all that, and privatizing everything that either moves or doesn't move.

Quote from: blixa on Sep 09, 2010, 02:12 PM
what the three of you guys have said sound a lot like things that nicholas stern addresses in most of his public lectures that i have heard.

"The Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change was produced by a team led by Stern at HM Treasury, and was released in October 2006. In the Review, climate change is described as an economic externality. Regulation, carbon taxes and carbon trading are recommended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It is argued that the world economy can lower its greenhouse gas emissions at a significant but manageable cost. The Review concludes that immediate reductions of greenhouse gas emissions are necessary to reduce the worst risks of climate change."

No, no, no, no, no.  Goddammit, no. Both absolutely the wrong ways to cure the problem, and a faulty premise.  I just love how they call it climate change these days.  What a hoot these people are.  Seriously, I don't wear tinfoil hats or anything, but you really can't see that the political class is just using climate change to redistribute wealth and nothing more?

Check it out:

"The real challenge comes from the exponential growth of the global consumerist society driven by ever higher aspirations of the upper and middle layers in rich countries as well as the expanding demand of emerging middle-class in developing countries. Our true ambition should be therefore creating incentives for the profound transformation of attitudes and consumption styles."

http://www.citizenlink.com/2010/09/united-nations%E2%80%98new-plan-%E2%80%98redistribute-wealth%E2%80%99-remove-sovereignty-barriers/
Austria Retreat Papers


I know on its surface it sounds like really nice, compassionate and typical hippie talk, but you've been so duped it's insane.  oh and also, carbon trading is legalized pollution (if you consider CO2 to be a pollutant, anyway).

no offence, but i don't appreciate you saying stuff like this. i have not been duped. i have been respectful towards you but you can't seem to express your opinion without using condescending names. this is the exact reason why there has never been a constructive debate on this subject between global warming deniers and scientists who believe that it is happening. whether you believe the likelihood of global warming or not, you will see that the risks are immense - we can't take away the risks, but we can reduce them drastically by the way we do things. we emit 47 million tonnes per annum. we should be cutting that to 35 then to 20. we have to cut emissions by 7 and a 1/2 over a 40 year period. we need creativity and technology to make this story good. the future is dependent on low carbon.

when you have the majority of scientists agreeing on something then it is likely that it is happening. you will obviously not have any other opinion because you've already adopted the denialist approach. i would rather take the option of doing something about global warming than taking a risk and doing nothing.

Quote from: blixa on Sep 12, 2010, 03:22 PM
also climate change will redistribute wealth around the world, both within and between nations. if and when the transition to a low carbon economy occurs, countries which have been slow to move will find that their high carbon assets are stranded owing to shifts in the full cost of dirty production processes. it is not impossible, given the magnitude of the gains from 'winning' in critical low carbon technologies, that a competitive dynamic will develop where countries race to develop the leading low carbon technology. given the significance of coal to the business-as-usual growth path of the global economy, at present carbon capture and sequestration would appear to be one of these critical technologies.

reaching a new climate agreement is both urgent and important, and will be exceptionally challenging. a new global deal on climate is nevertheless possible and extremely necessary.

Sorry I took so long to respond to this, but this really got my goat, so to speak and I wanted to approach it again with a cooler head.  But I make no promises.

My first beef is that what you are talking about with halving our carbon output in the name of "not taking a risk" on something that #1 you know deep down that you cannot prove and #2 you (or anybody else) truly cannot predict its effect on the world and whether or not it will be bad for humanity is not just a matter of biking to work a couple times a week or turning off the shower when you wash your hair or even switching to solar panels or wind turbines.  It is literally global impoverishment and a death sentence for people around the world.  Everything we do requires energy, a society arising from poverty requires energy, and everything we use to produce energy (besides nuclear) produces CO2, even wind turbines and solar panels have fossil-fuel backups for their lull-times, not to mention the fact that their production requires CO2 emissions.  In addition to economic freedom, what leads a society to prosperity is cheap, abundant energy, which comes in the form of fossil fuels at the moment.  So what you're talking about doing is dismantling modern-day prosperity.  If that's not what you're talking about, then enlighten me as to what exists that can replace fossil fuels, then tell me that the technology exists to implement them, and where you can drum up the resources to invest in them when you CAN'T USE ANY OF THE ENERGY SOURCES THAT WOULD BE NEEDED TO DEVELOP THESE TECHNOLOGIES.

My second beef is that you people are completely willing to violate international, national, and personal sovereignty in the name of something that #1 you know deep down that you cannot prove and #2 you (or anybody else) truly cannot predict its effect on the world and whether or not it will be bad for humanity.  You are willing to tell somebody that even if they disagree with you, even if maybe, just maybe there isn't calamity around the corner, that leadership around the world should be able to do away with his ability to prosper, his ability to pay for something whose market price was established on a voluntary basis, which was calculated based on private property (as much as is allowed by the global governance, anyway), and his ability to save his money, therefore providing the capital to invest in something that might even be more environmentally friendly?  That is what is truly disgusting to me, that this movement has finally found a scare tactic that can inflict socialism on every single person who consumes energy.  They can now take away the rights to private property because that while previously, air pollution did have geographic limits on its effects, CO2 pollution "affects every last one of us."  As a Libertarian, that scares the living fuck out of me, and it is my belief that it should do the same to any other straight-thinking person.  I also find it just plumb disgusting that you don't see anything wrong with government-mandated redistribution of wealth, no matter the cause in whose name it is done.  That is stealing, theft.  Period.  There is no other way to define it, and in my opinion it is one of the most immoral attitudes that one can have and attribute much of the problems in the world (especially in later 20th/21st century America) to that attitude.

My last beef is that you just do not understand economics, but feel the need to decree these things that have dire economic consequences.  How is the rationing of energy going to lead to better technology?  It makes literally no sense because, while we are investing in new technologies all of the time, we still have to support ourselves.  So taking away more and more of the economic pie means that people are going to take hits in their standard of living and ability to save at the same time.  So the savings that may have been available to invest in these new technologies are now used to pay for higher electric bills or greater taxes.  Look, things have already become so much more environmentally friendly over the course of the last 150 years.  The principle is this: people don't want to live in a dirty place, but feeding themselves and their families will come before that any day of the week.  That's why the least environmentally friendly nations are the poorest ones.  You need wealth as a society to be able to afford to invest in more environmentally friendly technologies.  That is rule numero uno.  And with the world on the precipice of another financial calamity far greater than that of 2008 because of the "compassionate" spending policies of your Liberal counterparts, there is absolutely no way that we will be able to afford to invest in these technologies, even without the extreme emissions limits.

I watched that video with Stephen Schneider, and I didn't really hear anything new that I haven't heard.  Did you read any of that book I gave to you?  Horner goes into far greater detail with citations and all that jazz, much more deeply than I could in a post.  

This link still works
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=PF9ZSQCZ

Also, here's my favorite talk show host (who is extremely logical and eloquent and who really, really knows his stuff) talking about this topic, if you'd prefer audio to reading.

http://a1135.g.akamai.net/f/1135/18227/1h/cchannel.download.akamai.com/18227/podcast/MINNEAPOLIS-MN/KTLK-FM/LEWIS121010_1st%20Hr%20Global%20Warming.mp3?CPROG=PCAST&MARKET=MINNEAPOLIS-MN&NG_FORMAT=&SITE_ID=3359&STATION_ID=KTLK-FM&PCAST_AUTHOR=100.3_KTLK-FM&PCAST_CAT=talk&PCAST_TITLE=Jason_Lewis_on_100.3_KTLK-FM

http://a1135.g.akamai.net/f/1135/18227/1h/cchannel.download.akamai.com/18227/podcast/MINNEAPOLIS-MN/KTLK-FM/LEWIS121010_2nd%20Hr%20More%20News.mp3?CPROG=PCAST&MARKET=MINNEAPOLIS-MN&NG_FORMAT=&SITE_ID=3359&STATION_ID=KTLK-FM&PCAST_AUTHOR=100.3_KTLK-FM&PCAST_CAT=talk&PCAST_TITLE=Jason_Lewis_on_100.3_KTLK-FM

http://a1135.g.akamai.net/f/1135/18227/1h/cchannel.download.akamai.com/18227/podcast/MINNEAPOLIS-MN/KTLK-FM/LEWIS122710_Hr1_GlobalWarmingHoax.mp3?CPROG=PCAST&MARKET=MINNEAPOLIS-MN&NG_FORMAT=&SITE_ID=3359&STATION_ID=KTLK-FM&PCAST_AUTHOR=100.3_KTLK-FM&PCAST_CAT=talk&PCAST_TITLE=Jason_Lewis_on_100.3_KTLK-FM

http://a1135.g.akamai.net/f/1135/18227/1h/cchannel.download.akamai.com/18227/podcast/MINNEAPOLIS-MN/KTLK-FM/LEWIS122710_Hr2_GlobalWarming.mp3?CPROG=PCAST&MARKET=MINNEAPOLIS-MN&NG_FORMAT=&SITE_ID=3359&STATION_ID=KTLK-FM&PCAST_AUTHOR=100.3_KTLK-FM&PCAST_CAT=talk&PCAST_TITLE=Jason_Lewis_on_100.3_KTLK-FM