Gee John thanks for telling me I don't matter

Why harm even one person if there is a better way.
This isn't a matter of anyone harming anybody. The market forces are raising the cost of energy. You're in a tight situation due to family illness. I sympathize with you, but these things happen. The point is that, in general, people are not suffering high energy prices for the reasons that you are and when we discuss the situation, it is unfair for you to be the poster-girl for what is wrong with high energy prices when your case is not typical of the general population.
Evidence of environmental damage on a global scale is pure conjecture that there are terminal consequences. I can unequivocally say that change does not inherently mean damage, let alone "terminal" damage. Short of creating a total toxic environment, change may be irreversible, but equating to permanent damage is extreme. Do volcanoes cause permanent ecological damage with long term terminal implications?
Yes, the larger volcanoes can and do cause permanent ecological damage on a human scale. While unprovable, it is largely thought by the scientific community that volcanic eruptions were among the causes, if not the leading cause of the "Little Ice Age" (1650 - 1850).
There is no single effect of human environmental damage that has a global reach that I know of, but humans have a global reach and the many effects of our lifestyles has affected every part of the globe. Our lifestyles and the nearly seven billion people on this planet are unsustainable. We either have to reduce our population or start consuming less.
You want terminal consequences just look at the ban on DDT. No provable damage to the enviroment has or could be done by DDT. Millions have died from disease because DDT has been banned. Please don't tell me how small a percent of the world population that is to do something to make enviromantal nuts feel good about themselves.
I am going to decline to get into yet another DDT debate with anyone.
I never said that we did not interferre in the Middle East, I said we have no coherent foreign policy in the Middle East. Free flow of oil or depriving others of oil is one of many strategies employed. Letting the Shah fall is one of the worst things we could have done if Oil ruled our foreign policy.
We didn't have much of a choice in that matter. When the people truly want it, they get it -- if they're willing to fight for it. The United States did everything within its abilities to prevent the Shah from losing control of that country, but the US isn't invincible. We were defeated in that struggle.
Actually I will not buy into the concept that there is only a finite amount of petroleum on the globe. Oil is compressed dead carbon based life forms, as long as carbon based life continues to die and be compressed oil results (yes I know I'm over simplifying). It is not considered a radical idea that the Earth is still producing oil. Admittedly we are probably using it up faster than it is produced.
Then, in human terms, petroleum is finite, especially since it takes thousands of years to produce.
Considering the advances in technology in my 40 years of life, I'd much rather push off running out of oil for 30 years rather than accept defeat today when there are untapped resources. Even if the U.S. is willing to cripple itself the rest of the globe will just laugh and bury us. If China becomes the dominant country on the globe and not the U.S. do you consider that a good thing?
So you want us to be like China? China is an ecological disaster area and believe me, that will come back to haunt them very soon; already is. China is a paper tiger, just like the Soviet Union was, and at least the Soviets had nuclear weapons out the wazoo. China is lucky that it can sustain itself as a nation, much less be a threat to anyone. China will never be the dominant global power.
Regardless, we don't have 30 years, even with the best projections. We cannot increase production enough, even by tapping these new reserves and waiting for new infrastructure that will last us barely more than a decade, and prices will still be high.
I think that now, while we have the imports available, and the domestic back-up, we ought to be trying to shift over our energy use from fossil fuels to some other alternative, preferably a mix of solar, hydrogen fuel-cell, hydro-electric, wind, nuclear, and coal. We ought not to wait until the last drop hits our taps. That is what is going to crush this country.
John said"And yes, I think it is a good thing for people to be forced into simple living due to natural market forces. It will save us our environment and serve to curb population growth. Modern living is what makes us soft."
The problem is that we are not talking about natural market forces, we are talking about government regulation forcing consequences on people. Are Libertarians in favor of coercive force when it suits their environmental Theology? So I say let the government lift it's ban and remove regulations and let natural market forces operate!
You just seem like a blame government for everything kind of person. The government can drop regulation as much as it wants and the price won't be affected to any significant degree. The best that it could do is drop the fuel tax and your pump prices might go down thirty cents, but then they're just going to have to raise taxes somewhere else.
in favor of coercive force
Yeah, thats what I said.
Population growth??? Have you noticed that the less developed a nation is the higher it's population growth. When there are no gadgets to amuse, people resort to free entertainment like sex. As it stands Caucasian people of the western world are in a population decrease. On a related note Christianity is actually the fastest growing religion through conversion; Islam is the fastest growing religion because they have lots of children. If western culture, with it's libertarian values becomes extinct, would this be a good thing?
I never said that we ought to be a less-developed nation, only that we should consume less.
With or without man climate and the environment change. It is a question of faith and not science that changes in the environment caused by man are inherently bad. Undeniably man killed off the passenger pigeon, what has been the consequence? I live in an area with lots of closed slate quarries that nature is reclaiming, where is the harm? Considering all of the claims made about the Alaskan Pipeline and the fact that it has actually been good for wild life, explain the disaster that ANWR would be? On Discovery channel I saw a program about how quickly NYC would disappear if people did not stop nature, what man does is incredibly fleeting in a geologic scale.
NYC shouldn't have been built on a swamp, just like New Orleans shouldn't have been built below sea level.
I don't think much environmental damage would come out of drilling in ANWR. What does concern me is that we're putting off the inevitable and probably gaining very little in return.
What is the consequence of the loss of biodiversity? How high is the rate of extinction?
The time is not now to concede anything! Let the oil flow until we find alternative ways to keep the good times rolling. If the good times do stop I do not want them to stop by the hands of the U.S. government. If we do not drill the oil someone less environmentally conscience will, even if they do it over our dead bodies. Shrinking the U.S. economy while our enemies expand theirs only brings that conclusion.
Peace and Love,
Samantha
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You know, I am done arguing this with you. I am not going to convince you of anything and you're not going to convince me of anything. I am not going to keep running in circles to