UA-Archangel
Sidekick
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2008
- Messages
- 1,494
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- 31
Agreed. We keep thinking about the present, and what's beneficial for the economy. But the problem is, we never think about the future. Consumption is working for us now, but where will we be in fifty years, when oil reaches peak production, we have degraded many of our rain forests, we have mined minerals and elements which were once in abundance but no longer will be?
People declare those of us who actually care about the environment to be "anti-capitalistic" or "tree-hugging hippes." But that isn't the reality of the situation. When I look at the small crises we are facing now, and put it into a future perspective, I am dead afraid of what will happen. I predict an economic crisis so large by the year 2050 that our entire country will fall apart.
Even if we only isolate the issue to one aspect of our environment-- oil-- I predict this scenario will unfold. If the Middle East reaches peak oil production by 2040, and we have yet to utilize alternative energies as our primary source of fuel, our entire infrastructure will collapse. You think gas prices are bad now? How bad will they be when there isn't enough oil left for everyone to consume? How bad will they be when the international community decides to step in and halt oil production in the Middle East?
What then? Will we be able to survive such a devastating blow?
I don't think so.
That doesn't even get into climate change, which is a real problem (especially now that India and China's middle classes are expanding and they too are consuming at insurmountable rates).
We need to reverse course soon.
Then we'll just find some other ways of generating energy.
Like we did when whale oil or coal went up too high in price.
Globally, the Earth has gotten warmer...that is a fact. Whether it was man made or not was up for debate.

