Corruption. Politicians in the deep pockets of the fossil fuel industry; standing on the brink of an entirely new era, and too cowardly and self-serving to bring it about. Fuck them. If I shout loud enough maybe China will hear me; and then they'll have no choice. — karl stone
It isn't that they are so much opposed to geo-thermal as they are opposed to risking their economies, as currently operated. This is not a mistaken danger. A sudden switch away from fossil fuels to any other system could not be done overnight, and the transition is more likely to be wrenching and wrecking rather than smooth and pleasant--whether the destination is geothermal, hydrogen, photovoltaic, wind, or hydro. — Bitter Crank
People do not do a lot of things they should and could do, whether that is giving up tobacco, exercising more, avoiding war, or demanding magma wells NOW. — Bitter Crank
The most I'm asking of the ruling classes is the stroke of a pen when they ought. — karl stone
Sure, but it's a different technology. Iceland's geothermal is hydrothermal; energy drawn from underground bodies of hot water. — karl stone
In order to maintain the relatively high standard of living for some people, many other people have to live a relatively low standard. So that's not really a solution.
— baker
Why?
Prosperity isn't fixed. It's not a game of someone wins, others loose.
For example, take all the Americans of 2022. Compare them with all the Americans of 1822.
How will you argue that compared to two hundred years ago, only some Americans have become more prosperous, but others have it worse than in 1822. — ssu
Prosperity isn't fixed. It's not a game of someone wins, others loose.
It is a solution.
The real question is how to get there.
Yet this simple fact will hardly have any impact to some. Too many people are mesmerized with ideas that improvements happen only by basically stealing from others, that capitalism and the market mechanism are bad, because there are obvious problems and injustices around us. Hence throw everything out...at least at a theoretical level. Yet central planning and socialism without market mechanism hasn't worked. But who cares about history? — ssu
The Luddite argument can be easily shown not to be true as the industrial revolution didn't bring us hoards of beggars roaming the countryside as there would be no work. — ssu
Samuel Johnson said, "Depend upon it, sir, when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully." That lots of people know we are facing an existential threat hasn't done the trick of concentrating our minds. — Bitter Crank
But prosperity is all about absolute terms. Do you have enough and good food? Good service and medical treatment. All those machines and opportunities to make things easy. That is the start point.You're looking at prosperity in absolute terms. I think this is problematic, because prosperity then gets to be defined by some arbitrary standard that depends solely on "how far people dare to dream". — baker
Yet the _relative_ difference between the rich and the poor is the same, regardless of which time period you observe. — baker
The scarcity of natural resources puts a limit to human expansion. — baker
Some of us are just digusted by living solely for the sake of living. All this eating, consuming, day in day out, getting nowehre, spinning around in a circle of consumption. This principle of consumption is the same, whether we're living a caveman lifestyle, or a post-industrial one. — baker
But prosperity is all about absolute terms. Do you have enough and good food? Good service and medical treatment. All those machines and opportunities to make things easy. That is the start point.
You are looking at a different problem, income and wealth inequality, not prosperity itself. — ssu
Then look at the poor people. And you can see that they are better in every country in the World than they were two or three hundred years ago. You simply cannot deny that.
And that has been always the problem since the birth of our species. There hasn't been any time in history when natural resources were bountiful. They look only "untapped" for us as the technology wasn't there to for us to use them. Our technology that we have had made the limits of what are obtainable resources.
Well, people who genuinely say that they are disgusted by living solely for the sake of living may have other problems. Just ask yourself, what do other animals do?
Larger homes, more servants. Same issue.Even two thousand years ago, and before that, they had the notion of "prosperity". They just didn't define it in terms of indoor plumbing, fancy kitchen appliances, or availability of top trauma surgeons who could sew back a detached limb. — baker
So if everybody would have the living standards of what billionaires have, that would be irrelevant, if there would be those who have far better living standards than our present billionaires?Irrelevant. Is the relative difference between the rich and the poor that makes the relevant difference. — baker
For all our supposed superiority, we should do better than worms. — baker
Maybe some time (soon!) we can learn to eat plastic. Yay! — baker
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