You make it a no-win situation. So we
shouldn't try to save a sustainable environment?
What if we can, using our "differenc", the ability
to see and plan for the future?
Our brutal existance can be made extremely
enjoyable experience, better to have it
than not being born or not living like humans.
I'd like to know that I did my best...
Blimey, you must be annoyed by all that
artificial american optimism around you...
European pessimism is more constructive...
Eva
> No mater what our intention, no matter what fairy tales we
> invent to rationalize the brutality of our existence, we are
> nothing more than a herd of animals devouring the world around
> us as we have for the last 5,000,000 years.
>
> Jay
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
> It was thus becoming apparent that nature must, in the not
> far distant future, institute bankruptcy proceedings against
> industrial civilization, and perhaps against the standing
> crop of human flesh, just as nature had done many times
> to other detritus-consuming species following their
> exuberant expansion in response to the savings deposits
> their ecosystems had accumulated before they got the
> opportunity to begin the drawdown... Having become a
> species of superdetritovores, mankind was destined
> not merely for succession, but for crash.
> -- William Catton
>
>
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