"...Have you noticed a set of patterns? Each assessment is quickly
eclipsed by another, fundamentally more dire set of scenarios. Every
scenario is far too optimistic because each is based on conservative
approaches to scenario development. And every bit of dire news is met
by the same political response..."

http://www.countercurrents.org/mcpherson161009.htm




    Apocalypse Or Extinction?

    By Guy R McPherson

    16 October, 2009
    Countercurrents.org

    Your medical doctor informs you: "You need to stop all industrial
activities immediately, or you'll be dead in twenty years. And so will
your five-year-old child. You might die anyway -- after all, nobody
gets out alive -- but your death is guaranteed if you do not stop
relying on fossil fuels for travel, heating and cooling, water from
the tap, and food from the grocery store."

    Naturally, you go straight from the clinic to the nearest store.
You need liquor, and time to ponder whether the trade-off is worth it.

    About two years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) announced we were committed to warming the planet by about 1 C
by the end of this century. Never mind that we were almost there when
they reached this profound conclusion. Simply for elucidating the
obvious, the IPCC was granted a share of the Nobel Peace Prize
(climate crusader Al Gore received the other half).

    About a year ago, the Hadley Centre for Meteorological Research
provided an update, indicating that, in the absence of complete
economic collapse, we're committed to a global average temperature
increase of 2 C. Considering the associated feedbacks, such an
increase likely spells extinction of the "wise" ape.

    Last month, the United Nations Environment Programme concluded
we're committed to an increase of 3.5 C by 2100, thus leaving little
doubt about human extinction by then.

    Last week, Chris West of the University of Oxford's UK Climate
Impacts Programme indicated we can kiss goodbye 2 C as a target: four
is the new two, and it's coming by mid-century. In a typical
disconnect from reality, the latest scenarios do not include potential
tipping points such as the release of carbon from northern permafrost
or the melting of undersea methane hydrates. Giving the response I've
come to expect from politicians, the Obama administration calls any
attempt to reduce emissions "not grounded in political reality."

    Have you noticed a set of patterns? Each assessment is quickly
eclipsed by another, fundamentally more dire set of scenarios. Every
scenario is far too optimistic because each is based on conservative
approaches to scenario development. And every bit of dire news is met
by the same political response.

    Is there any doubt we will try to kill every species on the
planet, including our own, by the middle of this century? At this
point, it is absolutely necessary, but probably not sufficient, to
bring down the industrial economy. It's no longer merely the lives of
your grandchildren we're talking about. Depending on your age, it's
the lives of your children or you. If you're 60 or younger, it's you.

    In 2002, as I edited a book about global climate change, I
concluded we had set events in motion that would cause our own
extinction, probably by 2030. I mourned for months, to the
bewilderment of the three people who noticed. About five years ago, I
was elated to learn about a hail-Mary pass that just might allow our
persistence for a few more generations: Peak oil and its economic
consequences might bring the industrial economy to an overdue close,
just in time.

    If we abandon the industrial culture of death, we might persist
until your children are old enough to die a "normal" death. But the
odds are long and the time short. Barack Obama epitomizes the actions
of every politician in the world by ensuring, with every political
act, a miserable future and insufferable death for his wife and
children.

    Now I mourn because the solution is right in front of us, yet we
run from it. We fail to recognize our salvation for what it is,
believing it to be dystopia instead of utopia. Are we waiting for the
last human on the planet to start the crusade?

    Guy R. McPherson is Profesor Emeritus at the University of
Arizona. Educated in the ecology and management of natural resources,
his early scholarly efforts produced many publications of little
lasting importance. In mid-career, he began to focus on development
and creative application of ecological theory, primarily with an eye
toward conservation of biological diversity. Currently, his scholarly
efforts focus on social criticism, with results that appear most
frequently on newspaper op-ed pages. In addition, he facilitates
research by students and he prepares synthetic documents focused on
articulation of the links between (1) environmental protection, social
justice, and the human economy and (2) science and its application.
These efforts have produced more than 100 scholarly papers and nine
books.



-- 



You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot
build up a nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you
will build on the foundations of caste will crack and will never be a
whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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