Do You Hear that Howling?
"I travel the roads of nature until the hour when I shall lie down and be at rest; yielding back my last breath into the air from which I have drawn it daily, and sinking down upon the earth from which my father derived the seed, my mother the blood, and my nurse the milk of my being - the earth for which so many years has furnished my daily meat and drink, and, though so grievously abused, still suffers me to tread its surface."
-Marcus Aurelius, Meditations, ( 5.4, trans. by Maxwell Staniforth)
I watched Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth today, and if true, it sure will be more than inconvenient. In the two hour documentary/ lecture, Gore cites compelling evidence that the planet is doomed. Among his most convincing arguments is the statistic that in almost 1000 scientific, scholarly articles, not one scientist disagreed with the fact that the earth is warming and that warming is causing significant, and in most cases, detrimental change to the planet. In the popular media, fifty-three percent of the newspapers and magazines offering commentary on the subject discount the facts of global warming, placing the debate into the political, and not scientific, arena.
Let's forget Al Gore and politics for a second, and let's employ common sense. Irrefutable is the fact that world population continues to increase exponentially as modern medicine and standards of living help preserve life. Now, think about natural selection and animal populations. As habitats change, so do the animals which inhabit them. If the animals cannot find sustainable living, they die out. If they can migrate, they do so and survive in a new location. Take for example the wily coyote in Washington, DC. Yes, in the great Rock Creek Park, the coyote has found refuge and plenty of deer on which to nibble to the consternation of the urbanites who dwell in the nation's capital. Why have they come there? Because the deer cannot survive the sprawl in the suburbs, so they move at night until they find vegitation. For the coyote, it means no natural competition and ample supply of venison. Mother Nature chuckles as the DC Parks Service scratches heads to find the answer to ridding the park of the carnivores. They'll be there tomorrow and next week and next. Take that to the bank.
Common Sense tells us that more people mean more demands on the planet's resources. More demands mean the strong will survive. Those with water, fossil fuels, and agriculture will be sitting pretty as the human migration to find that sustainable habitat occurs. Human coyotes in the middle of a protected park.
The movie also suggests one solution: government standards for fuel efficiency in cars and trucks. As the recent spike in gas prices has taught us in the past, the oil faucet can be stopped with the flick of the OPEC wrist. Venezuela's Chavez and Iran's Ahmadinejad wring wrists and lick chops to put the U.S. in their economic vise and crank away. However, the movie also points out that the automobile companies that earn the most profit are not the gas-guzzling makers in Detroit but those of Asia. Gore even suggests that Toyota and Honda's success has occurred because of their products' burning fuel more efficiently and cleanly. Why then would we want Uncle Sam to lift the hood and tweak Ford's engine? Let the market decide. Eventually, people won't be able to pay the price of filling up their GM SUV, and they'll wise up.
Marucs Aurelius, the Roman emperor, wrote the words above as he traveled the various regions of the empire with his armies. He reflected often upon the inner working of the soul, and how it relates to the larger, outer world of Nature that surrounds us all. What he understood is that we are on loan to the earth, and Mother Nature will have the last word. If we destroy ourselves, something will replace us. If we want to prevent it, however, the debate has to rage in the public arena with hard science, not with political puffing of someone who wants to re-enter the race or someone who wants to stay on retainer for the Big Oil companies. Otherwise, bet on the coyotes.
-Marcus Aurelius, Meditations, ( 5.4, trans. by Maxwell Staniforth)
I watched Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth today, and if true, it sure will be more than inconvenient. In the two hour documentary/ lecture, Gore cites compelling evidence that the planet is doomed. Among his most convincing arguments is the statistic that in almost 1000 scientific, scholarly articles, not one scientist disagreed with the fact that the earth is warming and that warming is causing significant, and in most cases, detrimental change to the planet. In the popular media, fifty-three percent of the newspapers and magazines offering commentary on the subject discount the facts of global warming, placing the debate into the political, and not scientific, arena.
Let's forget Al Gore and politics for a second, and let's employ common sense. Irrefutable is the fact that world population continues to increase exponentially as modern medicine and standards of living help preserve life. Now, think about natural selection and animal populations. As habitats change, so do the animals which inhabit them. If the animals cannot find sustainable living, they die out. If they can migrate, they do so and survive in a new location. Take for example the wily coyote in Washington, DC. Yes, in the great Rock Creek Park, the coyote has found refuge and plenty of deer on which to nibble to the consternation of the urbanites who dwell in the nation's capital. Why have they come there? Because the deer cannot survive the sprawl in the suburbs, so they move at night until they find vegitation. For the coyote, it means no natural competition and ample supply of venison. Mother Nature chuckles as the DC Parks Service scratches heads to find the answer to ridding the park of the carnivores. They'll be there tomorrow and next week and next. Take that to the bank.
Common Sense tells us that more people mean more demands on the planet's resources. More demands mean the strong will survive. Those with water, fossil fuels, and agriculture will be sitting pretty as the human migration to find that sustainable habitat occurs. Human coyotes in the middle of a protected park.
The movie also suggests one solution: government standards for fuel efficiency in cars and trucks. As the recent spike in gas prices has taught us in the past, the oil faucet can be stopped with the flick of the OPEC wrist. Venezuela's Chavez and Iran's Ahmadinejad wring wrists and lick chops to put the U.S. in their economic vise and crank away. However, the movie also points out that the automobile companies that earn the most profit are not the gas-guzzling makers in Detroit but those of Asia. Gore even suggests that Toyota and Honda's success has occurred because of their products' burning fuel more efficiently and cleanly. Why then would we want Uncle Sam to lift the hood and tweak Ford's engine? Let the market decide. Eventually, people won't be able to pay the price of filling up their GM SUV, and they'll wise up.
Marucs Aurelius, the Roman emperor, wrote the words above as he traveled the various regions of the empire with his armies. He reflected often upon the inner working of the soul, and how it relates to the larger, outer world of Nature that surrounds us all. What he understood is that we are on loan to the earth, and Mother Nature will have the last word. If we destroy ourselves, something will replace us. If we want to prevent it, however, the debate has to rage in the public arena with hard science, not with political puffing of someone who wants to re-enter the race or someone who wants to stay on retainer for the Big Oil companies. Otherwise, bet on the coyotes.