PLAYER57832 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:
You're missing the point because you are projecting a political bias on me. Let me try something different and simple. It should not take multiple paragraphs of mostly irrelevant information to address. Why do you think beaches and dunes are eroding and why do you think governments don't do enough about it?
OK, now you are paying attention to a detail, an example I brought up... and have gone away from the basic point which was that your use of "rent seeking" specifically allows you to ignore those details. Ironic, that.
Anyway, to answer that , its not just about beaches eroding. Its about us subverting the natural system without regard.
Beaches are "meant" to erode and be reconstructed, but in a particular manner. We dam up rivers, reducing silt loads, which ultimately result in less sand. We build on cliffs that should erode in some places, again... reducing the input of sand. Other areas that, if left lone, would from barriers are left vulnerable. This impacts spawning grounds of various species, including species of extreme import. We also degrade various types of wetlands by forcing them to take on far more materials (and of different types) than they are designed to utilize.
I could go on, but the bottom line is that while you can parcel out each of these into a specific, individual need or desire, the overall picture is one of a need for all of us. By parcelling it out and pretending that such individualism is appropriate, you don't just minimize the impacts, you utterly disregard the true import of it all.
thegreekdog wrote: And yes, science is not about rent seeking. I'm not talking about science. There is little to no rent seeking in science.
Exactly.
Well, make that "there shouldn't be". The problem is that money is only available from the profits of rent seekers in our current system... and thus it all gets subverted.
Which, brings us back to my original point.
thegreekdog wrote:I'm not a conspiracy theorist when it comes to global warming. I'm talking about politics and the role of government. The government (and citizens and businesses) are given the science and they are determining how to cope with the science that tells them X. How do businesses, citizens and the government decide what to do about the science they are given? The question is not necessarily "what should they do," the answer is "what do they do and why do they do it."
See, this divide "I am not talking about global warming, I am talking about politics and government" is false. Right now, science very much is, sadly, too often about individual demands -- "rent seeking", if you will. This is because it depends so heavily upon popular funding. The government is still the primary functionary for funding basic base line research, but much of that has been cut or subverted to answer to individual needs and desires. A lot has just plain become privatized. Even tax-payer funding is funneled through private entities in various way -- most notably through turning government programs into contract entities.
Science needs to be seperate. Part of why it is not is this tendency to just label everything AS IF it were all equal. The term "rent seeking" does that very well. You could substitute "special interests" or several other terms used in the past. The point of all of them is to put a label on a whole group of things so that they can be talked about in esoteric terms, and debated en masse, instead of individually.
The problem is that right now, we face a series of very critical and far reaching environmental crisis. We cannot afford to just dismiss it all as mere special interest, rent seekers or anything else.
Yet... I fear we are past the point of no return here in this country. Undoing the uneducation that has happened in the past 20 years will take more than 20 years, and I fear outside interests will long have already ceased control here before that can come to pass.
I AM a conspiracy theorist when it comes to our national interests versus other nations. I think we have been quite naive in opening up ourselves so fully to entities like China, Saudis Arabia and the like. Our security rests only in the prevalence of free information. Yet, that is a tenuous hold, today, in the age of the internet and so readily subverted information.