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riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
riskllama wrote:if u think that's bad, check out the rare earths thread. i'd say that japanese reactor is doing way more damage than an artificial island ever could, tho...
Metsfanmax wrote:Not really sure why we should be ashamed of this. OK, so it's a giant "toxic lake" in a place that people aren't living in anyway. Who cares? Presumably people don't object to the fact that there are landfills that take our residential trash away for us. Landfills are disgusting places that no one would want to live in, but it is necessary to cordon off certain sections of land for waste disposal so that society can function. Why is this fundamentally any different?
khazalid wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Not really sure why we should be ashamed of this. OK, so it's a giant "toxic lake" in a place that people aren't living in anyway. Who cares? Presumably people don't object to the fact that there are landfills that take our residential trash away for us. Landfills are disgusting places that no one would want to live in, but it is necessary to cordon off certain sections of land for waste disposal so that society can function. Why is this fundamentally any different?
clearly you didn't read the article. 2.5 million people live there, and many millions more in the surrounding area.
i can take your point to an extent re: landfills, but there is a difference between waste borne of necessity and this extremely toxic waste (so bad that no other country in the world will go near it even in the midst of the sharpest economic downturn since yadda yadda), which has basically been fueled by rapacious, unthinking consumerism of the absolute worst kind. nobody needs a new phone every 6-12 months.
it's a shocking image, and one which has been largely ignored and unreported elsewhere, and given that a picture is worth a thousand words, I will happily stand by the re-post.
nietzsche wrote:I find your position a little bit cynical Mets, and anything cynical comes from some sort of pesimism at the core.
I find his outragement (if such a word exist) like one of those we all often have but later decide we can't do anything about it and move on.
Metsfanmax wrote:nietzsche wrote:I find your position a little bit cynical Mets, and anything cynical comes from some sort of pesimism at the core.
I find his outragement (if such a word exist) like one of those we all often have but later decide we can't do anything about it and move on.
I contend that you have it exactly backwards.
I look at that article and I am overjoyed. I am overjoyed because we have collectively figured out how to build giant, dazzling cities of steel and chemicals to produce aesthetically amazing products that immensely improve human productivity and quality of life. I see it as a testament to the human spirit that we figured it out. The author got the story all wrong: it was the plants themselves that were the story, not the landfill out in the back. If a "toxic lake" somewhere out in the desert is the cost we collectively pay to have smartphones, I am not only ok with it, I am glad about it, because it is such a small cost in the grand scheme of things.
khazalid, meanwhile, pulls up that article and becomes despaired about the fact that we all want to buy and have nice things, and wallows in his belief that surely we can do better as humans, if we all just figure out now. But he provides no solution; he just bitches about how a new phone once or twice per year is too much. Notice how also there are clear villains in this story. It is essentially porn for environmentalists because they can get off to the idea that we should just blame those evil folks who can't think long enough to realize that their insatiable greed is destroying the planet. That is why I think it is lazy and cynical: blame the iPhone users instead of recognizing that this is something that's intrinsically tied to a market economy.
That is the pessimism you were looking for. khazalid lives in a world where we humans are too evil and lazy and gluttonous to just cut back and figure out how to get by with fewer nice things. I live in a world where we should all want to have nice things, and shouldn't feel bad about the fact that we are human and like nice things. Stop worrying about the toxic lakes and think about the bigger problems: global warming, droughts, ocean acidification, overfishing. Those are the real costs we are paying, and for those things there is no clear enemy. We are the source of our own problems, collectively, but we can fix them too, if we have the will to do so.
Metsfanmax wrote:nietzsche wrote:I find your position a little bit cynical Mets, and anything cynical comes from some sort of pesimism at the core.
I find his outragement (if such a word exist) like one of those we all often have but later decide we can't do anything about it and move on.
I contend that you have it exactly backwards.
I look at that article and I am overjoyed. I am overjoyed because we have collectively figured out how to build giant, dazzling cities of steel and chemicals to produce aesthetically amazing products that immensely improve human productivity and quality of life. I see it as a testament to the human spirit that we figured it out. The author got the story all wrong: it was the plants themselves that were the story, not the landfill out in the back. If a "toxic lake" somewhere out in the desert is the cost we collectively pay to have smartphones, I am not only ok with it, I am glad about it, because it is such a small cost in the grand scheme of things.
khazalid wrote:please carry on procreating, meat-eating, voting republican, and queueing at your local apple store if it's your bag, baby.
Metsfanmax wrote:khazalid wrote:please carry on procreating, meat-eating, voting republican, and queueing at your local apple store if it's your bag, baby.
I don't want to have any children; I don't eat any animal products; I don't vote Republican; and, I despise Apple products. It is possible for someone to be liberal and still recognize, and be in awe of, the power of a market economy.
Metsfanmax wrote:... If a "toxic lake" somewhere out in the desert is the cost we collectively pay to have smartphones, I am not only ok with it, I am glad about it, because it is such a small cost in the grand scheme of things...
...Stop worrying about the toxic lakes and think about the bigger problems: global warming, droughts, ocean acidification, overfishing. Those are the real costs we are paying, and for those things there is no clear enemy. We are the source of our own problems, collectively, but we can fix them too, if we have the will to do so.
khazalid wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:khazalid wrote:please carry on procreating, meat-eating, voting republican, and queueing at your local apple store if it's your bag, baby.
I don't want to have any children; I don't eat any animal products; I don't vote Republican; and, I despise Apple products. It is possible for someone to be liberal and still recognize, and be in awe of, the power of a market economy.
sure, but there's no need to be in thrall to it.
honestly, you sound confused. or at least conflicted.
Metsfanmax wrote:khazalid wrote:please carry on procreating, meat-eating, voting republican, and queueing at your local apple store if it's your bag, baby.
I don't want to have any children; I don't eat any animal products; I don't vote Republican; and, I despise Apple products. It is possible for someone to be liberal and still recognize, and be in awe of, the power of a market economy.
Dukasaur wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:khazalid wrote:please carry on procreating, meat-eating, voting republican, and queueing at your local apple store if it's your bag, baby.
I don't want to have any children; I don't eat any animal products; I don't vote Republican; and, I despise Apple products. It is possible for someone to be liberal and still recognize, and be in awe of, the power of a market economy.
Indeed that is true. And yet, the benefits of a market economy would be no less if it was rolling along at one-tenth the speed, or one-thousandth the s[eed. If instead of people buying a new phone every year, they bought a new phone every ten years, the (scaled) benefits would be no less. If instead of 10 billion people turning every square inch of the planet into an ashphalt desert there were 10 million people living in small, sustainable communities, they could still engage in a market economy and reap all its benefits.
2dimes wrote:I think part of the perceived problem with the toxic lake is it might affect a vast majority of the world population that does not yet strive for smartphones, more than the minority buying, disposing and replacing them on the other side of the planet.
Metsfanmax wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:khazalid wrote:please carry on procreating, meat-eating, voting republican, and queueing at your local apple store if it's your bag, baby.
I don't want to have any children; I don't eat any animal products; I don't vote Republican; and, I despise Apple products. It is possible for someone to be liberal and still recognize, and be in awe of, the power of a market economy.
Indeed that is true. And yet, the benefits of a market economy would be no less if it was rolling along at one-tenth the speed, or one-thousandth the s[eed. If instead of people buying a new phone every year, they bought a new phone every ten years, the (scaled) benefits would be no less. If instead of 10 billion people turning every square inch of the planet into an ashphalt desert there were 10 million people living in small, sustainable communities, they could still engage in a market economy and reap all its benefits.
The power of innovation and development is proportional to the number of people there are. If humanity had capped out at 10 million, would we have developed to the point we are today? It seems basically impossible. The development of the modern digital economy required immense amounts of global trade and cooperation, and the story of the rare earths is just one of many such examples. Through the power of comparative advantage, the more people there are to trade with, the better off I am (all else being equal), because it allows increasing amounts of specialization. If you want to live in a world where we've only made it 1/1000 of the way to where we are now (somewhere back around the time of Jesus, I guess), I guess that's up to you.
But even if this was true, it would be irrelevant, because barring a global nuclear war we're going to have several billion people living here for quite a while. Might as well accept that and find the best way to live in this circumstance.
Dukasaur wrote:A network needs a certain minimum number of participants before it becomes efficient. After a certain point, adding more participants doesn't give you much of anything. There's a law of diminishing returns to everything, and a network of a billion doesn't necessarily do anything that a network of a million wouldn't.
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