Tags:
We're all preaching, brother.
Me, from the pulpit encouraging an attitude of "let's scrutinize our behavior and choices and really think about the ways in which our ignorance, hubris, and myopia have fixed us with the environmental and social troubles we're in," and you, apparently from the one of "let's not shed our mantle of ignorance, hubris, or myopia lest we appear uncool, frantic, or progressive in our choices."
This discussion is about chain lube, a product that will likely have an incalculably small effect on things that make news, like climate change, ecological poisoning, failing school systems, famine and war, etc., yet you all now see how such a seemingly simple thing affects and influences many larger and more complex issues and the attitudes we hold about them.
I say that if you care enough about the chain lube you use on your bike to contribute to an online discussion about it, you should care about everything that goes into that lube and everything that influences its production, marketing and beyond. It's called "follow-thorough" and the world would be a better place if we all strove for more of it.
Michael Perz said:I somehow missed that the first time. Emphasis has now been added lest anyone mistake which pulpit you're preaching from.
Ezra Hozinsky said:Wow, that's a can of worms, considering the inextricable and intimate relationship between food production, petroleum, and world military power. Go feed the overpopulated world with that crude oil and soldier on, brother!
Michael Perz said:Until we reach an age when food riots are a distant memory and everyone around the world is finally enjoying a post-scarcity existence I'll happily continue using the nastiest, most Gaia-unfriendly chemicals to service my various modes of transportation. Sorry, but I just find the use of food products in this manner to be especially foul regardless of whether it fills a car fuel tank or lubricates a bicycle chain.
Talk to some prominent physicists and biologists. You'll find religion plays a much larger role in their lives and research than you might imagine. Most dedicated scientists are quite religious.
I highlighted your word choice in bold because it betrays a vile element of the so-called "progressive" ideology; one of which you seem to be an adherent. Since you allege that the world is overpopulated, perhaps you might feel at liberty as to illustrate which specific segment of the world population is gratuitous and could be dispensed with?
Ezra Hozinsky said:We're all preaching, brother.
Me, from the pulpit encouraging an attitude of "let's scrutinize our behavior and choices and really think about the ways in which our ignorance, hubris, and myopia have fixed us with the environmental and social troubles we're in," and you, apparently from the one of "let's not shed our mantle of ignorance, hubris, or myopia lest we appear uncool, frantic, or progressive in our choices."
This discussion is about chain lube, a product that will likely have an incalculably small effect on things that make news, like climate change, ecological poisoning, failing school systems, famine and war, etc., yet you all now see how such a seemingly simple thing affects and influences many larger and more complex issues and the attitudes we hold about them.
I say that if you care enough about the chain lube you use on your bike to contribute to an online discussion about it, you should care about everything that goes into that lube and everything that influences its production, marketing and beyond. It's called "follow-thorough" and the world would be a better place if we all strove for more of it.
Michael Perz said:I somehow missed that the first time. Emphasis has now been added lest anyone mistake which pulpit you're preaching from.
Ezra Hozinsky said:Wow, that's a can of worms, considering the inextricable and intimate relationship between food production, petroleum, and world military power. Go feed the overpopulated world with that crude oil and soldier on, brother!
Michael Perz said:Until we reach an age when food riots are a distant memory and everyone around the world is finally enjoying a post-scarcity existence I'll happily continue using the nastiest, most Gaia-unfriendly chemicals to service my various modes of transportation. Sorry, but I just find the use of food products in this manner to be especially foul regardless of whether it fills a car fuel tank or lubricates a bicycle chain.
But although I get your point, that our choice of chain lube doesn't matter at all, I think you'll agree that if we extend that attitude to all our choices and to everyone in the world, we would soon find ourselves in a very alien kind of society, one that has in the past led to the most despicable human behavior imaginable.
Religion in a nutshell: The ability to believe with all your heart things that you have no proof for is the prerequisite to being able to disbelieve things when the all the evidence points to the fact that they are TRUE.
Self-delusion is self-delusion.
Ezra Hozinsky said:Talk to some prominent physicists and biologists. You'll find religion plays a much larger role in their lives and research than you might imagine. Most dedicated scientists are quite religious.
I'd call it an admirable attempt at pigeonholing me, but that would be far too generous for such a half-assed, insincere attempt. I have no affiliation with any Tea Party or any incarnation thereof, I have no interest in becoming affiliated with the aforementioned as it offers precious nothing that might benefit me, nor do I own a motorized vehicle. Furthermore, I do not subscribe to any belief in the supernatural of any sort including, but not limited to, Judeo-Christianity and its various subsidiaries.
I do know, however, that people like you have been peddling the population-at-critical-mass bullshit for the better part of the past century and have been repeatedly and consistently been proven wrong. Don't let that dissuade you from trying though.
How many chains could we lube with the oil that was spilled in the Gulf of Mexico?
Well, aren't you strong! Congratulations on admitting to everyone that you need nothing nor care for anything of this world except that which directly benefits you! A model citizen if I've ever seen one, so long as you're still in diapers.
203 members
1 member
270 members
1 member
261 members