1033 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
1033 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
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The Environmental Movement and the Value of "Moderation"
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by Brian K. Yoder
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[Presented at a 1992 commencement address in California. An excellent
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analysis of the totalitarian threat posed by environmentalism. The historical
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examples discussed here bring to mind Santayana's maxim, "Those who do
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not learn from the past are condemned to repeat it." Note that asterisks are
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used to represent italics in this transcript.]
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--------------------------------
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If you could give some advice to a fish about how not to end up on a
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fisherman's stringer, you might recommend that he closely examine each juicy
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tidbit he encounters to see if it contains a hook. I would like to make that
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same recommendation to you this evening with regard to political ideologies.
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If you consider swallowing an ideology containing some true and good
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components, you should scrutinize its structure in order to determine whether
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it contains a false and evil hook.
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A look at history will show us many instances of large numbers of people
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adopting tyrannical ideologies which killed and enslaved them. What caused
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this? Were these people less intelligent than we are? Weimar Germany had
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one of the best educated populations in the world before the Nazis came to
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power. Certainly they weren't grossly stupid or uneducated. Even today,
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many of the most vocal proponents of Marxism on American campuses are
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otherwise intelligent people.
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Were they more subject to evil intent? There is certainly no evidence of this.
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Nobody promotes ideas he considers to be evil. Do you have ideas you
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consider to be evil? Of course not. Neither did the citizens of Russia and
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Germany. It must be something else.
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How could the proponents of tyranny have been so effective and the oppo-
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nents so ineffective? If the common people wouldn't stand up for themselves,
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didn't business and religious leaders stand up to the tyrants? No, for the most
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part, they supported them. How can it be that intelligent, well-meaning people
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can allow and even support the development of tyrannical political move-
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ments? The answer is that the majority swallowed some juicy bait uncritically,
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without looking for an ideological hook, and that's how they ended up on the
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stringer.
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So, how does one identify a "hook" of this kind? Answering this question is
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vitally important today because we are being presented with an ideology
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similar in many respects to those of the worst tyrannies of the 20th century. It
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is necessary to be able to recognize such ideologies in order to fight against
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them.
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The ideology I would like to discuss this evening is environmentalism as a
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philosophical and political movement. We will examine the philosophy of
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environmentalism, and determine whether or not it is safe to swallow.
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I could speak about the scientific case (or lack of it) behind such issues as
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ozone depletion, the greenhouse effect, and the solid waste "crisis", but I
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won't, because these issues have been dealt with by many others already, and
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because I do not believe that science is what makes environmentalism "work"
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as a political movement. Let's begin by looking at several environmental
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issues and trying to see what they have in common and how they differ.
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Remember Acid Rain? Asbestos? Mercury in fish? Ozone Depletion from
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Supersonic Transports? Alar in apples? Rachel Carson's Silent Spring of the
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1960s? The Coming Ice Age of the 1970s? Paul Ehrlich's Population Bomb of
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the 1980s? What all of these have in common is that they are based on
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dubious scientific theories, and that they predicted disaster unless the environ-
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mentalists were given the power to violate the rights of individual citizens.
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Also, ultimately all of the apocalyptic claims were proven to be false, if for
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no other reason than that the massive disease and death these theories predict-
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ed never materialized.
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What about today's predictions such as ozone depletion from CFCs, the
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greenhouse effect, deforestation, and the solid waste crisis? What do they all
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have in common?
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They are being trumpeted by the same people, they have the same dubious
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scientific foundations, and they are accompanied by the same demands for
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power to violate individual rights as the previous list. The only difference is
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that this last list is newer and therefore has not yet fallen to scientific dis-
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proof. Actually, global warming is already on its way out as more and more
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scientists stand up and point out the theory's faults. Don't worry though, there
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will be more sources of doomsday predictions next year. Perhaps the next big
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crisis will be the evil of road kills, paint fumes, neon lights, navigation
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beacons, or something else I can't even imagine. Probably that.
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If these predictions of doomsday are again and again shown to be false, why
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do new ones rise to take the place of each one that falls? This propensity can
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only be understood in a philosophical and political context rather than a
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scientific one. That is because environmentalism is a philosophical and
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political movement rather than a scientific one. It is no more scientific than
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communism (with its pseudo-science of history) or Naziism (with its pseudo-
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science of race).
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The communists claimed that scientific socialism would put an end to poverty
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and alienation. The Nazis claimed that the science of genetics proved that the
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Aryan race was blessed by nature with superior abilities. No matter how many
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times these theories were disproved, the adherents remained loyal to the
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ideology. Even today one can find many proponents of Marxist or racial
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ideologies plying their wares. Is environmentalism an ideology of the same
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kind?
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If we are to understand the nature of tyrannical political ideologies and
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determine whether environmentalism fits into that mold, we should examine
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some historical examples, and identify what makes them tick politically.
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We'll start with the communists. The essence of what they said to the public
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was, "Poverty is bad. We are the people opposed to poverty. In order for
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poverty to be eliminated, the people opposed to it must be given the power to
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violate individual rights. After all, helping others is the moral ideal and that's
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all we are doing. Trust us, we'll do it right this time.".
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The Nazis had a slightly different message for the common man. They said,
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"The destruction of Germany is bad. We are the people opposed to the
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destruction of Germany. In order for Germany to be defended, the people who
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defend Germany must be given the power to violate individual rights. After
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all, helping others is the moral ideal and that's all we are doing. Trust us,
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we'll do it right this time."
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The Khmer Rouge in Cambodia said, "Corruption is bad. We are the people
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opposed to corruption. In order for corruption to be eliminated, the people
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opposed to it must be given the power to violate individual rights. After all,
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helping others is the moral ideal and that's all we are doing. Trust us, we'll
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do it right this time." Each of these ideologies has a common set of attributes.
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1. Each defends an utterly uncontroversial position about which most
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people are likely to be concerned. (In these examples, that poverty
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is bad, that national destruction is bad, or that corruption is bad).
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2. Each offers to solve the uncontroversial problem, if only the public
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will grant the group the power to violate the rights of individuals.
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3. Each justifies that violation on the basis of the morality of altruism,
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that is, the moral theory that the standard of goodness is doing what
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is beneficial for others.
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4. Each resulted in millions of deaths, and slavery for millions more.
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Ideologies of this kind work by establishing a "package deal" in which a true
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and good idea is attached to a false and evil one which is swallowed whole by
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the unwitting citizen. This works the same way as a worm on a fisherman's
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hook and has similar results for those who swallow the combination.
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The simplest way of understanding how people can be tricked into swallowing
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a package deal of this kind is to notice that the first claim of each of these
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ideologies (that poverty, national destruction, and corruption are evil) are
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things everyone already agrees with. So ask yourself, what does taking such a
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position accomplish in a political context? Does it mobilize the public to
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change its opinions on the issue? Of course not, everyone already agrees.
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Does it differentiate the movement from the massive pro-poverty, pro-national
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destruction, or pro-corruption forces afoot in the population? Certainly not,
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there are no such wide-scale movements. It merely serves as the "worm" for
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the hook that follows.
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Once one has swallowed the worm and believes that "The Communists are the
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opponents of poverty," "The Nazis are the defenders of Germany," or "The
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Khmer Rouge are the opponents of corruption," there is only one step left for
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the advocates of tyranny. They must establish their goal as a moral primary.
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This is necessary because otherwise people could object to the tyranny on the
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basis of some higher moral principle such as individual rights.
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What I mean by "Moral Primary" is a moral concept which need not be
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justified on the basis of any other *moral* premise. For example, if I said, "It
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is good to eat your vegetables." you might ask why, to which I would answer,
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"A diet containing vegetables promotes health." That means my vegetable-
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eating principle was not moral primary. It was based on a more fundamental
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moral principle...the goodness of health. After hearing this, you might ask,
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"But why is being healthy good?" to which I would answer (depending on my
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moral philosophy), "Because having a healthy body is important to my life,"
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or "Because God commands it," or "Because society needs strong citizens to
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survive," or "Because health brings pleasure." In each case, one is expressing
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a moral primary, that one's life, the will of God, the good of society, or
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pleasure is the foundation of moral evaluation. Each of these is moral prima-
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ry. An egoist has no *moral* principle that underlies his evaluation of his life
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as his standard of value. What underlies it is an *epistemological* principle.
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A theist cannot explain what *moral* issue underlies the goodness of God. A
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collectivist cannot explain what moral issue underlies the goodness of society,
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and a hedonist cannot explain what moral issue underlies the goodness of
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pleasure. In each case, the explanation of the standard of good is
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epistemological, not moral. The theist, the collectivist, and the hedonist, will
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typically explain why their standard is correct with some version of "My
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standard is good because I feel it is." We'll get back to this issue later when
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we discuss the relationship between theories of knowledge and ethical systems.
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We will see why egoism can be defended on the basis of more than arbitrary
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feelings, while the others cannot.
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The moral foundation that the creators of tyrannical package deals count on,
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and the moral system already accepted by most people, is altruism. Altruism
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is the ethical theory which says that the moral ideal is to do what benefits
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others. Broadly speaking, "others" could include other people, supernatural
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beings, or even inanimate objects; the important issue is that altruism demands
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that one abandon one's own concerns and do things which are contrary to
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one's rational self-interest in order to lead a morally acceptable life. This is
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the perfect basis for a tyrannical ideology since anyone who claims that he is
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being personally harmed by Communism, Naziism, or the Khmer Rouge, is
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merely being selfish and is thus an agent of poverty, national destruction, or
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corruption. (Do you see how the package deal works here? To oppose the
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movement is taken as opposition to the uncontroversial idea, and since that
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idea has been elevated to a moral primary, such opposition must be considered
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the worst possible sin.) So, how can anyone oppose the tyranny?
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Once one has swallowed the hook, the chance for the citizen to oppose the
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violation of his rights in a consistent way is *gone*. Accepting the premises
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that the tyrants are the advocates of the good, and that the good supersedes the
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rights of any individual leads inexorably to the conclusions of the ty-
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rants...that they should rule outside of considerations of individual rights.
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In our examples, anyone opposed to communism was considered to be in
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favor of poverty, and therefore could be treated without regard to individual
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rights, since communism was considered to be equivalent to the opposition to
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poverty, which was considered to be a moral primary. Anyone opposed to
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Naziism was considered to be in favor of the destruction of Germany, and
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therefore could be treated without regard to his rights. Anyone opposed to the
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Khmer Rouge was considered to be in favor of corruption, and therefore
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could be treated without regard to his rights. By grafting the movement to an
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uncontroversial idea which is a moral primary, tyrants can dismiss any
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objections to their movement as opposition to that moral idea. Opposition to
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the actions of the movement therefore becomes an unforgivable sin, subject to
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any retaliation the movement chooses.
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I should point out that the worst of such retaliation historically has not become
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a reality until *after* the tyrants took power. Obviously they can't build death
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camps before they take over, so you should not assume that any movement
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that hasn't imposed press censorship or started mass purges yet is not tyranni-
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cal. Mass killings and censorship are not the hallmarks of tyranny on the rise,
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they are the hallmarks of tyrannies in power.
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OK. Enough for history. Let's look at current affairs.
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Consider the reaction to those who speak out against environmentalism here in
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1992. Anyone opposed to the environmentalists is considered to be in favor of
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pollution, and can be treated without regard to his rights (at least if the
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environmentalists have their way).
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The essential message of the environmental movement is, "Pollution is bad.
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We are the people opposed to pollution. In order for pollution to be eliminat-
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ed, the people opposed to it must be given the power to violate individual
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rights. After all, helping others is the moral ideal and that's all we are doing.
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Trust us. we'll do it right this time." One can expect that the results of this
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package deal will be the same as those generated by its ideological counter-
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parts if the environmentalists have their way.
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--------------------------------
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Let's look at what several prominent environmentalists have to say in their
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own words . . .
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Christopher Manes, the editor of the Earth First! Journal writes "[T]he
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biological meltdown is most directly the result of values fundamental to what
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we have come to recognize as culture under the regime of technological
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society: economic growth, "progress", property rights, consumerism, religious
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doctrines about humanity's dominion over nature, [and] technocratic notions
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about achieving an optimum human existence at the expense of all other life-
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forms."
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Lynn White, a professor of history at UCLA wrote: "men must not crowd
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coyotes [or] try to exterminate locusts," because, he says: "we can sense our
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comradeship with a glacier, a subatomic particle, or a spiral nebula," and
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therefore, "We must extend compassion to rattlesnakes, and not just to koala
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bears."
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Paul Ehrlich, a prominent writer on population control in the Population
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Bomb writes: "We must have population control...by compulsion if voluntary
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methods fail."
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Dave Foreman, a founder of the Earth First! movement and a former repre-
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sentative for The Wilderness Society writes: "An individual human life has no
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more intrinsic value than does an individual Grizzly Bear life. Human suffer-
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ing resulting from drought in Ethiopia is tragic, yes, but the destruction there
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of other creatures and habitat is even more tragic."
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Kirkpatrick Sale, an "ecological historian" was quoted in the Washington Post
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as saying Western civilization is "founded on a set of ideas that are fundamen-
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tally pernicious, and they have to do with rationalism, humanism, materialism,
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science, progress. These are to my mind just pernicious concepts."
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David Graber is a research biologist with the National Park Service. In
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Graber's Los Angeles Times review of Bill McKibben's book, "The End of
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Nature" he wrote:
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"Somewhere along the line -- at about a billion [sic] years ago, maybe half
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that -- we quit the contract and became a cancer. We have become a plague
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upon ourselves and upon the Earth . . . Until such time as Homo sapiens
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should decide to rejoin nature, some of us can only hope for the right virus to
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come along."
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--------------------------------
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When I present this evidence and reasoning to friends and debating opponents,
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a common reaction is "Oh sure, those guys are bad, but they are just on the
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lunatic fringe. I'm no misanthrope, I just want clean air and clean water.
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That's why I'm an environmentalist, not because I believe in all those radical
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ideas." But aren't these "radicals" the ones who are leading influential envi-
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ronmentalist groups? Writing books? Making speeches? Raising and spending
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millions of dollars for environmentalist causes? Writing educational materials
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for our children? Even so, the everyday environmentalists say "That's not
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what *I* mean when I talk about environmentalism. I'm a moderate *and*
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I'm an environmentalist. Why don't you talk about what moderate environ-
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mentalists have to say?" Well, that's exactly what I would like to do this
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evening. Let's look at what Senator Al Gore, someone moderate enough to be
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elected vice-president of the United States, thinks is a proper response to the
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environmental "crisis".
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First, let's turn to the explanation Gore gives in his book "Earth In the
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Balance: Ecology & the Human Spirit" of why we are in such a terrible
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position in the first place. He essentially gives two reasons. First, that we
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human beings and Western civilization are mentally ill.
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On the one hand, we are individually "addicted" to civilization...
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[p. 222] "Industrial civilization's great engines of distraction still seduce us
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with a promise of fulfillment. Our new power to work our will
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upon the world can bring with it a sudden rush of exhilaration, not
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unlike the momentary "rush" experienced by drug addicts when a
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drug injected into their bloodstream triggers changes in the chemis-
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try of the brain."
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That is because we are more interested in technology than in nature:
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[p. 207] "[F]ar too often, our fascination with technology displaces what
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used to be a fascination with the wonder of nature."
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On the other hand Western civilization itself is "addicted" to technology...
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[p. 220] "I believe that our civilization is, in effect, addicted to the consump-
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tion of the Earth itself. This addictive relationship distracts us from
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the pain of what we have lost: a direct experience of our connection
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to the vividness, vibrancy, and aliveness of the rest of the natural
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world. The froth and frenzy of industrial civilization masks our
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deep loneliness for that communion with the world that can lift our
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spirits..."
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How can addicts of civilization solve this problem?
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[p. 225] "Rather than distracting their inner awareness through behavior,
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addicts must learn to face the real pain they have sought to avoid.
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Rather than distracting their inner awareness through behavior,
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addicts must learn to face their pain -- feel it, think it, absorb it,
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own it. Only then can they begin to honestly deal with it instead of
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running away."
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Notice that according to Gore, in order to even recognize that one is addicted,
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one needs to accept the idea that one is making choices because of addiction,
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rather than because of reason. Anyone who claims to make rational choices in
|
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|
favor of technological civilization, must be mentally ill and therefore blind to
|
|||
|
his illness. In fact, the only "solution" to this illness is for people to accept
|
|||
|
that it is real despite the fact that there is no evidence of this technologically-
|
|||
|
induced mental illness:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 236] "[Experts have shown] than the act of mourning the original loss
|
|||
|
while fully and consciously feeling the pain it has caused can heal
|
|||
|
the wound and free the victim from further enslavement."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, anyone who claims not to feel this "psychic pain", is a wounded, enslaved
|
|||
|
victim who can only be cured of this disease, which he doesn't know he has,
|
|||
|
by adopting an environmentalist view of civilization, by mourning, and by
|
|||
|
experiencing pain. Those who don't agree are mentally ill and are in need of
|
|||
|
re-education and psychological help. This is reminiscent of the attitude of the
|
|||
|
Soviet Union toward dissidents.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gore's second explanation is that the prime mover of history is not philoso-
|
|||
|
phy, necessity, money, religion, or great men, but the weather. He equivo-
|
|||
|
cates about this considerably explaining that he really isn't saying that climate
|
|||
|
is necessarily the most important factor in the course of civilization, but you
|
|||
|
can decide what he really thinks. He attributes more historic events to weather
|
|||
|
than I have time to recite, but I'll read you a few just to give you an idea of
|
|||
|
where Gore is coming from. He says weather caused:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Human evolution, p. 63
|
|||
|
Vanishing of the Minoan civilization, p. 58
|
|||
|
Mass disappearance of population in Scotland in 1150 BC, p. 58
|
|||
|
Cannibalism & failed harvests in China in 209 B.C. p. 59
|
|||
|
Migration of Indians to America, p. 61
|
|||
|
The rise of Mesopotamia and Jericho, p. 62, p. 103
|
|||
|
The rise of Egypt, p. 62
|
|||
|
End of northern bronze age, p. 64
|
|||
|
The invasion of Europe by germanics, p. 64
|
|||
|
Macedonian conquest of Greece, p. 64
|
|||
|
Alexander the Great's conquest, p. 64
|
|||
|
Expansion of Chinese civilization, p. 64
|
|||
|
Decline of the Mali civilization in West Africa, p. 65
|
|||
|
Disappearance of the Mycenaean civilization, p. 65
|
|||
|
Migration of bronze age people from Balkans, p. 65
|
|||
|
The collapse of Hittite civilization, p. 65
|
|||
|
The rise of Rome, p. 65
|
|||
|
The imperial nature of Roman civilization, p. 64
|
|||
|
The fall of Rome & Barbarian invasions, p. 64
|
|||
|
The fall of the Mayan civilization, p. 66,67,379
|
|||
|
The voyages of Leif Erikson & Eric the Red, p. 66
|
|||
|
French revolution, p. 59
|
|||
|
Napoleonic wars, p. 57
|
|||
|
Anti-semitic riots in Wurzburg, p. 57
|
|||
|
The European emigration to the United States, p. 71
|
|||
|
The rise of the modem bureaucratic state (including the New Deal), p. 73
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The renaissance and enlightenment, & individualism in politics, p. 68
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you still don't think that Gore considers weather to be the prime mover of
|
|||
|
history, I suggest you read his book and look at the rest of the list I didn't
|
|||
|
have time to recite.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Third, he explains that we as a civilization are a "dysfunctional family"
|
|||
|
because we can't seem to give up on science and reason, a dreadful hang-up
|
|||
|
according to Gore.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 230] "Like the rules of a dysfunctional family, the unwritten rules that
|
|||
|
govern our relationship to the environment have been passed down
|
|||
|
from one generation to the next since the time of Descartes, Bacon,
|
|||
|
and the pioneers of the scientific revolution some 375 years ago.
|
|||
|
We have absorbed these rules and lived by them for centuries
|
|||
|
without seriously questioning them. As in a dysfunctional family,
|
|||
|
one of the rules in a dysfunctional civilization is that you don't
|
|||
|
question the rules."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All of this addiction and dysfunctional interaction ultimately arises, according
|
|||
|
to Gore from "psychic pain" [p. 219] which we experience because we are
|
|||
|
separated from nature. This separation began with the invention of agriculture,
|
|||
|
and is directly related to the use of knowledge in the creation of civilization.
|
|||
|
Civilization keeps us "out of touch" with nature by creating artificial environ-
|
|||
|
ments like homes and fields. Being "in touch with nature" apparently requires
|
|||
|
the most primitive animal state of existence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another problem Gore cites is that we have too much information available to
|
|||
|
us:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 197] "... rarely do we examine the negative impact of information on our
|
|||
|
lives..."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 200] "We have...automated the process of generating data -- with inven-
|
|||
|
tions like the printing press and computer -- without taking into
|
|||
|
account our limited ability to absorb the new knowledge thus creat-
|
|||
|
ed."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 201] "Vast amounts of information ultimately become a kind of pollu-
|
|||
|
tion."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, we westerners and our civilization have been driven to insanity by too
|
|||
|
much civilization, technology and information. What method does Gore
|
|||
|
suggest we should use to understand our problem? He gives a long list of
|
|||
|
methods: the Hindu method, the American Indian method, the Buddhist
|
|||
|
method, the Christian method, the Baha'i method and others. All of these
|
|||
|
methods, Gore tells us, will lead to the same conclusion...that civilization is a
|
|||
|
failure, that technology doesn't work, and that we should give it all up for
|
|||
|
some higher purpose. This theme is repeated in his book again and again in
|
|||
|
regard to pesticides, fertilizers, mechanical trucks and plows, mass-produc-
|
|||
|
tion, decorations, electronic communication, transportation, and the mass-
|
|||
|
production of artwork. Gore bases this on some interesting and very scientific
|
|||
|
premises:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 244] "Whatever is done to the Earth must be done with an awareness that
|
|||
|
it belongs to God."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 243] "From the biblical point of view, nature is only safe from pollution
|
|||
|
and brought into a secure moral relationship when it is united with
|
|||
|
people who love it and care for it."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
His scientific analysis continues on:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 244] "...whatever verses are selected in an effort to lend precision to the
|
|||
|
Judeo-Christian definition of life's purpose, that purpose is clearly
|
|||
|
inconsistent with the reckless destruction of that which belongs to
|
|||
|
God and which God has seen as 'good'."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now we arrive at the real enemy...human efficacy and achievement. The idea
|
|||
|
that we can have what we want out of life is wrong according to Gore.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 206] "Technological hubris tempts us to lose sight of our place in the
|
|||
|
natural order and believe that we can achieve whatever we want."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To be more specific...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 240] "We have been so seduced by industrial civilization's promise to
|
|||
|
make our lives comfortable that we allow the synthetic routines of
|
|||
|
modern life to soothe us in an inauthentic world of our own mak-
|
|||
|
ing. Life can be easy, we assure ourselves. We need not suffer heat
|
|||
|
or cold; we need not sow or reap or hunt and gather. We can heal
|
|||
|
the sick, fly through the air, light up the darkness, and be enter-
|
|||
|
tained in our living rooms by orchestras and clowns whenever we
|
|||
|
like."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apparently, Gore thinks that medicine, aircraft, heating, light bulbs and
|
|||
|
agriculture are intrusions against God's creation. If God had meant us to be
|
|||
|
mobile, healthy, well-fed, warm in the winter, and able to read at night, he
|
|||
|
would have provided us with wings, disease-free bodies, heated caves, and
|
|||
|
nite-lights. Since he didn't, it is wrong for us to provide them for ourselves.
|
|||
|
That wasn't what God created and saw to be "good" .
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But isn't environmentalism supposed to be a scientific ideology? If so, why
|
|||
|
bother with the religious arguments? According to Gore, we can reconcile
|
|||
|
science with religion in such a way as to allow religious revelation to inform
|
|||
|
scientific opinion.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 253] "...science offers a new way to understand -- and perhaps begin
|
|||
|
healing -- the long schism between science and religion." ...and he
|
|||
|
goes on to explain that the Heisenberg uncertainty principle opens
|
|||
|
the way to allowing religion and science to coexist without contra-
|
|||
|
diction. Exactly how he proposes that this might be done, is not
|
|||
|
clear, but Gore really does think that religion can be used in place
|
|||
|
of science, and therefore that religion is a proper method for dis-
|
|||
|
covering the truth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In a C-Span interview just after his book was published, Gore explained that
|
|||
|
the source of the idea that civilization must be restrained is irrelevant. One
|
|||
|
can justify that idea using science, religion, social solidarity, whatever you
|
|||
|
like, as long as the conclusion is that we should renounce our civilization,
|
|||
|
technology, and power over nature. Any method that does not create that
|
|||
|
conclusion should be discarded.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The moral goal toward which that renunciation is to be directed is also
|
|||
|
optional according to Gore. You can give up your comforts for the benefit of
|
|||
|
the state, for your children, for your class, for the biosphere, for cute little
|
|||
|
animals, or for God. What matters is that we use *some* method to arrive at
|
|||
|
the conclusion that we should perform *some* acts of renunciation toward
|
|||
|
*some* end other than ourselves. This is simple unadorned altruism. The
|
|||
|
method of thought doesn't matter to Gore. The recipient of the sacrifices
|
|||
|
doesn't matter either. What matters, and he said this literally over and over
|
|||
|
again, is that we must sacrifice something, to anyone or anything, for any
|
|||
|
reason.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As Ayn Rand said in "For the New Intellectual", p. 73, "It stands to reason
|
|||
|
that where there's sacrifice, there's someone collecting the sacrificial offer-
|
|||
|
ings. Where there is service, there is someone being served. The man who
|
|||
|
speaks to you of sacrifice speaks of slaves and masters. And he intends to be
|
|||
|
the master."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To sum it up, the environment reigns supreme as a force in history. People
|
|||
|
and civilization are insane, and we should rely on religious insights in order to
|
|||
|
see this. We should choose some person, thing, or superstitious entity to
|
|||
|
sacrifice ourselves for, and give up everything we can to accomplish this.
|
|||
|
Anyone who selfishly refuses to do this is acting immorally because of his
|
|||
|
mental illness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OK, that's the theory . . . lets look at the practice that follows from it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gore outlines two political programs in his book. The first is a "Global
|
|||
|
Marshall Plan" by which the United States transfers billions of dollars to the
|
|||
|
rest of the world to get them to adopt environmentally benign lifestyles. The
|
|||
|
second is the SEI (Strategic Environment Initiative), the domestic counterpart
|
|||
|
which will completely transform the domestic economy according to a plan of
|
|||
|
environmentalist control. This pair of initiatives are, according to Gore,
|
|||
|
designed to transfer the entire foundation of civilization from its current focus
|
|||
|
on fulfilling individual human needs and desires toward one based on the
|
|||
|
preservation of the world in its natural state.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 269] "I have come to believe that we must take bold and unequivocal
|
|||
|
action; we must make the rescue of the environment the central
|
|||
|
organizing principle of civilization."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 270] "Although it has never yet been accomplished on a global scale, the
|
|||
|
establishment of a single shared goal as the central organizing
|
|||
|
principle for every institution of society has been realized by free
|
|||
|
nations several times in modern history."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In other words, rather than being in the business of promoting the lives of
|
|||
|
human beings, as it does now, civilization ought to primarily be in the
|
|||
|
business of making it more difficult for human beings to extract values from
|
|||
|
nature.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
According to Gore, existing civilization is based on the fulfillment of human
|
|||
|
wants and desires:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 243] "[O]ur civilization is built on the premise that we can use nature for
|
|||
|
our own ends."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and goes on to explain that this is contrary to religious dictates.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Civilization, Gore says, is wrong because it tries to do good things for people,
|
|||
|
when it should be trying to do good things for Bambi instead and he knows
|
|||
|
this because God told him so.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He explicitly calls for a change in the central organizing principle of civiliza-
|
|||
|
tion to one which has as its goal the maintenance of the world in a wild state,
|
|||
|
and he claims that the only way to accomplish this is by the establishment of a
|
|||
|
world-wide pseudo-government which will control all of the human activities
|
|||
|
which have any impact on the environment.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 204] "the people of all nations have begun to feel that they are part of a
|
|||
|
truly global civilization, united by common interests and concerns --
|
|||
|
among the most important of which is the rescue of our environ-
|
|||
|
ment. "
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 295] "what's required now is a plan that combines large-scale, long-term,
|
|||
|
carefully targeted financial aid to developing nations, massive
|
|||
|
efforts to design and then transfer to poor nations the new technolo-
|
|||
|
gies needed for sustained economic progress, a worldwide program
|
|||
|
to stabilize world population, and binding commitments by the
|
|||
|
industrial nations to accelerate their own transition to an environ-
|
|||
|
mentally responsible pattern of life."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 302] "We must negotiate international agreements that establish global
|
|||
|
constraints on acceptable behavior but that are entered into volun-
|
|||
|
tarily -- albeit with the understanding that there will be both incen-
|
|||
|
tives and legally valid penalties for non-compliance."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This [p. 301] "framework of global agreements" Gore insists is not a govern-
|
|||
|
ment despite its binding nature and enforcement mechanisms
|
|||
|
and Gore assures us that our fear of such a delegation of sover-
|
|||
|
eignty to a global government is a guarantee that it couldn't
|
|||
|
possibly develop. Clearly he wants it both ways...to have a
|
|||
|
global government to manage the economies of the world but
|
|||
|
without it having any power. For what it is worth, the index of
|
|||
|
the book says that this page contains a discussion of "Post-
|
|||
|
nationalism" even though that word is never actually used...it is
|
|||
|
pretty obvious that is really what he is proposing here, a global
|
|||
|
environmentalist state.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As you might guess, this switch from the idea of the individual good to the
|
|||
|
collective good involves a switch away from the idea of individual rights, and
|
|||
|
toward the power of a universal government just like the ones proposed by the
|
|||
|
other tyrannical ideologies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[p. 278] "we have tilted so far toward individual rights and so far away from
|
|||
|
any sense of obligation that it is now difficult to muster an adequate
|
|||
|
defense of any rights vested in the community at large or in the
|
|||
|
nation -- much less rights properly vested in all humankind or
|
|||
|
posterity."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With this anti-individual rights paradigm in hand, Gore can plan his domestic
|
|||
|
policy. He can argue for it on the basis that his opponents are insane and
|
|||
|
therefore need not be answered rationally. He can argue that religious deter-
|
|||
|
mination is more important than individual rights. He can argue that people
|
|||
|
ought to be prevented from using the Earth to improve their lives, and that all
|
|||
|
of this follows from the desire for clean water and air.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He can base it on that same old kind of package deal: "Pollution is bad. We
|
|||
|
are the people opposed to pollution. In order for pollution to be eliminated,
|
|||
|
the people opposed to it must be given the power to violate individual rights.
|
|||
|
After all, helping others is the moral ideal and that's all we are doing. Trust
|
|||
|
us, we'll do it right this time."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Let's look at the Strategic Environment Initiative. Here is an outline of the
|
|||
|
parts of the plan:
|
|||
|
[p. 319-320]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Tax incentives for government-approved technologies and
|
|||
|
disincentives for those the government doesn't approve of.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Research and development funding for government-approved tech-
|
|||
|
nologies and bans for all those the government doesn't approve of.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. Government purchasing programs for the new technologies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. Government promises of large profits in a market certain to emerge
|
|||
|
as older technologies are phased out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. The establishment of rigorous technology assessment centers which
|
|||
|
evaluate new technologies and determine whether they are "appro-
|
|||
|
priate".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. The establishment of a network of training centers to create a core
|
|||
|
of environmentalist planners and technicians to control third world
|
|||
|
economies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. The imposition of export controls in developed countries to assess a
|
|||
|
technology's ecological effect and prevent all trade the government
|
|||
|
doesn't approve of.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. The expansion of intellectual property rights to include genetic
|
|||
|
materials which will be the property of the governments where
|
|||
|
various species emerged.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This amounts to complete domination of the domestic economy by environ-
|
|||
|
mentalist government agencies. It is quite consistent with Gore's proposal to
|
|||
|
change the central organizing principle of civilization to be the preservation of
|
|||
|
the world in a natural state. That being the case, individual rights, economic
|
|||
|
efficiency, and human advancement must all be made subservient to environ-
|
|||
|
mentalist dictates.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gore doesn't believe that just dominating the lives of Americans is good
|
|||
|
enough. He insists that the only way he can achieve his goals is through
|
|||
|
coordinated global actions, through a global state with powers of economic
|
|||
|
planning, technology approval, redistribution of income, and enforcement of
|
|||
|
its demands. Of course, everyone will voluntarily cooperate with this, so no
|
|||
|
violence will be necessary. "After all, helping others is the moral ideal, and
|
|||
|
that is all we are doing."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here are a few of his "strategic goals":
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. A comprehensive population control program, p. 311-314
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. A blur in what Gore calls the artificial distinction between hard and
|
|||
|
soft currencies in international trade, p. 344
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. The establishment of debt-for-nature swaps whereby poor countries
|
|||
|
have their debts forgiven in return for their promise to leave their
|
|||
|
resources untouched, p. 345
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. The establishment of a CO2 trading credit system with fewer and
|
|||
|
fewer credits being issued each year, p. 345
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. A change in the way GNP and productivity are calculated to include
|
|||
|
the use of natural resources to counteract the apparent creation of
|
|||
|
wealth when a resource is used to create goods, p. 346
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. A shift in the legal burden of proof from those who want to prove
|
|||
|
environmental harm to those who want to prove they are innocent,
|
|||
|
p. 341
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This last is particularly ominous since it assumes that everyone is guilty of
|
|||
|
crimes without proof, and with counterproof an impossibility because it is
|
|||
|
impossible to prove a negative. We are to be considered guilty until proven
|
|||
|
innocent of crimes which violate the central organizing principle of civiliza-
|
|||
|
tion. What could be worse?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are some additional ominous items in the joint Clinton-Gore campaign
|
|||
|
book, "Putting People First" which are not in "Earth in the Balance." For
|
|||
|
example:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. A national identification card with a magnetic strip which will be
|
|||
|
required to gain access to government services such as medical
|
|||
|
care.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. A national service corps where young people will serve the state in
|
|||
|
order to gain access to government services.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. The establishment of a government-controlled national computer
|
|||
|
network linking every home, library, and classroom in the country.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. A change in the corporate average fuel economy regulations from
|
|||
|
current 27.5 MPG to 40 MPG by the year 2000 and to 45 MPG by
|
|||
|
2015.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. Massive spending on public transportation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Opposition to use of nuclear power.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. A national program to re-educate citizens to produce environmental-
|
|||
|
ly correct behavior.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Elsewhere in "Putting People First", we see proposals for government control
|
|||
|
of other areas as well, including doctors, insurance companies, hospitals,
|
|||
|
pharmaceutical companies, labor, transportation, education, energy produc-
|
|||
|
tion, civilian R&D, the arts, political elections, day care, space exploration,
|
|||
|
computer telecommunication, the housing market...have I left anything out?
|
|||
|
The principle is clear. If the citizens are not doing what the wise managers of
|
|||
|
the environment desire, there is no reason why the individual rights of the
|
|||
|
people involved should get in the way. "In order for pollution to be eliminat-
|
|||
|
ed, those opposed to pollution must be given the power to violate individual
|
|||
|
rights. Trust us, we'll do it right this time."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What's that you say? You don't want government control of everything? You
|
|||
|
don't want a global state whose central organizing principle is to thwart your
|
|||
|
use of the earth to make your life better? You want the government to respect
|
|||
|
your rights? Why, if that's what you want, you must want to drink polluted
|
|||
|
water and breathe poisonous air! Remember, "Pollution is bad. Environmen-
|
|||
|
talists are the people opposed to pollution. In order for pollution to be elimi-
|
|||
|
nated, environmentalists must be given the power to violate individual rights.
|
|||
|
After all, helping others is the moral ideal and that's all we are doing. Trust
|
|||
|
them, they'll do it right this time."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The unstated argument here is that individual rights are incompatible with life,
|
|||
|
and that respecting them will lead to death and suffering. Of course, if that
|
|||
|
argument were to be addressed in this head-on way by the environmentalists,
|
|||
|
they would have to make admissions they would prefer to avoid. Among
|
|||
|
them, what individual rights actually are, that environmentalists are opposed
|
|||
|
to individual rights, and that this is on the grounds that citizens are incompe-
|
|||
|
tent to arrange their own affairs, and must turn to government bureaucrats for
|
|||
|
orders. Free thought and free action are what individual rights exist to defend.
|
|||
|
If they are forced to address the question, environmentalists have to admit that
|
|||
|
they are opposed to free thought and free action and in favor of government
|
|||
|
control of individual lives and property.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As we look at the history of the 20th century, we observe that the most
|
|||
|
"toxic" thing present is not plutonium, dioxin, pesticide residues, or mercury.
|
|||
|
These have at worst killed a few thousand people. Far more dangerous than
|
|||
|
these are the things they combat: spoiled food, the winter cold, starvation, and
|
|||
|
disease. Before the 20th century these were very wide-scale killers and
|
|||
|
cripplers of human beings, and they have been in the 20th century where
|
|||
|
modern technology was not available. But both of these hazards pale in
|
|||
|
comparison to the hazards of political tyranny. Governments using ideological
|
|||
|
package deals of the kind environmentalists present have killed hundreds of
|
|||
|
millions and enslaved billions more. Even if there really are dangerous
|
|||
|
environmental catastrophes looming on the horizon, abandoning technological
|
|||
|
civilization, and granting the government (a world-wide one at that) the power
|
|||
|
to violate individual rights is FAR more dangerous.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If anything, the environmentalists are worse than the Nazis, the Khmer
|
|||
|
Rouge, and the Communists. At least the Nazis, Communists, and Khmer
|
|||
|
Rouge were claiming *some* kind of human goal as the reason for their
|
|||
|
activities. The environmentalists are explicitly promoting the idea that having
|
|||
|
human needs and desires met is a bad thing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I hope you can see by now that there can be no such thing as a "moderate
|
|||
|
environmentalist" any more than there can be a "moderate Nazi", "moderate
|
|||
|
communist" or a "moderate axe murderer". Anyone who grants moral support
|
|||
|
to an ideology of this kind is helping to bring it into reality...not just the
|
|||
|
"clean air part" or the "anti-poverty part" but the whole package deal, worm,
|
|||
|
hook, and all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, what is the position of the leader of the Republican Party, George Bush,
|
|||
|
on this? He says "I'm an environmentalist too... just a moderate one."
|
|||
|
Unfortunately, Bush and many other conservatives think that the way to win
|
|||
|
battles against those who want to violate individual rights is to leap out ahead
|
|||
|
of the pack and show that they agree with every premise of the environmental-
|
|||
|
ists, and to claim that their policies are every bit as severe as those of the
|
|||
|
radicals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Witness George Bush's recent performance at the Rio Earth Summit [June
|
|||
|
1992]. Rather than pointing out the scientific faults of the environmentalist
|
|||
|
cause, or pointing out the moral flaws in the idea that governments should
|
|||
|
violate the rights of individuals, or pointing out the counterproductivity of
|
|||
|
various environmental proposals, or simply staying away from the Earth
|
|||
|
Summit entirely, he conceded every point immediately. He begged the
|
|||
|
audience to believe that the Clean Air Act, the policies of the EPA, and a
|
|||
|
myriad of other laws he has supported are as strong as the restrictions the
|
|||
|
radical environmentalists wish to impose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is obviously false. Worse yet, by arguing this way, opponents of the
|
|||
|
environmentalists, such as Bush is supposed to be, cannot hope to win. They
|
|||
|
concede every important point before they even begin. They have swallowed
|
|||
|
the environmental package deal hook, line and sinker.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In political life today, there are no anti-environmentalists. There are only
|
|||
|
"pretend environmentalists" like Bush who pretend to be both pro- and anti-
|
|||
|
environmentalist, and there are "moderate environmentalists" like Gore who
|
|||
|
offer the public a dangerous package deal. This situation is not a good one.
|
|||
|
We are not given a choice between environmentalism and anti-environmental-
|
|||
|
ism, but between enthusiastic genuine environmentalism and weak-kneed "me-
|
|||
|
too" environmentalism. It is heads-environmentalism and tails-environmental-
|
|||
|
ism.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What conservatives like Bush lack is a rational philosophy to counter the
|
|||
|
irrational philosophy of the environmentalists. At best, they simply offer no
|
|||
|
philosophical alternative, and at worst, they offer a religious or emotional one
|
|||
|
which (fortunately) they are shy about expressing. To combat a philosophy
|
|||
|
one cannot use emotion or raw conviction as intellectual weapons. The
|
|||
|
opponents of environmentalism are in desperate need of philosophical ideas.
|
|||
|
What they need is a philosophical answer to the people like Al Gore who deny
|
|||
|
free will in favor of climatological determinism. What they need is an answer
|
|||
|
to those who deny reason in favor of religion, emotion, or social consensus as
|
|||
|
a method of thought. What they need is an answer to those who deny the
|
|||
|
objectivity of values in favor of intrinsic values based on some irrational
|
|||
|
revelation. What they need is an answer to those who deny individual rights in
|
|||
|
favor of collectivistic tyranny.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In short, what they need is an *intellectual* defense of their opposition of
|
|||
|
tyranny. Without one, they will ultimately fail in their fight. What they need
|
|||
|
is Objectivist philosophy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For those of you who may not be familiar with Objectivism, I would like to
|
|||
|
present to you the outlines of the Ojectivist point of view to help you under-
|
|||
|
stand why such an intellectual foundation is necessary for an *intellectual*
|
|||
|
defense of any ideas whether they are scientific, moral or political.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Obviously, I cannot in the few minutes remaining give a thorough exposition
|
|||
|
of objectivist philosophy. What I can do is recommend that you read Ayn
|
|||
|
Rand's books: "Atlas Shrugged", "Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal," and
|
|||
|
"The New Left: The Anti-Industrial Revolution." I also recommend
|
|||
|
"Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand" and "The Ominous Parallels" by
|
|||
|
Leonard Peikoff. I also recommend Ayn Rand's novella "Anthem," it you
|
|||
|
want to have a look at the kind of "in touch with nature" society these "mod-
|
|||
|
erate" environmentalists propose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although I cannot give a complete exposition of Objectivism in the remaining
|
|||
|
time, I will offer a brief outline:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are 5 branches of philosophy, four of which are important in the
|
|||
|
context we are examining:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Metaphysics - Which answers questions about the fundamental
|
|||
|
nature of reality.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Epistemology - Which deals with the nature of knowledge and the
|
|||
|
means by which it can be acquired.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. Ethics - Which deals with questions regarding what choices one
|
|||
|
ought to make with that knowledge.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. Politics - Which deals with issues of ethics in a social context.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Let's look briefly at each of these:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In metaphysics, some believe that the ultimate foundation of existence is one's
|
|||
|
own mind and that there is no external reality. Others believe that it is the
|
|||
|
collective mind of society which is the source of existence. For others, it is
|
|||
|
the mind of God, and for others, there is simply no reality and no way to
|
|||
|
know anything about it if it did exist. The objectivist view is that reality *is*
|
|||
|
the foundation of existence. Objectivism says that *External reality exists
|
|||
|
independent of the mind.*
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In epistemology, there are many who believe intuition, religious revelation,
|
|||
|
social consensus, or word games are the means by which knowledge can be
|
|||
|
acquired. Others deny that knowledge of the real world is possible by any
|
|||
|
means. The objectivist position is that human beings possess free will and can
|
|||
|
choose to use a process of reason and science on information presented by the
|
|||
|
senses in order to achieve knowledge of reality. Objectivism says that *reason
|
|||
|
allows knowledge of existence.*
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In ethics, many believe that people should make their choices of action based
|
|||
|
on what would benefit the race, the class, the nation, one's neighbor, God, or
|
|||
|
the ecosystem. Others claim that any kind of ethical principle is naive and that
|
|||
|
one ought to act on the expediency of the moment. The objectivist position is
|
|||
|
that one ought to make choices which are to one's rational self-interest.
|
|||
|
Objectivism says that *rational choices of action are those which are consistent
|
|||
|
with one's self-interest.*
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In politics, many people believe that the proper role of government is to plan
|
|||
|
the lives of individuals, to do the will of the majority, to serve the will of
|
|||
|
God, to serve the interests of the powerful, to serve the interests of the weak,
|
|||
|
to maximize the common good, or to preserve nature against human intru-
|
|||
|
sions. The objectivist position is that the proper purpose of the government is
|
|||
|
to protect the rights of individuals by outlawing the initiation of force and
|
|||
|
fraud from human affairs. Objectivism says that *the rational way to live in a
|
|||
|
social context is by the principle of individual rights.*
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To review:
|
|||
|
External reality exists independent of the mind.
|
|||
|
Reason allows knowledge of existence.
|
|||
|
Rational choices of action are those which are consistent with one's self-
|
|||
|
interest.
|
|||
|
The rational way to live in a social context is by the principle of individu-
|
|||
|
al rights.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The objectivist political message is this: "The initiation of force is bad. In
|
|||
|
order for the initiation of force to be eliminated, the government must protect
|
|||
|
the individual rights of every citizen and never violate these rights itself. After
|
|||
|
all, rational self-interest is the moral ideal, and that is the source of the idea
|
|||
|
that individuals have rights." This is different from the tyrannical ideologies in
|
|||
|
that it doesn't demand that people renounce the control of their lives to the
|
|||
|
government. It demands that the government renounce the violation of rights
|
|||
|
and prevent others from doing so as well. This provides the kind of environ-
|
|||
|
ment where individuals are free to solve their problems, economic, personal,
|
|||
|
environmental, and otherwise.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You cannot mix and match these positions. It you believe that the foundation
|
|||
|
of reality is social consensus, how could you conclude that individuals have
|
|||
|
inalienable rights? Maybe next week there will be a poll in which most people
|
|||
|
deny individual rights.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It you believe that reality cannot be known, how can you conclude that one
|
|||
|
course of action is actually better than any other?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It you conclude that serving God is the ethical ideal, how can you consistently
|
|||
|
defend a secular government? What if God demands theocracy? What if God
|
|||
|
changes his mind?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Just as the objectivist ideas of reality, reason, egoism, and individual rights
|
|||
|
are consistent with one another, so are theism, skepticism, irrationalism,
|
|||
|
altruism, and tyranny. If you are consistent (and most people are not) you will
|
|||
|
ultimately have to choose between these incompatible systems of ideas.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At any point in the philosophical hierarchy, objectivism answers the argu-
|
|||
|
ments of environmentalists that the "me-tooism" of the kind Bush exemplifies
|
|||
|
cannot.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In metaphysics, the environmentalists claim that the ground of existence is
|
|||
|
anything but reality, and that allows them to turn away from the facts when it
|
|||
|
suits them. Objectivism claims that reality is a primary which cannot be
|
|||
|
ignored or wished away.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In epistemology, environmentalists claim that religion, intuition, and tradition
|
|||
|
just are as valid as reason and science. Objectivism counters this with an
|
|||
|
insistence on observation and reason. Each position flows from the previous
|
|||
|
metaphysical premises. A conservative who agrees that reality is not a prima-
|
|||
|
ry, but a matter of social consensus, religion, or intuition, cannot consistently
|
|||
|
adopt a pro-scientific position and will have to slug it out in the
|
|||
|
epistemological free-for-all that results when one's ideas have no firm ground
|
|||
|
to stand on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In ethics, environmentalists claim that trees and animals have "intrinsic
|
|||
|
value." How do they know? They "feel it", or God has told them so. Without
|
|||
|
a rational epistemology, how can such claims be discredited? A conservative
|
|||
|
who agrees that non-rational methods of thought are valid cannot consistently
|
|||
|
accuse environmentalists of flaws in the way they determine what has value
|
|||
|
and why. He has thrown away every tool that could have disproven the ethical
|
|||
|
claims of the environmentalists.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In politics, environmentalists claim that the government knows best how to
|
|||
|
organize society and that individuals ought to be forced to conform to the
|
|||
|
demands of the government as long as the world is being maintained in a
|
|||
|
natural state. They claim that people have no rights if the government consid-
|
|||
|
ers itself to have a good reason to violate them. A conservative who simply
|
|||
|
asserts the existence of rights (using some equally flawed epistemology based
|
|||
|
on emotion, intuition, tradition, or revelation) can't even explain what rights
|
|||
|
are. His arguments are just as weak as those of the environmentalists. They
|
|||
|
typically amount to nothing more than appeals to emotion. Such arguments are
|
|||
|
only empty shells. Their foundation has been undercut by a lack of any
|
|||
|
intellectual foundation in ethics.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Finally, when the environmentalists claim that this or that law ought to be
|
|||
|
passed or that this or that industry ought to be attacked and destroyed, the
|
|||
|
conservatives show their bankruptcy. They have no intellectual arguments with
|
|||
|
which to combat such laws. They are reduced to pathetic me-tooism rather
|
|||
|
than a principled opposition. They have no principles and nothing to build
|
|||
|
them out of.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How have large business concerns reacted to this onslaught? No better than
|
|||
|
the politicians, I am afraid. They have pumped millions of dollars into
|
|||
|
environmentalist groups, and into their own ad campaigns that promote their
|
|||
|
products as being ecologically beneficial. They hope that by doing this, they
|
|||
|
will get the environmentalists to leave them alone. They are just as wrong as
|
|||
|
the supposed opponents of environmentalism in government. They too need an
|
|||
|
intellectual defense of their existence and of their freedom, and without one,
|
|||
|
they will continue answering attacks with bribes rather than with moral
|
|||
|
condemnation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, how can one fight against this ideology once one concludes that it is
|
|||
|
tyrannical?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you are a part of the political process as either an intellectual, a politician,
|
|||
|
or a voter, you need to take sides. A "moderate" position is no more accept-
|
|||
|
able against environmentalist tyranny than against Nazi or Communist tyran-
|
|||
|
ny. It you are a businessman, you must stop sanctioning your destroyers. Stop
|
|||
|
supporting environmentalist groups with donations. Stop advertising your
|
|||
|
products as "recyclable". Stop any support of the environmental movement
|
|||
|
that may encroach on your work. Lastly, if you are a student, parent, or a
|
|||
|
teacher, work to restore a sound science curriculum to your school. If there
|
|||
|
are environmentalist materials in your curriculum, complain about them.
|
|||
|
Learning about science is important, learning environmentalist pseudo-science
|
|||
|
is not, and every hour wasted discussing the apocalypse of the month is time
|
|||
|
that could have been spent studying important things like literature, science,
|
|||
|
history, and math. Youth is too important to waste on pseudo-scientific
|
|||
|
propaganda.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When citizens are presented with a tyrannical ideology, they can either accept
|
|||
|
the package deal and suffer the consequences or recognize it for the trap it is
|
|||
|
and reject it. Germany, Russia, and Cambodia failed to do so, and suffered
|
|||
|
the horrible consequences we have all seen.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It you were a fisherman, you might offer advice to nearby fish along the
|
|||
|
following lines: "Worms taste good. This tidbit contains a worm. In order for
|
|||
|
you to benefit from the worm, you have to swallow it all the way down. After
|
|||
|
all, eating is the most important thing fish do, and that's all I'm suggesting.
|
|||
|
Don't look too closely, it'll be tasty this time." I hope I have helped to
|
|||
|
cleared the way for you to see that environmentalism is a worm on a hook. I
|
|||
|
urge you not to take the bait.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thank you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|