I don't "want" anything - I am analyzing the events of the last several years. The grand program for global climate regulation has collapsed. It was far too large and expansive to begin with. If its backers really want their concerns addressed, they should refocus to smaller and more local initiatives, such as carbon soot cleanup in China.tomclarke wrote:Wow.djolds1 wrote:Green-ism has collapsed in the last three years.
The huge expense of the desired global regulation (and pay offs to the developing world) can no longer be afforded;
Devil-take-the-hindmost mentalities are undermining the EU, refiring nationalism, and consequently undermining the willingness to submit to additional money-demanding transnational authorities; and
It is obvious the Kyoto is on the rocks and there will be no follow-on.
Copenhagen 2009 was bad, Durban 2010 was a joke, and no one even noticed the Bonn 2011 IPCC Conference. And to add insult to injury, the Climategate-1 and -2 datadumps have undermined the Olympian reputations of the pro-CAGW worker bees.
Time for the Reds to find yet another new home.
So what is your solution for how we share common resources: atmosphere, seas, etc?
You sound as though what you want is a free-for-all in which there is no agreement between parties and therefore the resources are used non-optimally.
"Nuclear" is a boogeyman, and has been for 50 years. The geopolitical arguments wrt nukes in the hands of rogue regimes outweigh the environmental ones by far. And IIRC, the long-term global effects of atmospheric testing during the early Cold War have been entirely marginal, so your basic assumption is questionable.tomclarke wrote:Suppose Iran (or somewhere else) decides that atmospheric nuclear tests are sensible. Is it greenism to try to stop them? And if not, why are emasures to reduce or stop other undesirable global consequences wrong?