hjmaiere: thanks for the engagement. Sorry you`re leaving so soon.
Look, I`m strongly opposed to the war, too. But those who started it and are burning through ferocious sums off-budget are the same ones who turned K street into a pork orgy feast while distracting us with loud claims that we need to be really, REALLY afraid of Islamofascists, gays, unmarried mothers who want abortions, enviros, liberals and immigrants. They are NOT the ones who are saying we should do anything about climate change other than study it. Given the Luntz memo and the Bush administration`s famous closeness to oil and coal interests, it`s a wonder you don`t think that the reason why they`ve been stonewalling (and wailing about lefty enviros - even while ignoring the scientific, corporate, investor, foreign, defense, intelligence, religious and other concern) is because they`ve been paid good money to do so (and have their own money at stake).
In any cas, an argument against he way is not an argument for denying climate change. Even Ron Paul has said that he thinks we should be actively discussing this issue with other countries.
By the way, it was Bush`s father who, after much foot-dragging, signed the Framework Climate Convention that led to the IPCC - certainly not Dweeb Bush or Cheney. This administration approved the IPCC`s reports only because it had no scientific grounds for refusing, after doing its best to water them down. FWIW, Exxon`s scientists are also active participants in the IPCC and has approved the reports.
The concern is not with the volcano itself. The concern is with the unimaginable amounts of glacial ice that will be dumped into the ocean in a matter of minutes.
It`s hard to know wher you`re coming from. It seems like you`re saying that because we never know when our car might be hit by a meteor or lightning, fall into an unknown sinkhole or enter a patch of blinding fog that we shouldn`t worry about how many drinks we have after we get in the car. Why exercise any control over ourselves, ever?
Further, as a scientific matter, it`s been known for decades that Antarctica has active volcanoes and new ones are still being discovered. But we have no evidence from seismic tracks etc. that any of this is new; in fact the one more recently discovered beneath an ice sheet appears to have been active for around 2000 years, so whatever effect it`s now having isn`t new - and Antarctic melting is accelerating:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080120160720.htm
http://www.antarcticconnection.com/antarctic/science/mterebus.shtml
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/resources/coldscience/avolcano.htm
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2008-010
Juan:
I`m happy you want to see subsidies eliminated, and good for you on saying it here before me - you win the race! Now I challenge you to keep finding ways to make common cause with those hateful enviros to make the world a better place. It might be a more successful stragegy than simply hating enviros. But if you choose not to, you`re certainly in good company here, with folks who only want to argue with strawmen and those they can most easily demonize.
(In that connection, you might consider looking at my many posts on my blog about guys like Yandle, Callahan, Richman, Adler and others who are in favor of decentralization on climate change and elimination of subsidies, etc.)
TT: "While I prefer where possible to strengthen property rights and tort law protections against pollution, rather than trying to have federal regulation for everything, I also realize that for certain cases our shared tool of government may serve productive or even essential purposes"
You: So, you are a libertarian who believes that government is essential to protect the enviroment...
Juan, I`m in favor of rolling back our federal government generally, but I`m not an anarchist. As for why I believe that a government tole is necessary and how I think the government should play a role, I can lead a horse to water, but I can`t make him drink. You can read the things I write and argue with me, or you can refuse - you`re in charge of your own reality. But Mises himself did not argue against a state role in creating/enforcing proerty rights, and there are plenty of libertarians who agree. You`ll find some of them, and some of my further thoughts, here
http://mises.com/blogs/tokyotom/archive/2007/10/12/draft.aspx
http://mises.com/blogs/tokyotom/archive/2007/10/12/building-property-rights-for-common-resources.aspx
http://mises.com/blogs/tokyotom/archive/2008/04/05/bruce-yandle-on-quot-no-regrets-quot-quot-free-market-environmentalist-quot-approaches-to-climate-change-policy.aspx
http://mises.com/blogs/tokyotom/archive/2008/02/14/edwin-dolan-applying-the-lockean-framework-to-climate-change.aspx
http://mises.com/blogs/tokyotom/archive/2007/10/17/fighting-over-the-wheel-of-government.aspx
http://libertarian-left.blogspot.com/
You: With respect to science I think that my view of it is humble, while yours is indeed full of hubris. You think that state funded 'scientitsts' have figured out how the world works using some debatable facts and a bunch of math formulae as premises - I'd call that naive, if it weren't wholly politically motivated, wich, of course, it is.
It`s interesting that you, with your "humble" view, do nothing but makes unsupported, dismissive and conclusory statements about science, while I "arrogantly" try to explain my view and provide support for it. I do not believe that my view is perfect or complete, and I am always willing to test it, in the way Ludwig von Mises said:
"Man can never become omniscient. He can never be absolutely certain that his inquiries were not misled and that what he considers as certain truth is not error. All that man can do is to submit all his theories again and again to the most critical reexamination." - Human Action
Is your view of the "non-science" of climate change really as "punture-proof" as you make it out to be? Why do you need to assume that Exxon has ever changed its mind on climate science (as opposed to its political interests)? It is investing millions in basic research to develop new, carbon-lite technologies.
http://mises.com/blogs/tokyotom/archive/2007/12/04/murdoch-amp-149-other-top-vile-collectivists-capitalists-call-for-global-poverty.aspx
Regards,
Tom
"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself - and you are the easiest person to fool."
-- Richard Feynman