Juan:
Sorry; I'm definitely not saying that you are stupid. You are obviously smart. But you are obviously hostile, and I do think that as a result you keep missing the point - even when it is the chief point of hjmaiere's post You say:
I thought it was clear that the allusion to nazism underlined the totalitarian features of 'enviromentalism'.
Was that even remotely his point? He says:
Specifically, a threat to the tribe will very reliably invoke people's instinct to shut off their own individual critical analysis and submit to tribal consensus. In our evolutionary past there were situations where this instinct was critical to the survival of the tribe as a whole, but as our ability to survive extended beyond a hand-to-mouth existence, such instincts increasingly served as a mechanism of intra-tribal predation. The predatory classes thus establish, concentrate, and institutionalize political authority by routinely invoking threats to the tribe. ... But a threat to the tribe doesn't have to be a traditional foreign enemy to be useful to the predatory classes. An icon of imending moral decrepitude or the environmental catastrophy du jour can be just as effective.
hjmaiere is trying to first show that, because of our tribal nature, we can easily be misled by claims of threats to the tribe, viz., even smart people can be manipulated. He then show that this is exactly what the Bush administration has done. Finally, he argues that elite predatory classes are trying to do the same thing with respect to alleged environmental crises by trying to stir up a wave of fear and manipulating those who believe it to be real, for their own benefit. Okay, there may be some who fit this bill, at least in part, but hjmaiere is not arguing that everyone who is concerned is part of the elite, predatory class - rather, he is implying that practically everyone is being manipulated. He is saying that we need to be careful of being manipulated by elites via tribal reactions; you helpfully display a tribal counter-example, by presuming that hjmaiere is acting like you, in pretending as if everyone who professes a concern about climate change or our shared environment is a totalitarian. Haven't you just proven his point about tribal responses mess with our critical facilities?
Another example of how you miss the point is here:
TT: The solutions are being proposed by a MUCH wider swath than those "enviros" whom you hate so much.
You: Hm. So this is not about truth, but about numbers ?
TT: Don't be deliberately obtuse. The point is that you dismiss all others by simply focussing on a strawman - the evil enviros, who aren't in charge of anything, anyway.
You also claim to have won an argument when you say we should do away with subsidies, when it's a point I've made elsewhere many times, over an over.
You also keep throwing out sweeping, conclusory unsupported statements like this, and refuse ever to engage when I try to explain what I mean - based on any number of staunch Austrians and libertarians:
You don't care about the rights of the individual. You're interested in protecting the 'enviroment' by violating individual rights, through government, wich is essential (so you claim).
your position ... is not consistent with libertarian principles.
Finally, as you yourself conclude, you are not interested in persuading me, but only in showing how weak my position is. In short, you are treating me as an enemy, and are not interested in productive engagement, but in defeating me - but since you refuse to try to understand what my position is or my reasons for it are - you are really not attacking me, but a strawman, and an unsupported one at that.
Fine; you can have a war. But I'm not going to join it.
"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself - and you are the easiest person to fool."
-- Richard Feynman