At what point did we become "unsustainable?"

When did we become "unsustainable?"


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Libertarians support tort law, meaning that if it can be proven that pollution spreads to other property owners, the latter are legally entitled to ask for compensation or cessation for that pollution. This idea is part of the wider Libertarian on property rights.

For example, if a factory is about to emit pollution that could potentionally and ruin a garden you own as property, that factory may not emit pollution without your permission, unless it finds a way to do so without (directly) affecting your property. If the factory does so anyway and your garden is demonstratably affected by it, you may sue the factory for that and receive compensation and/or cessation.

Firefighting instead of fire prevention then? I'm not too satisfied with that system.
 
Firefighting instead of fire prevention then? I'm not too satisfied with that system.


Particularly because the cause and effect are much harder to prove and localize. There are 1000 companies polluting a river, and so a well is ruined. Which company did it?

The burden of proof becomes impossible. Add to that the fact that the court favors the richer party to the suit, and it is a wholly impossible standard of protection for the weaker party.
 
1960-1970 AD

With the embrace of the Great Society humankind loses it last best hope of sustainability. At that point the idea that we can have our cake and eat it too begins to erode the values that lifted human society out of the jungle and hence guarantees our return to the primative.

Nothing less that a reduction of 80% of human population will result.

Government of the elite for the benefit of the mob is a dead end.
 
Science may yet dig us out. But I consider the era of exploration to be the tipping point. Before the 1600's we hadn't really scratched the planet.
 
Science may yet dig us out. But I consider the era of exploration to be the tipping point. Before the 1600's we hadn't really scratched the planet.

Locally, we definitely did. Even pre-industrial societies can cause extreme environmental damage, if you let them run amok in a relatively localized environment (Maya in Yucatan, etc.) It's interesting because those societies which did exceed the limits of their environment usually collapsed rather spectacularly.

We're not exceeding the limits of our environment globally, so it will be "interesting" what happens to us.
 
I don't consider a local disturbance beyond the stability of the planet. Thus disregarding such examples.

Indeed, I wish I would be here to experience it. The strife will drive man in a way no other has. The scientific advance at that point will be wowmazin
 
Well it wouldn't be our "final" stupidity would it!
 
Libertarians support tort law, meaning that if it can be proven that pollution spreads to other property owners, the latter are legally entitled to ask for compensation or cessation for that pollution. This idea is part of the wider Libertarian on property rights.

For example, if a factory is about to emit pollution that could potentionally and ruin a garden you own as property, that factory may not emit pollution without your permission, unless it finds a way to do so without (directly) affecting your property. If the factory does so anyway and your garden is demonstratably affected by it, you may sue the factory for that and receive compensation and/or cessation.
So, under this principle, all of society would be entitled to a compensation for air pollution?

Maybe we should found an institution to collect and distribute these compensations :mischief:
 
I don't consider a local disturbance beyond the stability of the planet. Thus disregarding such examples.

Indeed, I wish I would be here to experience it. The strife will drive man in a way no other has. The scientific advance at that point will be wowmazin

I think sustainable/unsustainable is a very wide term - like responsible/unresponsible. You can't differentiate between local disruption and planetary wide disruption - it still is unsustainable and has real consequenses for the region that's affected.

Besides, if you look at global risruption there really is only our output that's unsustainable. More specifically our waste in the form of CO2 and the planets ability to recycle it into O2. And we're still zeroing in to what extent this is actually true, but acidification of the oceans is a good pointer that we've crossed past the ability of the oceans ability to recycle CO2.

A very good example of clearly defined unsustainable lifestyle can be found on the Eastern Islands. It used to have a rich subtropical/tropical forest up to 400 years ago, the civilization that used to live and thrive there is now gone, and the forest was utterly exterminated due to unsustainable deforestation - to the point where it still isn't back today. In other words it was total unsustainable lifestyle that led to the ultimate doom of the trapped polynesian civilization living there(with the few exceptions like the odd Mayan surviving their own collapse).

Just because we're doing it on a grander scale today doesn't mean we haven't done so in the past with tragic results. I bet it was a cold and hungry hunter/gatherer population that had to survive past the extermination of the mammuths, and that it had a real impact on a population that had gotten used to being sustained on hunting mammuths in a very unsustainable manner.
 
IA very good example of clearly defined unsustainable lifestyle can be found on the Eastern Islands. It used to have a rich subtropical/tropical forest up to 400 years ago, the civilization that used to live and thrive there is now gone, and the forest was utterly exterminated due to unsustainable deforestation - to the point where it still isn't back today. In other words it was total unsustainable lifestyle that led to the ultimate doom of the trapped polynesian civilization living there(with the few exceptions like the odd Mayan surviving their own collapse).

The biggest problem with Easter Island was likely to be the rats they accidentally brought over on their ships. These rats grew into an unsustainable population and they destroyed the roots of the trees and ate the seeds that the trees would have used to repopulate the island. It probably wasn't the humans who deforested the island so quickly.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/people-places/The_Mystery_of_Easter_Island.html
 
A very good example of clearly defined unsustainable lifestyle can be found on the Eastern Islands. It used to have a rich subtropical/tropical forest up to 400 years ago, the civilization that used to live and thrive there is now gone, and the forest was utterly exterminated due to unsustainable deforestation - to the point where it still isn't back today. In other words it was total unsustainable lifestyle that led to the ultimate doom of the trapped polynesian civilization living there(with the few exceptions like the odd Mayan surviving their own collapse).
Masada would make this conversation at least nine times better.
 
Just because we're doing it on a grander scale today doesn't mean we haven't done so in the past with tragic results. I bet it was a cold and hungry hunter/gatherer population that had to survive past the extermination of the mammuths, and that it had a real impact on a population that had gotten used to being sustained on hunting mammuths in a very unsustainable manner.
Humanity never sustained itself on hunting mammoths.
 
You asked me to amplify my position so...
taxation typically constitutes theft.
Taxation is always theft. This is not a point I really like to dwell on though. Statists argue that theft is justified because of some higher good. I have a lot of sympathy for that position. If I actually thought that state theft could be put to some useful purpose, I might agree.

But I don't. Because the purpose of theft is... umm... theft. It is to steal from the productive and give the loot to parasites.

More specifically, the purpose of the state is provide a legal means for the powerful to steal from the powerless. Secondarily, it allows the powerful to control the lives of the powerless.

Back in the days of absolute Monarchs, the state didn't hide its purpose. The thieves styled themselves the "Nobility" and their victims were the Commoners. The Nobility built great mansions on the backs of the people they stole from.

Our modern democratic era hasn't changed the purpose of the state. What it has done is to obfuscate the distinction between the thief and the victim. It is possible to be both at the same time. This is generally true. The state steals my money and uses it to build roads that I travel on.

But never forget that the purpose is theft. The roads are just a facade which justifies the theft. State roads cost far more than private ones and take far longer to build because of all the graft which goes to the thieves.

Road are simple things. You see them or you don't. Much of what the state does it outright theft and it leaves the world worse off after it has finished stealing. The War on Terrah. The War on Drugs. The Wars, period. Billions of stolen dollars down the tubes to make the world yet more horrible. Millions of people die and millions more are sent to state prisons to destroy their souls.

The state is an outrage. Any decent person would reject it out of hand. Unfortunately the vast majority of people seem to want to get their hands on a bit of the loot. Not to mention that bossing other people around is just soooo much of a trip.
 
Humanity never sustained itself on hunting mammoths.

How can you say we didn't sustain ourselves on mammoth? To what level we sustained ourselves would of course be speculation, just like the theory that hunter/gatherers where the main cause of the extinction of the mammoth. But you don't have to speculate too heavily in seeing the population extending up to the receding ice shield left over from the last ice age would have a predictable and important sustenance from hunting Mammoth in the quite cool climate with limited game to hunt for. It is not conclusive, but it is a strong hypothesis that migrating humans is the cause of the decline in in Mammoth numbers following the last ice age. And logic would make it hard to argue that a loss of such a rich source of game would be a hard hit for those societies, particularily during the cold seasons.

The biggest problem with Easter Island was likely to be the rats they accidentally brought over on their ships. These rats grew into an unsustainable population and they destroyed the roots of the trees and ate the seeds that the trees would have used to repopulate the island. It probably wasn't the humans who deforested the island so quickly.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/people-places/The_Mystery_of_Easter_Island.html


Again, there's competing theories on this. There's polynesian rats on most sizeable inhabited pacific islands, and they never had this problem of a collapse of the local fauna. Which would make the Easter Islands pretty unique to be the only one to succumb to rats. I've hardly taken a controversial stand when I say that it was the polynesians themselves that caused the deforestation of the island. But yeah, it's not an unconstested stance on what exactly happened there.
 
I'd like to know what libertarians think about the unpaid for use and pollution of goods that belong to everyone, like the skies, waters and ground, by fossil energy producers and other corporations. Is that theft too?
I'd like to know why lefties have this obsession about pollution. In developed countries, the skies, waters and ground are clean. Why is this? Because pollution is waste. The free market is all about efficiency so it comes up with ways to make waste useful.

The bureaucrats and the rest of the parasites have nothing to do with it. If private industry had not come up with a way to do 'X', the parasites would never have been able to impose 'X' on decent folk. They are utterly useless. They never come up with any innovation themselves.
 
But never forget that the purpose is theft. The roads are just a facade which justifies the theft. State roads cost far more than private ones and take far longer to build because of all the graft which goes to the thieves.

Can you name a single instance in history of private roads working as you advertise them here? Or at all?
 
I'd like to hear about how a free market can exist without the "theft" that governs its rules. Then again I'd also like to hear how a society of more than a couple of thousand people can function without "theft" on behalf of the collective.

Such an angry and unhappy view. I can only imagine how enraging and alienating daily life must be. And it obscures criticism of any one individual thing when it's apparent everything comes from the same prima facie place of anger and ideology.
 
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