Screw growth. We don't need growth for growth's sake, that's the ideology of the cancer cell.
Cute quip, but it's fundamentally incorrect. We
like growth. If you didn't also like growth, you wouldn't willingly exchange your labour in order to access the internet. You've implicitly bought into the model by willingly buying the fruits of progress. The internet didn't exist when you were born, it was embraced by those hating growth and created by those pursuing growth. And given what it is, it raised all boats.
We should consolidate what we have, get our distribution of existing resources and wealth right, and then advance responsibly in a way which halts and undoes this blight.
I'll not disagree completely. I think that proper distribution of growth is a fundamental question. The goal is to sustainably raise the quality of life for the bottom 1%. After that, it's a question of 'how'. But the grand goal, I agree with. But, that's a separate question from how quickly we battle AGW. Remember, one scenario has us stopping all fertilizer production
today, and it's right out.
The only improvement on before that we are under any obligation to make is that which benefits future generations.
Nope, that's not true. We should be improving the lives of people
today, too. My parents are going to be alive for at least another 20 years. I want their lives over the next 20 years to get better than it is today.
But, speaking of future generations: you don't think that freedom from smallpox and polio, access to the internet, GPS, and weather forecasts is 'better'? No, of course it is. The hard wean in 1889 would've never created these things. How about cures for malaria, Alzheimer's, and dirty water? Those things don't exist yet. We need growth to get them.
That bottom 1% includes a lot of people with schizophrenia. There's no redistribution of wealth that will make their lives 'good' or even 'acceptable'.
edit: might be best to migrate conversation over to the thread I made devoted to this discussion.
The Burning Question and Jevon's Paradox