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Civillization vs. Primitivism: The Only Choice.

Since starting this blog, I’ve blogged about environmentalism a little more than I’d like to.

There are other issues out there; issues that are more pressing, that affect our country and our world much more directly– like Iran’s nuclear program, or the fact that they’ve been launching test missiles capable of striking Israel. But so often I choose to write about the Environmentalist Movement over other things for a very specific reason, which is:

The choice to accept environmentalism or not is the choice between industry and inactivity, civilization and primitivism, comfortability and suffering; it is the choice between life and death. Many may disagree with this claim, citing the good intentions of the environmentalists: taking care of the earth couldn’t be bad, could it? After all, not all environmentalists are nut jobs like Eric Pianka, a noted ecologist who wants to kill off 90% of human life; most are in fact quite moderate, and simply believe that humans have a responsibility to look after the earth.

Such people are not evil, but they are misguided. They accept the two basic premises of environmentalism: that the environment is good because it is the environment, and that the smallest human interference in the natural ecological structure is a desirable goal. The logical conclusion of these premises, of course, is that human activity must be restricted as much as possible in order to prevent such interference. If you accept these premises, chances are good that you would not be in favor of a mass culling of the human population. The danger is that men like Pianka also accept them, and they desire to see their logical ends carried out. Since you’ve already accepted their premises, they can use the power of guilt to get you to accept a gradually more oppressive environmental policy. Case in point:

Yesterday, the leaders at the G8 Summit agreed to cut their countries’ carbon emissions by 50% by 2050, a radically anti-industrial move that will dismember the economy and stunt the standard of living for the global population. No one can claim that such an act was motivated by anything other than a hatred for mankind. Last week, a measure was put up for conideration in the British Parliament that would institute a personal cap-and-trade policy for every resident of England. Was this act considered because its proponents love the earth, or because they hate humanity? You be the judge.

With the basic premises of environmentalism so common today, it won’t be long before such cap-and-trade proposals are made in the United States. Do you really believe that such a measure would be beyond the scope of a Barack Obama environmental policy? Maybe not now, but what about four years from now? This is why the environmentalism issue is so important to me.

But there is another reason I frequently choose environmentalism over other topics. Throughout history, the war against man’s productive faculty has been waged under the banner of countless different names and movements; tribalism, monarchism, feudalism– more recently communism, socialism, and fascism– and of course, there’s always been the monstrosity that is organized religion. All of these have been a part of an overarching war on Individualism and a hatred of humanity; environmentalism is no exception here– it is merely the newest leader in the same war, the latest manifestation of the same hatred. However, environmentalism is different from its ideological ancestors in one, very important way.

In the past, movements that sought to destroy humanity (the modern ones anyway) have disguised their hatred for man’s virtues, proclaiming them to be the immoral while holding up their own standards as the moral alternative. With the broad base of society accepting altruism, their unpracticeable moral code, they guilted people into embracing their own self-destruction in the name of the love of mankind. Environmentalism is different because it makes no attempt to disguise its contempt for humanity.

Now, I won’t run through my whole spiel on environmentalism again because I’ve already blogged on it and have stated my opposition to it in as clear terms as I can, both here and in other places. But I will say this:

It is impossible to create or maintain a civilized, industrial society while accepting any percept of environmentalism. If we give them an inch, they will take a mile, and its a long, slippery slope. Like their predecessors, they will use their moral high ground that we have freely given them to guilt us into self-immolation– the only difference is that unlike their predecessors, it won’t be disguised as a love for mankind, but rather, it will be expressed openly as the genuine, explicit hatred of it.

2 Comments

  1. midnightrider wrote:

    God Bill sometimes you are such an idiot, as environmental concern rises, as well as oil prices. more and more people will WANT to buy things that are less polluting. Whole Foods and other very capitalist corporations have cashed in on this very idea. GM is shutting down its SUV plants, people are scrambling for ways to lower fuel prices. Many of these ideas like hydrogen fuel cells will eventually be cheaper AND be better for the environment. I really don’t understand how you are so narrow minded, where you see people trying to “destroy society” I see ways to profit.

    Friday, July 11, 2008 at 1:59 pm | Permalink
  2. Wildbird wrote:

    Liberals can be such a bunch of idiots i mean they whine about chopping down trees but not about aborted babies they are so rediculous they probibly lay awake all night listening to the falling of the trees in the rainforsts and 90 to 95% of the rainforests are still there SCREW THE GREENS THE EARTH IS NOT YOUR MOTHER AND THE RAINFORESTS ARE NOT THE LUNGS OF THE EARTH AND THE EARTH IS NOT FRAGILE

    Thursday, October 2, 2008 at 10:17 pm | Permalink

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