Originally posted by Soonerlongbow:
The environmental whackos throw tantrums if we tried to responsibly utilize the natural resources God graciously gave us.
To this environmental (almost) whacko, I'll just throw out how a different perspective can change your attitude a bit. You seem to believe that the earth was made for us. We own it and can use everything here as we see fit. I'm sure most people in the world today would agree with you since this is our dominant cultural worldview. It is also the narrative of the Abrahamic religions, to which you referred.
But the worldview that sustained humans for 95% of our history was that we are made for the earth. We neither own it nor really "manage" it any more than we can own or manage gravity. We are subject to it; it is not subject to us. Every attempt to manage "our resources" on a large scale has led to more and more environmental degradation. The earth doesn't need management; it needs protection -- from us and our inability to stop growing at all costs. This is also part of the narrative of indigenous populations worldwide (or those who are left) and, in that sense, is more robust since it has had 240,000+ years of proven success vs 10,000 years of failure in achieving a true balance with nature.
I'm not looking for an argument of the merits of each worldview. And, for the record, I'm a fat hypocrite since I sit at a computer, work in finance, drive a car and *gasp* shoot carbon arrows. I'm just trying to point out how things can look perfectly reasonable from one perspective and yet be batsh** crazy from another.
Personally, I'm a bit fatalistic on the matter. With 7 billion humans and growing, I think we'll cause our own extinction long before we give up our modern conveniences or start to accept death as a natural part of life. I just want to enjoy what there is a bit longer and see that my children can as well. I am willing to throw political tantrums if somebody wants to lay some pavement and oil wells in my favorite hunting or hiking grounds. I don't want more logging; I want more fires. I don't want more dams, I want fewer large-scale farms. Yes, it's a fantasy. But so is our current system of unlimited growth.