September 3, 2010   12:17 pm,  The post writted by admin

Fast Forward: Ethics and Politics in the Age of Global Warming

  • ISBN13: 9780815704690
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

Product Description
Those of us alive today are the first generation to know that we live in the Age of Global Warming. We may also be the last generation to have any chance of doing something about it. Our forebears had the excuse of ignorance. Our descendants will have the excuse of helplessness. We have no excuse.
—From Chapter One

Fast Forward is equal parts science primer, history lesson, policy prescription, and ethical treatise. This pithy and compelling book… More >>

Fast Forward: Ethics and Politics in the Age of Global Warming

Posted in: Global Warming     

Tags: , , , , ,  

3 Comments »

  1. Back in the 60s, when I was a liberal hippie, I was very much into Earth Day and the need to abolish the evils of corporations and capitalism. For decades now the liberal environmental movements have dreamed of a giant bureaucracy that could regulate the industrial production of the whole world and in the process force all of us to live by what they imagine is an ethically correct and natural lifestyle. This giant bureaucracy would have the power to control the evil corporate entities and their devilish pursuit of the root of all evil; yes I speak the unspeakable, that demon called profit. It would have the power to redistribute wealth and level the economies of the world so that all of us would be “equal”; no one having more wealth than the other. “Climate change” and the hysteria behind it are the tools that those at the top of this movement are counting on to make this possible. The problem is that it’s a scam pure and simple.

    Talbott simply dismisses the skeptics of CO2 driven global warming as a fringe group and asserts that the issue is settled and the overwhelming scientific consensus supports Al Gore and his ilk. Well that assertion is the biggest lie in the history of science. The scientific establishment that pushes Gore and Talbott’s view is so contaminated by politics that it is almost beyond the ability of one to imagine. But even if Talbott were correct, he has no practical plans to control CO2. Even if we destroyed the economies of ever industrialized nation on earth trying to hold back CO2 it would amount to no practical alteration of the climate. What it would do is nothing less than the destruction of civilization as we know it and plunge the whole world into an Orwellian climate bureaucracy that would control every aspect of our lives and make prosperity virtually impossible. It would kill far more people with devastating economic fallout than all the horrors the climate alarmists can project.

    Rating: 1 / 5

    Comment by cedar — September 3, 2010 @ 2:19 pm

  2. This is an exceptional book. It is clear and concise, a fairly quick read that packs a powerful knowledge punch. It has some really fascinating behind-the-scenes tidbits that any reader can enjoy, no matter how much (or little) one knows about politics. Lays out clear goals (and the reasons for those goals) for short and medium term US environmental policy. Helps to explain the political deadlock on this issue and the reasons why not-so-subtle pressure TODAY has a chance to make a real difference. Read it, then call up your representatives and demand that they make energy and climate legislation happen NOW, while we still have a chance to preserve our climate as we know it for our children and grand children.
    Rating: 5 / 5

    Comment by Carla82 — September 3, 2010 @ 3:55 pm

  3. …they’ll wonder why we didn’t heed the cogent and thoughtful message of Antholis & Talbott’s brilliant book. I’m no global-warming expert, and I found myself riveted right up to the sobering final pages. (The global-warming expert I *do* know is using this book in his Princeton class this fall.) With Cassandras this pitch-perfect, we can no longer say we weren’t warned about our destructive habits. And if policymakers heed the reasonable prescriptions here, those historians’ generation will salute rather than despair.
    Rating: 5 / 5

    Comment by R.T. in DC — September 3, 2010 @ 4:00 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. | TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

Powered by Yahoo! Answers