but I am not apologizing.
Because, a $100 trillion price tag to stop and even reverse climate change is too low.
The International Energy Agency estimated in a recent report that the world needs to spend $359 trillion between now and 2050 to avoid catastrophic climate change.
All you jerks that contend mentioning such numbers just scares people away, please stfu, and read this instead: Nothing is possible so don't even try.
We, really, really need to break through these psychological and ideological barriers that are preventing us from doing what needs to be done to save this planet. We have the technology. In hand. Ready to go.
All we need is the money — and it’s not that much if you keep your wits about you. World GDP in 2014 was US$78.28 trillion. And the growth rate of world GDP has been around 3.4 percent annually for a number of years. Project the growth of world GDP out to 2050, add it all up, and you get US$ 5,630.5 trillion.
$359 trillion is only 6.4 percent of world GDP over the next 35 years..
So if you’re not mature enough to think straight when a number like $359 trillion comes at you, please focus on the 6.4 percent number before you start hyperventilating and embarrass yourself,
And it will probably be less than 6.4 percent, because once we get serious about doing this, world GDP is going to boom! We’re more likely to see growth rates of five or six percent a year. Maybe even double digit growth rates, like China achieved for much of the 1990s and twenty-naughts. We’re going to replace every vehicle with an internal combustion engine. Every vehicle on the planet. We’re going to build a whole new distribution, wholesale, and retail system to support electric vehicles. We’re going to build tens of thousands of kilometers of urban rail lines, in every major city on earth. We’re going to build hundreds of thousands of wind power turbines, and two or three billion small, independent solar power systems, all over the world. We’re going to tear down and replace, or remodel and insulate almost every single building and dwelling on the planet.
There is so much work that we must do, there will be massive shortages of labor and skills. There will be plenty of work for everybody, from the people in the funny clean suits in the big chip plants churning out photovoltaics, to the carpenters and plumbers and electricians doing all the replacing and remodeling.
It’s a bright future! It’s a glorious future! It’s a good future!
All you have to do is realize that the only obstacle is in your own mind. For example, you’re thinking, Where’s the money going to come from? Well, we just create the money, just like money has always been created. Was there $4 trillion in U.S. dollars in 1787? No? Then where did it all come from? Did it fall to earth on an asteroid?
It was created. And we can create more. A few rich pricks have somehow convinced you that they, and only they—because they run a bank—can create money. Well, so can governments! In fact, that’s how we won the Civil War. That’s the plain historical fact: the United States won the Civil War with money created by the government, instead of private banks.
Still not convinced that the only obstacle is in your own mind? Let me lay this on you. This has been bothering me for weeks now, since the bombing in Paris. How do we defeat ISIS? How do we defeat radicalized Islamic militants? For that matter, how do we defeat radicalized Christianist militants? You defeat them by giving people hope for a better future. If people don’t have that, lots of times a gun-waving radical is going to sound like a sensible person to them.
Now, here’s the particular point that bothers me: in all the discussion about ISIS and what to do about it, it is now common wisdom that the United States lost the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The fact is, the we won those wars. Both of them. Yes, we won both wars. What we lost was the peace.
Nation building failed. That’s what I read. And it was on a liberal, progressive site, too: Hullaballo. They used that exact phrase: “nation building.” According to them, we tried it. We tried “nation building,” and it failed.
I want to scream: WE NEVER EVEN TRIED NATION BUILDING in Afghanistan and Iraq. Oh, we tried to build some schools, and a few hospitals, and repair some bombed-out power plants and water plants, and pave the roads better.
That was all part of our counter-insurgency strategy. That was not “nation building.” If we were doing nation-building in Afghanistan and Iraq, then point out the cross-country rail lines that were built. Point out the four- and six-lane highways poured along new routes that tied together one end of those countries to another. Point out the thousands of wind turbines and new electric power distribution grids that were built. Point out the millions of new solar panels that were installed and connected to the new grids.
No, we didn’t even try to do any of that, did we? Why? Because those ideologues in the Dubya administration were all “free market” zealots. Governments aren’t supposed to build rail lines and erect wind turbines and install solar panels. “Free enterprise” is supposed to do that. No, sirree, what the dickheads in the Bush regime did: they built stock markets. Because, how can you possibly have “free enterprise” without a bunch of speculators providing liquidity while they strive to corner and rig the market?
We have the science and the technology and the knowledge needed to provide a decent, dignified and sustainable life for every single person on this planet. And don’t hide behind the “there’s too many people” excuse. That’s not the problem. The problem is we allow a small bunch of sociopaths to control the financial and monetary systems of this planet.
We thus have here, first, a system that is unsound and unnatural, and second, a theory invented for the purpose of accounting for the poverty and wretchedness which are its necessary results. The miseries of Ireland are charged to over-population, although millions of acres of the richest soils of the kingdom are waiting drainage to take their place among the most productive in the world, and although the Irish are compelled to waste more labour than would pay, many times over, for all the cloth and iron they consume. The wretchedness of Scotland is charged to over-population when a large portion of the land is so tied up by entails as to forbid improvement, and almost forbid cultivation. The difficulty of obtaining food in England is ascribed to over-population, when throughout the kingdom a large portion of the land is occupied as pleasure grounds, by men whose fortunes are due to the system which has ruined Ireland and India. Over-population is the ready excuse for all the evils of a vicious system, and so will it continue to be until that system shall see its end… --Henry C. Carey, The Harmony of Interests: Agricultural, Manufacturing & Commercial (1851)
Comments are closed on this story.