Originally posted by: BigDH01
Originally posted by: Craig234
Originally posted by: BigDH01
No one will be dented here because GW has become politicized. Once this subject stepped into the realm of politics, any possibility of scientific debate, consensus, and action disappeared. This applies to everyone in my opinion.
Politics serve a huge disservice to mankind.
Uh, for all its problems, politics is still the only way the public generaly expesses its desired policies. Without politics, not much would get done in public policy.
It'd just be a fast return to the primitive societal model where the few powerful enslave the rest of the population. Deal with the issue of GW.
I should have said modern identity politics. The term "politics" simply refers to the interactions that occur within any social group.
Modern politics have stripped people of any sense of reason and instead replaces that void with a sense of identity. This process is quite obvious even on these boards. Many posters here think of a tree hugging hippie from San Francisco when they hear the word liberal and confederate-flag-waving redneck from Alabama when they think of conservative. Amazingly enough, those individuals that fit the above stereotypes are likely proud of their political identity and ideology.
The point is, modern politics have not only separated us based on what we believe, it has separated us based on who we are. There are definitely some truths in the aforementioned stereotypes. And the political leaders play on this when they try to appear to be a part of such groups and degrade other groups of people. Look at the Republican rally videos. Sure, you heard cries of "Socialist," etc, but you also heard, "go back to Europe." It's as if people believe that by simply being European, you are the liberal enemy.
As long as people have internalized their party (and their party's beliefs) as being part of their identity, there will be no logical discourse. It is impossible to take an unbiased view of a scientific matter if that matter has become part of your party's platform and therefore part of your own identity. To criticize that theory or belief is to not only criticize the science, or lack thereof, but the people who've adopted that belief as part of their political identity.
In the case of GW, there is plenty of blame to go around. Over-eager scientists attempting to get funding pushed this issue into our political realms. The cause is taken to extreme by Al Gore (who is despised by Republicans) and Rush Limbaugh (similarly despised by Democrats). With this sort of activism, it didn't take long for the parties to adopt these views and for Republicans and Democrats to internalize them. As such, I find it very hard to believe that any consensus will be reached and any real conclusion made one way or the other about man-made global warming.