- 24,553
- Frankfort, KY
- GTP_FoolKiller
- FoolKiller1979
Beyond the payrolls issue is the rhetoric used. Since before I was born we've been given scary scenarios and models, many of which have had their deadlines come and go. Everything from running out of gas in the seventies to people making predictions of the ice caps melting in ten years recently. When I was president of STOP we were flooded with stories of freshwater running out and Florida disappearing under rising oceans.
I have no clue what encourages these scare tactics, but that is where the mistrust began. And then you had those negatively affected by scare tactics produce their own studies. Eventually, it became a back and forth of making statistics say what you want.
And then when you wind up with businesses run by people like Al Gore charging people for green credits to basically relieve their green guilt I see the same tactics being used as the Catholic Church uses. At that point I realize a lot of the common terminology and PR strategies are eerily similar to that of organized religious groups. As a Christian believer who hasn't been associated with a specific denomination in over a decade for these very reasons I realized the time for intellectual discourse had passed. We will repeat the same mistakes and likely never reach a truth.
Oh, and in the US Christians get far more public grief than environmentalists in the media. Much of it is brought on themselves, but I could argue the same about "evangelical" environmentalists.
I have no clue what encourages these scare tactics, but that is where the mistrust began. And then you had those negatively affected by scare tactics produce their own studies. Eventually, it became a back and forth of making statistics say what you want.
And then when you wind up with businesses run by people like Al Gore charging people for green credits to basically relieve their green guilt I see the same tactics being used as the Catholic Church uses. At that point I realize a lot of the common terminology and PR strategies are eerily similar to that of organized religious groups. As a Christian believer who hasn't been associated with a specific denomination in over a decade for these very reasons I realized the time for intellectual discourse had passed. We will repeat the same mistakes and likely never reach a truth.
Oh, and in the US Christians get far more public grief than environmentalists in the media. Much of it is brought on themselves, but I could argue the same about "evangelical" environmentalists.