"If you do not believe in climate change, you should not be allowed to hold public office"

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
@SneekyNinja .. did not have enough data to either place you or make a joke. What you described about nany state ect. Sounds like more authoritarian left. Not libratarian left and not libral left. The other left keeps the benefits of social security humanity progress good stuff and dictches the thow must part
Getting back to the "climate change" subject, is the libertarian left just expecting people and businesses to do the right thing and stop using fossil fuels? Right now, we treat air as a commons that anybody and everybody uses as a waste receptacle. Are laws and taxes to shift consumption to renewables and green tech by their authoritarian nature are bad?
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
Getting back to the "climate change" subject, is the libertarian left just expecting people and businesses to do the right thing and stop using fossil fuels? Right now, we treat air as a commons that anybody and everybody uses as a waste receptacle. Are laws and taxes to shift consumption to renewables and green tech are by their authoritarian nature bad?
I'd imagine it's socially liberal without saying "social..." and scaring people.

Can't be left and not have Govt.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
I'd imagine it's socially liberal without saying "social..." and scaring people.

Can't be left and not have Govt.
With you there. Socially liberal, no place for law and government to shape association, freedom to live and love how one wishes. Progressive liberal in terms of laws, regulatory polices and taxes that protect the environment, civil rights and direct industry and commerce to benefit society as a whole.

Libertarian ideals don't hold up in complex society. Maybe a small remote village or within a commune. Even there, while authoritative laws and enforcement are frowned upon, social pressure to live within moral constraints are applied. Shunning is one punishment meted out in those societies for transgressions. The libertarian liberals I've met will lecture about "the right thing to do" to the point of driving me away. Maybe that was the objective.
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
With you there. Socially liberal, no place for law and government to shape association, freedom to live and love how one wishes. Progressive liberal in terms of laws, regulatory polices and taxes that protect the environment, civil rights and direct industry and commerce to benefit society as a whole.

Libertarian ideals don't hold up in complex society. Maybe a small remote village or within a commune. Even there, while authoritative laws and enforcement are frowned upon, social pressure to live within moral constraints are applied. Shunning is one punishment meted out in those societies for transgressions. The libertarian liberals I've met will lecture about "the right thing to do" to the point of driving me away. Maybe that was the objective.
I think it's more an issue of semantics.

There's almost a sect system attached to the word "Libertarian" that's a rainbow of different ideologies.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
I think it's more an issue of semantics.

There's almost a sect system attached to the word "Libertarian" that's a rainbow of different ideologies.
The grid that ty and esh like to post is useful in that regard. It illustrates the differences between people to are anti authority e.g. libertarian yet still be left or right in economic policies.

One take on how to divvy up the current mish mash of labels:
https://www.theatlantic.com/daily-dish/archive/2010/04/a-liberal-right-wing-progressive/187719/

Noah Millman wants a new political taxonomy system. William Brafford summarizes Noah's three political axes:

liberal vs. conservative (attitudes toward the individual and authority)

left vs. right (attitudes toward social/economic winners and losers)

progressive vs. reactionary (attitude toward past and future)

 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Getting back to the "climate change" subject, is the libertarian left just expecting people and businesses to do the right thing and stop using fossil fuels? Right now, we treat air as a commons that anybody and everybody uses as a waste receptacle. Are laws and taxes to shift consumption to renewables and green tech by their authoritarian nature are bad?
We need laws to ensure the greater good for everyone and to prevent a few from benefiting at the expense of everyone else. We aren't using our legal system well at all by this standard.

In the case of climate change and pollution, I think it's a good area of law because it meets the above criteria.

Carbon taxes would also work and be more stable and therefore business friendly.

It helps a lot that we have access to abundant sources of cheap natural gas with which to supplant the use of coal.

Using that natural gas more efficiently can and should be our next goal. Fuel cells and in home cogeneration of heat and power would reduce the loads on our power transmission grid, use the fuel more efficiently and reduce people's bills and consumption rates, thus helping the environment.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
We need laws to ensure the greater good for everyone and to prevent a few from benefiting at the expense of everyone else. We aren't using our legal system well at all by this standard.

In the case of climate change and pollution, I think it's a good area of law because it meets the above criteria.

Carbon taxes would also work and be more stable and therefore business friendly.

It helps a lot that we have access to abundant sources of cheap natural gas with which to supplant the use of coal.

Using that natural gas more efficiently can and should be our next goal. Fuel cells and in home cogeneration of heat and power would reduce the loads on our power transmission grid, use the fuel more efficiently and reduce people's bills and consumption rates, thus helping the environment.
Nat Gas is cheap because of fracking. I've seen maps that show methane ppm is higher in portions of the country where fracking is in place. So, yeah, better than coal, maybe. I'm more on the "invest in renewable energy" bandwagon rather than build out a natural gas/home fuel cell electrical grid.

What I'd really like to see is a comprehensive effort to map the route and destination away from fossil fuels. Maybe nat gas/fuel cells are a valid bridge towards clean energy/zero carbon emissions. With so many alternatives and interested parties, I just feel that we need to do more independent assessments of options before choosing a path forward. Of course, not going to happen in this administration.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Nat Gas is cheap because of fracking. I've seen maps that show methane ppm is higher in portions of the country where fracking is in place. So, yeah, better than coal, maybe. I'm more on the "invest in renewable energy" bandwagon rather than build out a natural gas/home fuel cell electrical grid.

What I'd really like to see is a comprehensive effort to map the route and destination away from fossil fuels. Maybe nat gas/fuel cells are a valid bridge towards clean energy/zero carbon emissions. With so many alternatives and interested parties, I just feel that we need to do more independent assessments of options before choosing a path forward. Of course, not going to happen in this administration.
Agreed on all counts.

Natural gas infrastructure has several advantages, such as using it to distribute biogas- it's pretty much the same as natural gas, just the origin is different.

Such infrastructure also provides power for when the sun isn't shining and the wind isn't blowing.

Look up passive buildings. Not quite the same as passive solar, though they're good too.
 

esh dov ets

Well-Known Member
Getting back to the "climate change" subject, is the libertarian left just expecting people and businesses to do the right thing and stop using fossil fuels? Right now, we treat air as a commons that anybody and everybody uses as a waste receptacle. Are laws and taxes to shift consumption to renewables and green tech by their authoritarian nature are bad?
i may have over stated with thow shalt ..There have to be rules with sanctions and such to enforce regulation of anything dangerous like global warming. Not every liberal agrees as to what extent laws should be enacted or enforced, there are arguments with points of contention and agreement. not o mention the difference between a traditional liberal and a libertarian or a so-called liberal left winger or democratic party member.
The public debate is swallowed up by the smokey blaze of political game,, it's all which shill do you side with and look at the clowns fight "the war on terror"
 

esh dov ets

Well-Known Member
With you there. Socially liberal, no place for law and government to shape association, freedom to live and love how one wishes. Progressive liberal in terms of laws, regulatory polices and taxes that protect the environment, civil rights and direct industry and commerce to benefit society as a whole.

Libertarian ideals don't hold up in complex society. Maybe a small remote village or within a commune. Even there, while authoritative laws and enforcement are frowned upon, social pressure to live within moral constraints are applied. Shunning is one punishment meted out in those societies for transgressions. The libertarian liberals I've met will lecture about "the right thing to do" to the point of driving me away. Maybe that was the objective.
so a healthy ecosystem doesn't hold up? or equal rights, fairness, freedom... these are traditional Libertarian ideals . or do you mean the Libertarian party in America ? when has it been tried instead of prevented by those at the top of the pyrimid?
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
so a healthy ecosystem doesn't hold up? or equal rights, fairness, freedom... these are traditional Libertarian ideals . or do you mean the Libertarian party in America ? when has it been tried instead of prevented by those at the top of the pyrimid?
I mean libertarian ideals as they apply to harvest and dumping waste. They work just fine when there is plenty of room and agreement between people living in small villages. I'd like to know where it has been tried and worked in larger societies. Even Japan, where the natural world is held sacred and the population is pretty much homogeneous, there has to be regulations to restrain natural tendencies of capitalism or large corporations to dump waste and over harvest from the environment for competitive advantage. Can you name even a middling size nation that has a libertarian zeal with a healthy environment and economy?

Same goes with civil rights. No regulation in a capitalist society means a race to the bottom in terms of people's rights.

The environment, fairness and freedom have pretty much been trampled when it got in the way of multinational corporations. Finger wagging doesn't stop them. Only regulations and fines, sometimes they find their way around regs by paying off officials. Do you think talking to them will make them stop?
 
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esh dov ets

Well-Known Member
I mean libertarian ideals as they apply to harvest and dumping waste. They work just fine when there is plenty of room and agreement between people living in small villages. I'd like to know where it has been tried and worked in larger societies. Even Japan, where the natural world is held sacred and the population is pretty much homogeneous, there has to be regulations to restrain natural tendencies of capitalism or large corporations to dump waste and over harvest from the environment for competitive advantage. Can you name even a middling size nation that has a libertarian zeal with a healthy environment and economy?

Same goes with civil rights. No regulation in a capitalist society means a race to the bottom in terms of people's rights.

The environment, fairness and freedom have pretty much been trampled when it got in the way of multinational corporations. Finger wagging doesn't stop them. Only regulations and fines, sometimes they find their way around regs by paying off officials. Do you think talking to them will make them stop?
there are not any fully liberal societies that are nations. there are , like you said small examples allowed to exist for a time within nations or places that have adopted parts of a liberal society but even with big changes not all layers of society are addressed and there are often successes where the big change doesn't fix everything. very few places get very far due to oppression and lack of either education on change and sustainability or lack of options i.e. oppression
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
there are not any fully liberal societies that are nations. there are , like you said small examples allowed to exist for a time within nations or places that have adopted parts of a liberal society but even with big changes not all layers of society are addressed and there are often successes where the big change doesn't fix everything. very few places get very far due to oppression and lack of either education on change and sustainability or lack of options i.e. oppression
Seems we mostly agree, which makes for a pretty boring debate. So, I'll ask, because I'm interested if there can be a libertarian solution to fossil fuel caused global warming? I'll take the authoritarian side an say there isn't, that business competition has to be regulated to guide business practices away from carbon emissions and creatively compete using green strategies. Any ideas? Anybody?

(except Rob Roy who's ideas are invalid and always end up supporting venal behavior, not interested in his opinion)
 

esh dov ets

Well-Known Member
Seems we mostly agree, which makes for a pretty boring debate. So, I'll ask, because I'm interested if there can be a libertarian solution to fossil fuel caused global warming? I'll take the authoritarian side an say there isn't, that business competition has to be regulated to guide business practices away from carbon emissions and creatively compete using green strategies. Any ideas? Anybody?

(except Rob Roy who's ideas are invalid and always end up supporting venal behavior, not interested in his opinion)
There is a solution for everything. Many things need to be done differently. Materials need to be sourced differently. The old fossil fuel and unsustainable argoculture needs to be phased out and replaced by these solutions while more solutions are r and d'ed. if the governments we have now won't enforce this new regulation it is clear that they do not have our best interests at heart and they should be replaced.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
There is a solution for everything. Many things need to be done differently. Materials need to be sourced differently. The old fossil fuel and unsustainable argoculture needs to be phased out and replaced by these solutions while more solutions are r and d'ed. if the governments we have now won't enforce this new regulation it is clear that they do not have our best interests at heart and they should be replaced.
A lot of that very kind of R&D is being done right in this forum. I know, I'm doing some of it.
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
A lot of that very kind of R&D is being done right in this forum. I know, I'm doing some of it.

STFU. You can't even date without getting used for dinner. Does she at least let you kiss her cheek?


This post will be deleted due to "feelings".
 
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