Lynn, thank you for your correction of my typo. Thank you also for the reference. I have book marked it and will follow that and similar pages.
I believe William Faulkner's statements regarding the futility of insulting people. I believe his remarks were made during the early Civil Rights era, shortly before James Baldwin wrote a strident criticism of him. His premise is that one cannot insult someone to change their view. If you are sarcastic or insulting, you seek to "preach to the converted" rather than persuade the person you pretend to speak to.
I do not view weather as the province of religion. Whether its changes are natural or man-made, it is important to recognize the change, consider the most reasonable causes and to change for our best interest. Using energy sources that rely less on fossil fuel and heat discharge is in our interest as a nation and as people.
I do not view weather and our choices pertaining to it as related to population decline in Europe. That is as separate issue that deserves its own analysis. Immigration in Great Britain, and the plethora of other matters glibly condemned also deserve their own discussion. Instead they are mixed as one would mix lettuce and vegetables in a salad. I suspect an underlying religious or moral motive behind the mess entitled "By the Numbers," but that is unclear.
Faith might be understood in my father's experience several decades ago. He was driving an Interstate in a heavy fog, and in an instant decided his visibility was too impaired. He pulled onto the shoulder, and immediately heard the first impacts of a collision that ultimately involved several dozen cars and several fatalities. There is no reason to that event, only the sense that his life, and all life, is a precious gift to be honored. The reasoning is what we make of that gift.
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Other reader comments on this article
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Date
I live in a big city, like most of us probably. Hundreds of city classrooms stand empty but schools remain... [MORE]
Gary Miller
Dec 20, 2007 23:01
John House. Steyn is a very opinionated columnist , and without question infuriating to those who disagree with his viiews,... [MORE]
neil gaffney
Dec 18, 2007 00:26
While I appreciate statistics and consider them within a context. My overwhelming experience is that global warming is real. Mr.... [MORE]
John House
Dec 18, 2007 22:45
I am intrigued by the claims of John 'Green' House to have certain "overwhelming experience" that "global warming is real".
Does... [MORE]
Geraint Roberts
Dec 19, 2007 17:38
Cheer up, Mr. Steyn. There may be a purpose behind the mental illness gripping the world's elites.
In "Anatomy of Criticism"... [MORE]
Robert Arvanitis
Dec 17, 2007 21:35
I try to read news from around the world. My readings reflect little currency for the opinions Mr. Steyn fears.... [MORE]
John House
Dec 17, 2007 20:35
Mr. House, your argument that global warming must be true based on your personal experience is absolutely absurd. "Obvious, if... [MORE]
Lynn
Dec 19, 2007 10:50
Lynn, I remember when cattle egrets were seldom seen in Central Illinois. I now see many. I remember when trees... [MORE]
John House
Dec 19, 2007 23:46
Mr. House,
I would argue that rather than using reason, which would see an individual's personal experience as insigificant in the... [MORE]
Lynn
Dec 20, 2007 10:55
Lynn, thank you for your correction of my typo. Thank you also for the reference. I have book marked it...
John House
Dec 20, 2007 22:36
While your story about faith is indeed moving, it is not what I mean when I say that your view... [MORE]
Lynn
Dec 21, 2007 10:20
The real question, of course, is whether global warming is anthropogenic in nature, or just a repeat of the macro-trend... [MORE]
john twinem
Dec 21, 2007 10:58
I think Thomas Malthus and Paul Erlich were fundamentally incorrect, and Western thought is pathetically slow to catch it. I... [MORE]
John House
Dec 24, 2007 23:05
There are some statistics you can argue over, but the basic numbers tell the story. In 2004, the last year... [MORE]
Neil
Dec 17, 2007 17:09
I believe that we will soon (less than 10 years from now) use solar energy to make fuels in significant... [MORE]
Wilm E. Donath
Dec 17, 2007 12:38
•Emissions from the U.S. increased 6.6%.
A plurality of the world's emmissions come from the United States - with 25% of... [MORE]
Ethan
Dec 17, 2007 01:09
Ethan might be more convincing if he could spell emissions.
Carbon dioxide emissions are not poison, but fertilizer for the plant... [MORE]
tarkus
Dec 17, 2007 03:08
I think (correct me if I'm wrong) the Kyoto protocol was to reduce emissions by percentage amounts. So by showing... [MORE]
Keith
Dec 17, 2007 10:03
Sirs,
Whether Mark Steyn's right or wrong matters not. It's the basic premise of the global ecochondriacs that's erroneous. On page... [MORE]
Boris Bell
Dec 17, 2007 14:53
Regardless of the fact that the US is the leading source of emissions, Steyn's point is simply that the US... [MORE]
jon
Dec 17, 2007 15:20
Regardless of the fact that the US is the leading source of emissions, Steyn's point is simply that the US... [MORE]
Jon
Dec 17, 2007 15:21
Ethan,
Your rounding seems to only work in one direction. While it may be nit picking:
US pop = 4.57% of world... [MORE]
David
Dec 17, 2007 16:00
According to the World Bank figures for 2006, The US economy accounts for 27.4% of the world economy.
siteresources.worldbank.org/DATASTATISTICS/Resources/GDP.pdf
So what we... [MORE]