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Science & Technology
Why do many (but not all) Conservatives hate the environment?
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<blockquote data-quote="Pix3l_P0w3r" data-source="post: 165008" data-attributes="member: 9968"><p>I'd like to believe if a planet was sentient, that we'd be seeing more planets with life, yet it seems to occur only under specific conditions in which we happen to be a part of in our solar system. It's not unrealistic to think Mars could have once held sentient life on it, and it would have been a terraformed planet. If it was indeed like this at one point in time, the fact that it is a relatively dead planet now would suggest that the only way we could destroy our planet is to change the specific conditions under which it thrives, and that's a seemingly impossible task for man to accomplish. Regarding the existence of modern humans versus the lifespan of our planet, we occupy less than a fraction of a percentage of the planet's lifespan, so it's not so hard to understand that humans have a less than meaningful impact on the planet, and rather, the impact is on ourselves. We've destroyed 40% of species within the last several decades. At first glance it looks like impact to mother nature, but little do we realise, we depend on this ecosystem to survive. If we were to suddenly disappear from a massive nuclear war that wipes out all humans, the planet will recover within several hundred years. All levels of radiation will have dissipated back into the Earth's core, and creatures will start to repopulate the Earth and become the dominant form of life. </p><p></p><p><img src="http://i2.wp.com/flowingdata.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Time_Clock.gif?fit=620%2C587" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pix3l_P0w3r, post: 165008, member: 9968"] I'd like to believe if a planet was sentient, that we'd be seeing more planets with life, yet it seems to occur only under specific conditions in which we happen to be a part of in our solar system. It's not unrealistic to think Mars could have once held sentient life on it, and it would have been a terraformed planet. If it was indeed like this at one point in time, the fact that it is a relatively dead planet now would suggest that the only way we could destroy our planet is to change the specific conditions under which it thrives, and that's a seemingly impossible task for man to accomplish. Regarding the existence of modern humans versus the lifespan of our planet, we occupy less than a fraction of a percentage of the planet's lifespan, so it's not so hard to understand that humans have a less than meaningful impact on the planet, and rather, the impact is on ourselves. We've destroyed 40% of species within the last several decades. At first glance it looks like impact to mother nature, but little do we realise, we depend on this ecosystem to survive. If we were to suddenly disappear from a massive nuclear war that wipes out all humans, the planet will recover within several hundred years. All levels of radiation will have dissipated back into the Earth's core, and creatures will start to repopulate the Earth and become the dominant form of life. [IMG]http://i2.wp.com/flowingdata.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Time_Clock.gif?fit=620%2C587[/IMG] [/QUOTE]
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Why do many (but not all) Conservatives hate the environment?
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