Archive for April, 2007

Earth Day

Google offers a cool Earth Day logo on their website:

earthday07.gif

… and sets alarm bells ringing in the conservative blogosphere, which duly brings up Al Gore and then brings him down. I am no fan of Mr. Gore, or any political party for that matter, but there is little that is scientifically wrong about An Inconvenient Truth. It is a travesty that any discussion on global warming (charmingly euphemized as global climate change) inevitably begins with a political bias, when it should remain strictly a scientific issue. I participated in a passionate, and occasionally impolite debate about global warming on a public message board recently, and it was interesting to see that the people who do not accept that anthropogenic emissions affect global warming were the same people who opposed stricter gun control after the Virginia Tech massacre.

My (perhaps naive) view is this: A discussion on global warming will have an impact on political decision-making, but it ought not to begin with a political spin designed to impact the decision. Empirical observations, provided that they are honestly obtained and thoroughly validated, express the state of the world as it is, and do not admit subjective points of view. If a glacier recedes by a certain amount every year, then its recession is independent of the political slant of the observer and his funding agency, and there is no point in denying that it is happening. The objective of the global warming debate ought to be about softening man’s ecological footprint on the only planet in the observable universe that is known to support life. Given what could be at stake, it is better to err on the side of caution. Even if everyone does not agree that the current trend of elevated temperatures is more serious than a merely cyclic phenomenon of global warming/cooling, even if everyone does not agree that said trend is due to human activity, a little paranoia wouldn’t go astray.

Virginia Tech shootings

A few hours ago, a man bearing a gun entered an engineering building in Virginia Tech and shot 30 people (students and professors) to death. Just like that. Then he shot himself. What does one do when something like this happens? What does one think?

Do you think of grieving families? Or about what went on in minds of the students who were about to be shot? Or do you wonder what caused the desperation and dementia that drove the gunman to homicide? Or do you ask why it should be so easy for a young man to procure a gun and enough ammunition to kill 33 people and injure 15 others?

I don’t know. For the most part, I feel thoroughly wretched. It just doesn’t make any sense.

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Florilegium

Freedom of thought is the only good that is perhaps more precious than peace, for the simple reason that, without it, peace would merely be another name for servitude.
[Andre Comte-Sponville]

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