Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Doomsday Prophets et al

I haven't blogged in a while. That's because my brain went into a state of ferment. Its generally vegetating... now it was fermenting.

I've just studied a couple of poems that deal with nature, and how mankind is ruining nature, and how we don't appreciate nature, and how we don't see God in nature, and other assorted arguments for nature.

And these arguments make sense. We've lost touch with nature, and we cannot go back to living in trees, because that's not what we do. We live in houses, with leather sofas. Heck, even the sofas aren't made from things that live in trees. That's a pretty sad state of alienation from the planet that sired us. And we cannot do without our 'privacy' and our 'creature comforts'. We need them.
My point is that we've lost touch, and we haven't really tried to regain that touch, so now we've passed a point of no return, where we cannot go back. Although try we will to save the tigers, and the whales, and the dolphins, and other assorted animals. And prevent global warming, and people on the coasts from drowning. And protect ourselves from swarming insects. We try. We almost always fail. And success is short term.

And at this juncture, we cannot really do much to save nature anymore. I think its far beyond repair. We will continue to loose species at an 'alarming' rate. We will inject greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, and further the cause of global warming. And we should all feel sad for ourselves, and blame older people, and the other generation. And feel sorry for ourselves. And try to fix what we can. And feel sorry for ourselves.

I'm not saying we shouldn't try to fix it. We should try to fix it... unless we do what I think is the other option we've got.

The other option we've got is to completely industrialize and urbanize the world. We're really smart people, humans. We built buildings, for heaven's sake. And bridges. And other such industrial marvels. We've got water in the middle of the desert. We've got mid-air refuelling. We've got faster-than-sound speeds. We've got buildings that reach Mars. This is how inventive we are. And we're also the ones who murdered nature, and who completely destroyed most of it.
But those people are the same people who managed to get water in the middle of the desert. We've conquered nature, if you like. More or less. We just haven't completely conquered it, and that's affecting us, through the form of random natural disasters.

But I'm saying completely humanize the world. We need to leave not one trace of nature on this planet. And a couple of generations down, no one would be the wiser. And we'd finally achieve our dream of owning this planet. Although is beyond me why anyone would want to own a large rock. Which spins. In the middle of nowhere.

But I digress. If we could just harness nature in its entirety, then we wouldn't have to worry about global warming, because we would control the 'global' in global warming. We wouldn't have to worry about tigers. They wouldn't exist. We wouldn't have to worry about flies, and mosquitoes, and malaria. They wouldn't exist either.

Nothing major in either direction is going to happen in the next hundred years, so this really doesn't concern me, but I just find it endlessly fascinating that we half heartedly try to 'control' nature. And we've half- succeeded. We just need to succeed more often. Then we'd be set. Or we need nature to dictate what we do. Then we'd be set.
This in-between path is going to get us killed faster than we care.

Not that I care, because I'd be dead at the time anyway.

Just be warned, future generation of people who will not read this blog, because it will be obsolete then. Be warned.