You're really interesting and a nice chat companion. I hate having someone always agreeing with me and I hate having someone who calls me dumb for having a different opinion. If other members don't mind, I'd be more than happy to continue this conversation.
I was taught British English and I do my best to stick with it (colour and not color, favour and not favor). I hope you don't mind that.
As a communist (is this spelled with a capital letter? my spelling checker seems to allow both) I'm fond of an idea of a big powerful government that controls all aspects of society and human life except thinking, privacy, art, information, sex, tastes, preferences etc. You can read the BS Grover Norquist unloads, but you can't practice it, you can read about devising explosives, but you can't devise them other than under the control of the governemnt.
So, you got me completely (
COMPLETELY) wrong about where my resistance comes from. I'm all for imposing everything that benefits most of us regardless of whether everyone understands exactly why it is being imposed (if they wish to understand they are free to learn). It has to do with negative and positive freedom, you can find it in Isaiah Berlin's writing, although he promotes negative type which is the American type, but what he describes as positive is what I'm interested in. (Here positive and negative are not quality markers i.e. negative (American) is far better in Berlin's opinion - put simply negative is just free from (rules, laws, etiquete, compassion, solidarity...) positive is free to (organize, uprise, rebel, strike change the world for better)
What I oppose is private sector using state to force people into something by law which in the end benefits private sector and no one else.
I did learn several of these abbreviations, but not all!
While I was teaching at the University I had a lot of problems explaining this exact same thought - recycling being bad. It is widely accepted as being positive. I usually say; whenever you see something widely accepted question it. I don't assume the outcome, perhaps you'll simply reassert it after questioning, but do question it.
Here goes, in short: it is impossible to recycle the material alone without recycling the mode of production. I'm happy to see you also agree with planet being limited, I don't have to go into all Tansley and brothers Odum on ecosystems etc. The current mode of production is very bad for the planet and one should not recycle it. In a hypothetical state, where there's no fear of overproduction, where there's no calculated fallability, no commodity fetishism, where products are made in order to serve a purpose and not reflect how you feel, or who you are and similar BS, where the goal is to make them to last as long as possible, where your grand, grand, grand, grand nephews still use your washing machine... Recycling would be a good thing. If instead of one life-time (or several life-times if your grand kids get to use it) washing machine, you have to buy a new one every couple of years, actual price is: every unit's price + all pollution of production of 10 washing machines instead of one + pollution of 10 recycling processes... You see where I'm heading with this.
If planet is finite, short lasting products are a crime. If that crime can be concealed with recycling, recycling is a crime.
Of course, me separating waste is not completely the same as child labour, but a bad thing benefiting private sector and no one else. I would recycle in aforementioned hypothetical state.
Sure, I do a lot of (well not googling, but...) duckduckgoing on everything you say. This is the least amount of respect. CBS is far better than some and I respect it, but only as much as I would respect Blue Jeans Cables (the way you describe them, haven't had any). I did eventually find out what CBS was, but didn't want to assume, once again. I would say CBS and PBS and Frontline are as good as it gets.
OK, so we mostly agree on civility. If it is something I'm giving and it is not being understood in any way by anyone who is higher up the hierarchy, I'm all for it. And in that case even my superiors would get some civility from me.
Regarding your Eastern Europe remark, please, although you don't have to, give me the benefit of the doubt and let's not sink our conversation to a level of: well, look at Stalin, there's your communism. Stalin was, first and foremost, a psychopath idiot. It would be really hard to find justifications for what he did to (then) Czechoslovakia (or anywhere else) in communist literature. Same as when Joseph Kabila calls Congo a Democratic State of Congo, I wouldn't tell you: see what your democracy does. We're discussing ideas. I don't condone to almost anything Stalin did and I think I would have no problems proving that SSSR wasn't communism. But the West liked the idea of embracing the Stalin's point of view so they could dismiss it more easily.
I'm not so naive (I'd like to believe) to say all capitalism is bad. I don't even think it's bad. I think it is a successful mode of production (coming from a commie bastard, ey!!
). But it really does operate as an ideology today and it shouldn't. If it was ran a tight ship by state, It could be good.
So, if profit says shut the EPA down and you do it for the sake of profit, it is bad. If we, the people, say; no, we can make only as much profit as the environment allows us, it is all good.
This is the most important question and the foundation of all ideological fervor today, are ecosystems static or dynamic?
Free market preachers say it is static, it always tries to get back into balance. So today it's oil, tomorrow we make sneakers from the plastic floating in pacific (heap the size of Texas).
Controlled market preachers say it is dynamic. It is very likely to be pushed into a form that is completely unsuited for human kind. So ecosystem is the frame that sets the rules for the mode of production.
Trump only goes along with free market people; profit should in no way be burdened with regards to nature and environment because in that case 'the invisible hand' can't operate. One's man pollution is another's man future source of raw material. It can go endlessly.
I don't believe this and even if it's true, I think the price is too high. Gambling on losing all biodiversity for a faint chance that some other biodiversity MIGHT come in its place in the future is too high of a stake.
This conundrum can even be solved logically, but I don't want be a bore. If you ask me to, I'll demonstrate.
Have a nice day!
kd