Originally posted by Oncle Boris
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Give science some time to play with GMO and we can surely do much more. Biodegradeable plastics which are consumed by special strains of bacteria that output fuel from the process ... trees that grow strawberries the size of your fist ... bacon slabs. These are the sorts of things GMO science offers us in the future. Because sunlight can be used very efficiently by biological processes, and because sunlight is so profuse, this offers a huge potential for economic growth in the future.
No wonder you hate GMO so much, it destroys your chicken little act ...
Yes, if you assume that the pesticides don't go anywhere. Sure, if you assume that cross-pollination doesn't disrupt ecosystems. I wonder what would happen faster: depletion of resources, or you understanding this?
As for cross-pollination disrupting ecosystems ... there's no reason to think a GMO cross pollinating will disrupt an ecosystem that way any more than a new hybrid or a non-indigenous species. Surely it won't disrupt ecosystems as much as chopping down what's left of the world's forests to open up grazing so that dumb philosophers can live out their fantasies of living like nomads on marginal grasslands while much of the world's population starves. Extensive agriculture
Decay happens quite fast. This is good as long as there are few organic resources to decay. But according to you:
- some magical technology will make all objects organic
- some magical technology will make all objects organic
- We'll have the space to dispose of these so that they can be recycled.
It still doesn't get you out of the problem.
It still doesn't get you out of the problem.
Assuming 3% growth and a very generous recycling rate of 90%, we would be hard capped at a few centuries.
The truth of the matter is if we really wanted to, we could switch over to easily decayed items in a great many cases already. (Perhaps all cases.) The only reason we don't is because of cost. It's still cheaper to buy land to put trash on than to switch.
If that changes, so will what people buy.
Services economies are those that use up the most resources.
You're also confusing poverty with something good. The reason we use more resources isn't because we're service economy ... it's because we're rich. Which incidentally is because the services (which are often immaterial in and of themselves) are valuable.
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