Recent Comments
Nick Nakorn on Living the Dream Nigel Sture on Living the Dream Living the Dream | N… on Working around illness when yo… Nicholas Bruce on About Yellow Peril | Nagar… on Blood in the River Blood in the River |… on Yellow Peril Nick Nakorn on Corona Virus Community Re… Nick Nakorn on Corona Virus Community Re… Nick Nakorn on Corona Virus Community Re… sara louise wilson on Corona Virus Community Re… Frances Jaine on Corona Virus Community Re… Pip Harris on Corona Virus Community Re… Nick Nakorn on Corona Virus Community Re… Lynne on Corona Virus Community Re… Nick Nakorn on Corona Virus Community Re… -
Recent Posts
- Living the Dream
- Hard Reign Falling
- Blood in the River
- Corona Virus Community Response
- Yellow Peril
- More Brexiter lies: No – the Revoke Art. 50 petition is NOT being faked by Russian bots or fraudsters
- These are not the little things: unsanitary conditions on mental health wards
- Goodbye and Good Riddance ya melts
- Out and About in Polyamory
- From the Absurd to the Sublime
- Age Doesn’t Quell The Stirred Heart
- Halal? Is it me you’re cooking for?
- Why Greens in particular should call out and denounce Anthroposophical organisations.
- Working around illness when you’re self-employed.
- The Political Will to Face Environmental Affairs
- All Grooming Gangs
- Forged in the fire of protest: A Prime Minister for the many
- The Guardian censor Ken Loach’s letter
- An Open Letter To Iain McNicol
- VOTE REMAIN
Archives
Categories
Meta
Tag Archives: redistribution
What are the Limits to Growth?
I think scientists need to speak out. Over the past 30 years, our politicians have almost grasped the idea that the resources we humans have at our disposal fall into two distinct categories, renewable and non-renewable; both categories provide limited inputs to our activities. Politicians have also almost realised that our outputs, including those that contribute to climate change and loss of habitats, must be limited to rates that enable our planetary systems to function and remain reasonably stable. Yet, inspite of their improved grasp of how and why human activities are governed by the laws of nature, most politicians seems to think that we should ignore entropic thermodynamics and simply go for growth as if such limits did not exist.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged activism, agriculture, capitalism, CASSE, citizens, Climate change, economics, energy, entropy, family planning, food, fusion, greed, Herman Daly, left wing, limits to growth, military, Nick Nakorn, nuclear power, peace, Politics, population growth, poverty, redistribution, religion, renewable energy, right wing, Science, sirisuk, socialism, territory, thermodynamics, trickle down effect, water
8 Comments