Plenty of Hatred Remains
Guy
McPherson
12
June, 2016
“I
imagine one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly
is because they sense, once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal
with pain.”
~
James Baldwin, The
Fire Next Time
So
much for “only loves remains.” Abundant evidence indicates some
people prefer hatred all the way to their own personal deaths. This
space would largely lack comments if not for the ones characterized
as abusiveness and disrespectful.
Personal attacks are common.
Empathy is profoundly lacking. A trip to the shopping mall would be
pleasant by comparison. Not surprisingly, I contemplate terminating
comments, the reading of which used to brighten my day. Now I dread
reading them. Only principle and masochism keep them coming.
Herein
I present, from this space and beyond, a few pitiful examples of
mean-spirited responses to the evidence underlying my overall
message. As with a trip to the shopping mall accompanied by a few
minutes of observation, the following examples indicate why near-term
human extinction is locked in.
But
first, a brief written overview of my message, the long version of
which can be found
in a recent presentation.
Several self-absorbed members of the commentariat can’t be bothered
with the long version. Ergo, the paragraphs nearly brief enough to
tweet. Note that I rely upon very conservative sources for this
analysis.
The Great Dying wiped out at least 90% of the species on Earth due to an abrupt rise in global-average temperature about 252 million years ago. The vast majority of complex life became extinct. Earth is headed for a similar global-average temperature in the very near future. The recent and near-future rises in temperature are occurring and will occur at least three orders of magnitude faster than the worst of all prior Mass Extinctions. Habitat for human animals is disappearing throughout the world, and abrupt climate change has barely begun. In the near future, habitat for Homo sapienswill be gone. Shortly thereafter, all humans will die.
I’m not quitting, despite frequent comments to the contrary (and by comments, I mean lies from cowards). Rather, unafflicted by the arrogance of humanism, I’m a fan of life on Earth. As a result, I’m not a fan of civilization. Few have taken action as substantive as mine. Talk is cheap, and cheap speakers abound.
Only
a fool would believe we will survive. A few examples of foolishness
follow, from among thousands in plain view.
I
subscribe to Jay Hanson’s America 2.0 email list. It succeeds his
popular website, Die-off.
On 22 May 2016 Nathan John (“Nate”) Hagens launched one of his
customary hit pieces to the list.
After
making a fortune on Wall Street, Hagens now teaches a class titled
Reality 101 at the University of Minnesota. He disparages my work
regularly, citing his colleagues who believe climate change will
become a problem we’ll need to address in a century or two. Citing
authority over evidence is a classic example of patriarchy,
exemplified by religious organizations throughout world history.
Unimpaired by evidence and unaware that abrupt climate change is
under way, Hagens regularly writes nonsense such as the following:
“… a great many people in the blogosphere (including but not limited to Guy McPherson) go off on their own non-science based fantasys -both benign and doomy. This is expected of our deluded-ape-brains but does not mean the underlying science of human impact is faulty”
“No one on this list (correct me if Im wrong) is a trained climate scientist. The way humans work is we look at our in-group (and list serv etc) on what people think and believe strongly – science is secondary to what our tribe believes. If we are a group of born again christians we are unlikely to believe god could allow climate change be due to humans, If we watch Fox news, we will have a built in skepticism to Portlands decision. If our group of closest internet ‘experts’ says that climate change is a hoax, ditto, if we frequent Nature Bats Last, we’ll have a different opinion entirely. All of us, including me, perceive a virtual reality that is distinct from the physical truth. If we imagine switching in-groups for a day, and reading/hearing what those others hear, we might empathize with how the Guy McPherson and Alexander Carpenters can both be utterly confident, diametrically opposed, and completely wrong.”
I
have no idea who Alexander Carpenter is. Apparently he’s about as
famous as I am.
Hagens
is obviously unfamiliar with the concept of abrupt climate change,
even though we’re in the midst of such an event right now.
Consistent with the culture of make believe, I’ve no doubt he’ll
deny his own death, and the extinction of Homo
sapiens,
until he draws his final breath.
It’s
no surprise Hagens is paid by taxpayers to teach impressionable
people that I’m an extremist. Promoting the dominant culture is the
only approach tolerated by the dominant culture, including its
educational exemplars. I observed numerous examples, and provided a
few, when I spent every day on the campus of the University of
Arizona. Hagens has used video from one of my presentations in his
Reality 101 course, and I suspect he uses the subsequent discussion
to paint me with the same brush of crazy my former colleagues use.
Like them, I doubt he’s seen much of my work. I doubt he knows that
I quote the work of others as the entire basis for my
connect-the-dots approach.
This
is what passes for contemporary higher hire
education in the land of the me and the home of the crave.
Meanwhile, one
of the papers published under my name more than 15 years
ago continues
to receive favorable attention. My positive influence at the nexus of
scholarship and teaching persists more than seven years after I
willingly left active service at the university.
I’m
routinely attacked for what I don’t say, too. I promote the notion
of saving life on Earth by contributing to the collapse of the death
cult known as civilization. For its initial few years, this blog
focused on that topic. Apparently the new-comers in this space can’t
be bothered to check the archives. Attacking the messenger is
considerably more fun than checking the facts.
Also
in the category of disparagement for what I don’t say: human
overpopulation. As if any sentient adult on the planet isn’t aware
of this ongoing predicament. I taught college courses for more than
twenty years and I talked about human overpopulation in each course I
taught. I served as a selfless, childless example. I wrote books and
articles. Meanwhile, the overshoot became worse every day, a process
that continues. As it turns out, in a stunning surprise to those
ignorant of biology, overcoming behaviors selected by evolution
through natural selection is no simple task. The draconian strategies
employed by China during its one-child “revolution” weren’t up
to the task. But, as with abrupt climate change, I’m said to be
responsible for human population overshoot.
Also
in the category of attacking me for what I don’t say: virtually
every recent comment from Bud Nye. After viciously attacking others
with abusive, disrespectful, unnecessary language — while carefully
avoiding mentioning the names of those he attacks — Nye states, “I
would just like to understand Guy’s motives for allowing and thus
encouraging the frequent abusive, bullying, disrespectful,
unnecessary, and easily eliminated personal attacking that so often
occurs here.” Although Nye doesn’t include names of those he
disparages, except mine, his targets are nonetheless obvious.
Painting with his insanely broad brush, Nye absurdly implicates
anarchism within some of his hostile comments. After Nye’s abusive
language, he asks me to censor abusive language. By others. Toward
him. Pots, kettles, and the “color” black come to mind. If I were
prone to censorship, I could do worse than starting with Bud Nye’s
inflammatory comments.
Even
Gerald Spezio, who often comments in this space, has gone on the
offensive again. After briefly coming to grips with near-term human
extinction, Spezio now gets worked up in a lather about my small
ecological footprint. Apparently my footprint is too big for a
privileged white man living at the apex of civilization, one of the
largest cities in the world: Phoenix, Arizona. Rather than making a
statement with actions, Spezio prefers the standard approach of
denigrating others.
My
footprint when I travel to deliver presentations is extremely small.
I stay in the homes of my hosts, eat at their tables, and rely upon
local transportation between venues. I use these tactics for several
reasons, including attention to personal consumption.
Many
who comment on this space, and perhaps most, prefer hate over love.
They want to blame others, notably including those who transmit
messages with which they disagree. To many, evidence is irrelevant
relative to ill-founded notions rooted in motion.
I’ll
readily admit that if you’re on an ocean liner and you see an
iceberg a mile away, a one-degree change in direction will allow the
vessel to miss the iceberg by a wide margin. If you wait until you’re
30 feet away and change direction by one degree, the ocean liner hits
the iceberg. We hit the iceberg. It’s not my fault, at least not
entirely. It’s not your fault, either. We were born into captivity,
as my friend Tim Bennett likes to say. There is no escape.
And
don’t even get me started on klondike444 and RE (and the willfully
ignorant acolytes of the latter, notably at the Doomstead
Diner).
Whoops, too late. These cowardly, anonymous trolls occasionally check
my long essay, watch my presentations online, and spend much of their
time launching insults in the comments section. They lie about my
intentions and my actions, which is standard practice for clueless
minions blinded by patriarchy. These are the kind of unthinking
people who continue to accuse me of causing the suicide of my friend
Michael C. Ruppert. These nonsensical idiots believe I have the
ability to kill people with my writing, and also that I use this
power to kill my friends. Unlike these trolls, Ruppert was capable of
thinking for himself. If these people are not being paid to deny
abrupt climate change leading to human extinction, then they’re
missing a fine opportunity.
You’d
think I’d be accustomed to the shit storm raging around me,
considering the
frequency with which I’m exposed to it.
You’d be mistaken. As it turns out, I’m as fragile as a typical
human.
Those
who prefer comfortable lies over inconvenient truths may want to look
beyond this blog. Perhaps signing up for Reality 101 at the
University of Minnesota would be a good place to start.
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