tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34766153.post4714798946199646666..comments2019-04-26T09:15:34.460-04:00Comments on Curb Global Warming: Geoengineering the Climate from the Perspective of James LovelockUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34766153.post-88372942350699072132007-03-25T23:23:00.000-04:002007-03-25T23:23:00.000-04:00Letters: The end of the world is nighSunday, Mar 2...Letters: The end of the world is nigh<BR/><BR/><BR/><BR/>Sunday, Mar 25, 2007, Page 8 <BR/>In a recent Guardian article you ran about James Lovelock, the British expert on global warming ("It's the end of the world as we know it", March 18, page 18), it was implied that humankind is responsible for global warming and that it is already too late to do anything to reverse the impact it is having on life on Earth. <BR/><BR/>Lovelock says it is already too late to act to reverse the problems of global warming. Why? Because we are all addicted to our post-modern lives of cars, scooters, computers, airplanes, trains and ships, not to mention the thousands of coal-burning plants around the world that help fuel our addiction and pollute the planet. The huge carbon dioxide emissions faucet cannot be turned off.<BR/><BR/>While I am an optimist about most things in life, after reading Lovelock's books I have come to agree with him and now believe that humankind will cease to exist on Earth by the year 2500, or 3000 at the latest. I know this is not a popular thing to say, and it is just a personal opinion, but readers who are concerned about these issues can read my take on them at http://climatechange3000.blogspot.com, with feedback welcome, of course.<BR/><BR/>If there is any hope -- and we must hold to hope, despite the odds -- it is for leaders and visionaries to start planning now to build vast polar cities to house the future survivors of climate change in the hopes that their descendants can one day come out from the polar regions and repopulate the Earth. We should be listening to Lovelock, but most people couldn't be bothered. That's our problem.<BR/><BR/>Dan Bloom<BR/><BR/>Chiayi <BR/>This story has been viewed 418 times.DANIELBLOOMhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05130493903696077379noreply@blogger.com