Mar 042005
 

As a fol­low up to my post about Global Warm­ing, Navin had men­tioned that he found Lomborg’s arti­cle in the Econ­o­mist inter­est­ing. I re-read it and real­ized it does make a com­pelling argu­ment. But here’s the other side of the story.

Grist has a whole series of arti­cles that rebut Bjorn Lomborg’s arti­cle and his book “The Skep­ti­cal Envi­ron­men­tal­ist.” Grist is a an envi­ron­men­tal mag­a­zine, so it is prob­a­bly skewed a lit­tle bit, but read this:

Lom­borg writes, “If we fail to con­sider how the money could oth­er­wise have been spent, we actu­ally cre­ate a soci­etal struc­ture in which fewer peo­ple sur­vive. … We are in real­ity com­mit­ting sta­tis­ti­cal mur­der.” But who is really fail­ing to con­sider how our money is spent? As Lom­borg notes, “We will never have enough money,” and there­fore, “Pri­or­i­ti­za­tion is absolutely essen­tial.” Why, then, does he weigh the envi­ron­ment only against hos­pi­tals and child­care, rather than against, say, indus­try sub­si­dies and defense spending?

Exactly. To me, this is why Lomborg’s arti­cle is decep­tive. It is not very smart to argue that Gov­ern­ments should pro­tect the envi­ron­ment at the expense of say, feed­ing peo­ple or pro­vid­ing clean water. But there are a mil­lion other things that Gov­ern­ments and indus­tries do, so why not ask them to spend at least some of it on pro­tect­ing the environment?

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