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FLGuest wrote:DynoMat! Iceburgs!? Human's wont to ruin everything.... We are already killing the land and it's wildlife, why not the oceans....

tideline wrote:with the exception of a few uranium isotopes and a few metors we have not imported a thing. everything that is here was already here. we may alter the shape or configuration but everything is natural.
tideline wrote:with the exception of a few uranium isotopes and a few metors we have not imported a thing. everything that is here was already here. we may alter the shape or configuration but everything is natural.

MPH101 wrote:tideline wrote:with the exception of a few uranium isotopes and a few metors we have not imported a thing. everything that is here was already here. we may alter the shape or configuration but everything is natural.
wow....
Now that is a complete but simple minded view, though the principle is correct I find nothing natural about plastic cups floating in the tides or hundreds of thousands of cigerette butts on the beach.
Innotech & you related?
By your view then I guess you won't mind if they dumped the raw sewage produced for 1 yr by the entire city of New York in your County? I mean its all natural human waste and it wouldn't destroy anything or cause disease. It would just alter the landscape. Yeah I understand now, that if we "change" the entire ecoystem of a animal, by cutting all the forest it lives in lets say a Panda Bear we do not destroy it (Panda Bear) by removing all of its food source we just alter its live style. Hmmm this is interesting. I see the point, how right you are
So here in Tampa where we have huge waste piles of highly acidic gypsum stacks the residue produced by mining phosphate that "changes" I mean alter the configuration of the land. So when one of these waste piles (gypsum stacks) breaks the levees and spills down into Tampa Bay wiping out hundreds off thousands of fish/shellfish and wipes out there breeding/feeding areas thus "removing" the entire ecoystem we are not destroying it just changing it.
So the Soviets or we as the human race didn't destroy anything during the Chernobyl disaster? Its just the tools left on the planet for us to use and enjoy as we see fit, ...
Hey its all natural and provided to us already on Earth, why this sort of thing should be expected by such a Intelligent worldy society, as its only altering the configuration of the natural elements given to us by God and its our God given right to make these changes to our planet.
Now I realize nature does the samething with volcano's, earthquakes, floods, drought, hurricanes, etc along with biological pathogens that cause natural outbreaks of disease. Somehow I think we are doing it a bit faster than nature at this date. Now this could change if a big astroid hits the Earth or the Sun sends out a super large storm.
No point in going on, as everything from the Exxon Valdez oil spill to the filth & waste floating in the Ganghis river in India causing wide spread disease and human suffering is all natural just re-configured by humans.
You've convinced me, thankyou
I think I''ll eat a piece of mecury laden snapper now & with a glass of wine
Yep, I understand now, Hallaluah I see the light.![]()
Mike

Innotech wrote:Like I said, we will NEVER destroy the Earth. It is not in our power or ability to do so.
Yes we can alter the existing envornment a bit with pollutants in localized areas, however, we cannot actually destroy everything so much as change it. what we do is bring about changes. Earth is no stranger to change, as it is happening as we speak in a billion different ways. Our changes are but a few examples, and not even the most dominating. Every time a hurricane comes, or an earthquake, a tornado, floods, high winds, fires, volcanoes, meteor and ocmet impacts...these all natural, but they do much more damage in a shorter itme than humans can do. Nature constantly redefines itself, and to think humanity can destroy it is being extremely arrogant. the only hting we would destroy, is ourselves, and that would actually be good for the Earth, not bad. personally, I plan to live my life, but treating the Earth like a fragile object is laughable. The laws of nature ultimately determine earth's fate, not man. We only modify the changes.
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