A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Environment

  • Libertarian Leninism

    Do libertarians really hate environmentalism so much that they’ll soft-pedal Chinese authoritarianism just to stick a thumb in the eye of the Green Menace for the sake of the shiny capitalist utopia? (The idea seems to be that eventually, in the far-flung future, everyone will be rich, so we shouldn’t worry too much about the Read more

  • Gaius makes a fair point: cries against “consumerism” can ring hollow when there are people who are genuniely struggling, even in the land of overstuffed plenty. But this doesn’t solve the problem, that, given resource and environmental constraints, an economy devoted to ever-expanding consumption is unsustainable. And “we the people” bear some responsibility for it. Read more

  • If Andrew Bacevich is right that our consumptive habits are the cause, not only of resource depletion and environmental degradation, but of our far-flung military adventurism, then the unpleasant conclusion seems to be that we need to start consuming less. Here’s an article (via Book Forum) about, among other things, a professor in Western Pennsylvania Read more

  • Hypocrisy

    George Monbiot: Sure, we are hypocrites. Every one of us, almost by definition. Hypocrisy is the gap between your aspirations and your actions. Greens have high aspirations – they want to live more ethically – and they will always fall short. But the alternative to hypocrisy isn’t moral purity (no one manages that), but cynicism. Read more

  • We watched this the other night and I liked it quite a bit more than I expected. I think using CGI zombies was a mistake, but other than that it was a taut sci-fi/horror thriller with some interesting themes (the fate of humanity, providence, the nature of heroism, etc.). Will Smith nicely toned down his Read more

  • Durable community

    An experiment in local energy self-sufficiency in Germany. I’d like to see some discussion of how scalable something like this is, but it sounds promising. Read more

  • As a big fan both of peanut butter and jelly and reducing our meat consumption, I really like this. Read more

  • Bean vs. teat

    What’s more environmentally friendly – soy milk or cow’s milk? Looks like soy by a nose. Personally, I’m a big cheese-eater, but I do like to put soy milk on my cereal and in the occasional espresso drink. The article makes the interesting point that the limited market for soy milk is a mark against Read more

  • The limits of Berryism

    A couple of liberal bloggers point out, apropos of the AmCon interview with Michael Pollan (see here for my ramblings), that Wendell Berry is, in fact, not a liberal. Rather, his criticisms of big agriculture, big business, and big government are rooted in a basically traditionalist worldview. I take it that’s why unconventional conservatives and Read more

  • Thought for the day

    The issue before us is to discover or determine what we are, and what we are for. Traditional believers–among whom I count myself–suppose that there are answers to those questions, and that they can be found by prayerful examination of the Word of God in Scripture–and the world. Less traditional believers, reacting against the follies Read more