I agree that some (a very small part) of it is contributed to by man. But is is contributed to by other species, too. Not just man. MAN is not the evil ruin-er (is that a word) of the earth! (Well, technically, we are, since man's sin is what made it a fallen world, lol---but that isn't going to be fixed by what we do or don't do NOW).
I think that on ALL of these regulations that the EPA and every other organization comes out with, that we need to take a big picture look at it. Not in terms of "what does it do to the earth?" But in terms of "what are the costs/benefits of implementing this or that plan?" We are all so busy looking at and adding up the costs to the planet, that we don't look at any OTHER costs... It's warped.
It's kind of like organic fruit. Sure, I can pay 3 times as much for the banana that is organic, but since I peel the peel off and throw it away, is that really any benefit? At 3 times the price? What if the cost of buying that organic banana (or whatever) prevents me from buying something else that has more actual value for my family?
There is more to it than doing things "green". There is a cost to all that as well, but everyone seems so willing to pay it without bothering to ask what it is...... :(
I saw an ad recently for "family cloths"---reusable cloths as a substitute for toilet tissue. I have a septic system, so it's not going in a landfill or into the city wastewater plant. It is made from paper and trees are grown to make it from. Trees re-grow. How much clean water and chemicals is the average family going to use getting these silly things clean (aside from the gross factor)? Wouldn't using a replaceable resource (trees) to make tissue that will decompose in my septic system be better for "the environment" than using these cloths (that are either made from cotton--so no different than using a tree really-- or some artificial chemical formula of stuffs--modal-polyester or whatever and then have to use chemicals and clean water wasted to get them clean)??
Yes, you can take reasonable steps. Recycle glass containers and plastic containers. Try not to waste in general. Take REASONABLE steps to reduce pollutants. But to impose regulations or fines for non-compliance on businesses to the point that it is better for the business to move its operations overseas (where the regulations are less stringent--so creating MORE pollution) which not only contributes MORE pollution to the world environment, but reduces American jobs..... uh.... why do we do things like that? JUST to be green?? Seems just dumb to me.
Kinda like the U.S. not allowing offshore oil drilling in certain areas off our coastline. When a bit further out the Chinese (or whoever else) can drill away. And they aren't taking the same precautions to keep things safe (physical safety and environmentally). So we increase the risk of a bad environmental situation by letting the less environmentally careful companies/countries explore/drill there, AND they get the benefit for doing so. WE get nothing. What sense does any of that make? Wouldn't it be smarter for us fiscally and more responsible environmentally, to have the SAFEST most environmentally friendly companies/countries do that work?
ETA: Does anyone think that the folks with the intellect to figure out new forms of energy aren't doing everything they CAN to figure out something that works? They would be unfathomably rich beyond imagining! The fact is, that Wishing that we could create a "sustainable" energy source doesn't make it possible. I'm not saying it is NOT possible, at all. But throughout history, advances of this type are not uniform. There are very long periods sometimes between each advance. The remarkable innovations that came about in the end of the 19th and early part of the 20th century were phenomenal. It only took us several thousand years to get there. Why do the masses think that it is sheerly a matter of "Will" to figure out the next great energy source. It isn't that simple. It's like education---throw every dime we have at it if you want to, but there is only so much you can do to affect the outcome. There are tons of factors as play, not all of them under our control. Science isn't just having enough money and enough willpower to figure something out.
So, what do you guys think of the theory of the earth's axis shifting having something to do with ice ages and global warming/cooling?