peaceful_life wrote:
The essence in what I'm saying is that any notions of self preservation, both here..and there, will be best served by bringing about primary ecological stability
But on a global scale, "primary ecological stability" via planned, voluntary means, is about as far away as human colonisation of Mars. The only difference being that "primary ecological stability" is guaranteed to arrive sooner or later anyway, by an unplanned, involuntary process involving lots of humans dying of starvation, disease and war, until there's nothing like so many of us destabilising the ecosystem.
because if our humanly efforts aren't focused on getting it done then the biospherical degradation, coupled with climatic upheaval, will simply rip right through us, irrespective of geographical location.
I see no reason why it should rip through all human societies equally - in the same way or at the same time. It seems to me inevitable that some parts of the world are going to go tits up much sooner than others. In fact this is already happening, which is exactly why we are talking about this. You seem to be saying something along the lines of "if it all goes horribly wrong in, say, sub-saharan Africa, then we can't stop the fallout from making it all go horribly wrong here."
I don't think this is true, there are plenty of people who agree with me, and if the political mainstream doesn't at least attempt to preserve some semblance of civilisation in Europe/UK when this happens then the people will elect an extremist government who
will. If the people currently arriving on Greek islands believed they'd be rounded up and taken back to Turkey/Libya the next day, then they would not pay the traffickers £1000 to get here. Likewise if the people camped in Calais believed their chances of being allowed to stay in the UK were nil, they wouldn't be there.
You are saying nothing can be done. I don't agree.