biffvernon wrote:Reaching Utopia may be impossible but that doesn't make it impossible to travel a long way down that road.
Possibly, but you are still ignoring the real issues. The question is not whether or not it is possible to travel a certain distance in the direction of an unachievable utopia. Clearly it
is. The question is
what are the real-world consequences of doing so?
And you have a clear example of these sorts of consequences, which you are steadfastly ignoring. The German policy of opening their borders to any refugees who could make it to Germany was just a step towards an unachievable utopia. The intention was to relieve the suffering of refugees from war zones and show that Europe had a conscience. But the real world result was to cause a ten-fold increase (and more) in the number of economic migrants heading towards Europe. This was unsustainable - it made the migration problem worse instead of relieving it, fuelled the rise of the far right and ultimately led to the genuine refugees ending up trapped in squalid camps in Greece, along with hundreds of thousands of economic migrants who would have been better off staying in their homeland.
It is no use trying to travel part way down the path to an unattainable Utopia if the real-world result is to make the world a worse place instead of a better place. The reason you are the target of such unrelenting criticism is that you point blank accept to refuse to acknowledge those real-world consequences, even after they have happened and are historic facts rather than theoretical predictions.
I will ask you again. Will you PLEASE start being realistic. Not about what a utopian world might look like, but about what the real-world consequences of real-world actions.
This stuff matters. You believe you are helping.
What you are actually doing is destroying the environmental movement, by rendering it a joke and forcing the realists within that movement to waste their time and effort dealing with your nonsense instead of attacking what should be the real enemy.