Indeed. But to a chronic absolutist like him, all sorts of weird stuff makes sense.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Apr 26, 2026 7:26 pmThat would be a clear case of Christian beliefs undermining human welfare by giving people false assurances that lead to more wasteful practices (unless the second coming and resurrection are indeed factual prophecies).FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sun Apr 26, 2026 7:17 pmI saw him comment on some other thread ages ago that events in the middle east indicated that Jebus is about to come and do a thousand year reign. He's working to shorter horizons than sane people are.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Apr 26, 2026 7:09 pm
So are you saying that since nothing is sustainable forever, that everything will necessarily wind down at some point, that we should not try to stretch things out, conserve, and sustain things for longer if we can? Or what is the issue you're having with "sustainability"?
For any sane person, when a fishery collapses due to overfishing, that fishery has not been sustainably managed. So we need rules to enable sustainable fisheries, with sustainable simply meaning that fish are removed from the fishery no faster than they are replaced in the ordinary course of fishes doing fishy sexy times.
The fact that in 172 million years there will be a significant tectonic shift that turns the relevant stretch of ocean into a salty inland sea, isn't generally considered relevant to whether a fishery is sustainable for the current eon. Nor do we worry that a new species of fish will displace the humble haddock by means of evolution, and render the haddock fishery unproductive. It would be quite obviously insane to take that approach. But when you are an absolutist with no real desire to make sense anyway, suddenly the stupid shit is the more important thing.
For the Chrsitian absolutist, eventually there must be no way to fix a problem by your own effort. You must need Jebus to save the polar bears and the sea turtles.