environmentalists take on the military

According to some environmentalists, the worst part of war is the carbon footprint.

military hardware

When gas prices surged beyond $4 a gallon across the United States, calculating miles per gallon became a national sport and just about every environmental group was out to track down the biggest gas guzzlers. The prices at the pump may be lower now, but environmentalists are still tracking down who wastes the most fuel and bringing their findings to light.

But sometimes, this concern for nature crosses into territory where no one is really worried about MPGs or the impact to wildlife. Consider this "shocking revelation" about the world's biggest gas guzzler from Planet Green for example. By adding up how much fuel the U.S. military burns, the author was able to throw out some staggering numbers and cast war as a major environmental menace.

Sure, tanks, fighter jets, bombers and naval destroyers aren't exactly the greenest machinery on the planet. In fact, they're often far worse than even the most excessive civilian machine due to their heavy armor, payloads and afterburners. And here's the thing. They're not designed to be easy on the environment. They're built to be tools of war and the last thing nations engaged in combat care about is the health of a nearby forest and the local wildlife, which is exactly what the article's author wants them to make their number one priority…

- War destroys human settlements and native habitats. It destroys wildlife and contaminates the land, air and water. The damage can last for generations.

- U.S. cluster bombs, thermobaric explosions, electromagnetic bursts, and weapons made with depleted uranium are indiscriminate weapons of mass destruction.

- Bombs pollute, poisoning the land with unexploded shells and toxic chemicals.

If anti-war activists can lend a hand in the name of climate justice, surely you devoted greenies can make the connections that war is always an assault on the natural world.

You know, maybe it's just me, but I was sort of hoping to see something about how war kills humans which is a really good reason not to have wars in the first place, not just our worry for the whales and cute furry things which make it front and center on posters urging us to fight climate change. However, we're a violent species and the reasons why we go to war revolve first and foremost around us and our needs.

When some warlords or brutal dictators endanger people's lives, or there's a geopolitical conflict spiraling out of control, fighting the battle takes precedence over environmental protection. Our future as a species is simply more important to us just as the basic principles of evolution would dictate and while it would be nice not to have any wars and use the trillions anually allotted for warfare across the planet for fulfilling our utopian dreams, it's just not going to happen anytime in the foreseeable future.

  archived from wowt
              
# politics // climate change / environmentalism / military / war


  show comments
latest reads

how to endanger the future of space flight for status and profit

CEOs and space faring powers are treating low Earth orbit as their personal playgrounds, much to the horror of space agencies.
how to endanger the future of space flight for status and profit

why your boss is obsessed with a.i. past the point of sanity

Not only is the C-suite not immune to AI psychosis, they seem to be primed to suffer the worst of it as their employees duck and cover.
why your boss is obsessed with a.i. past the point of sanity

why so many of us are just not that into chatbots

AI adoption is at an all time high, but opinion of AI keeps on tumbling with every poll and study on the subject.
why so many of us are just not that into chatbots

no, your chatbots aren't secretly marxists at heart

But they can and do detect and complain about unfair treatment when asked, according to an experiment by Stanford researchers.
no, your chatbots aren't secretly marxists at heart

how the right wing took over social media

Right wing content has a major advantage on social media. But we can do something about that with a very simple change in our habits.
how the right wing took over social media

no, we still don't know why t. rex had little arms

Popular science outlets continue to do a terrible job of explaining studies on primeval evolution and pretending we have answers we don't.
no, we still don't know why t. rex had little arms