Self sufficiency brings many things into bold relief. How many kids will you have when you have to feed them from your land? Will you have more kids and feed each one less? Will you expect each child to be able to marry, have lots of kids and live on a a third of your land?
Or will you expect your neighbour who practiced self control to feed your children?
Perhaps some people you have never met will turn up and you will say that your children will need to give up some of their land to feed the strangers who come from a land where there are less people?
These are the choices we face.
Exactly so sir. Providing financial incentives to breed, indeed not financially punishing those who make a socially responsible choice, to support those who cannot control their animal instincts, does seem to be a great place to start.
No-one is saying "choose who can breed", but "pay for the children you choose to have that the world does not need" does seem reasonable.
You are quite right; I ought to have been clearer.
Thing is though, electricity produced this way doesn't need to burn fossil fuels or bio fuels either…..and electricity powers a heck of a lot of modern life. I would quite happily not have gas central heating; it was in the house when we moved in. Again, that's an each to their own thing though. I know I certainly do not want to go back to gas lighting. I would quite happily only have electricity, and for the driving around that I do these days an electric car would do fine I reckon.
Recycling is the next huge push that's needed, and processing that recycling effectively and efficiently with no pollution must be an aim.
http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Business-Industry/Energy/Energy-sources/19185
M
Hi Santaman,As you say, to each his own. As for me, I deliberately asked for the full gas package when I had my current house built: Gas heat, gas clothes dryer, gas stove (cooker/oven) and gas water heater.If I ever build again, I'll do the same. Electric heat dries my sinuses too much and by comparison is too expensive (I have access to natural gas over butane or propane) Not to mention that natural disasters have never disrupted gas supplies while electric power is almost always out for days at least.
As for driving, yes, an electric car would work for some but it's unrealistic (at least for now) for anybody not returning home at night to recharge them. Or for anybody doing heavy work with a vehicle such as trucks. The hybrids show some promise but their development isn't quite there yet (surprising when you consider how ling it's been since railroad locomotives went to diesel-electric)
Ironically though, it was back in the days of more such self-sufficiency (family farms and less mechanization from petroleum powered machinery) that larger families were the rule rather than the exception. You needed the manpower to effectively work the land.
BR, it'd cost me over three grand to change the central heating to all electric. I'll save my bawbees until the present one croaks it and then figure things out. I have been considering installing underfloor central heating again but that's even more expensive.
I freely admit I use my tumble drier and a dehumidifier. In this climate I'm not setting up Winterdykes for months on end.
M
Would you have solar panels fitted to your roof M if it were an option?
Was that picture taken at the end of a long fund raising drive in Aberdeen M?It's an offer that's frequently made .until the realities of the roof are explained. We have a tiled roof, and unusual for around here, it has no sarking but sits directly on top of purlins that rest on tar sheet on the rafters.
My bother calls it a 'Roman Roof' and says it's much more common south of the Border, that he'd never seen one up here.
Apart from the occasional tile needing replaced due to high wind damage, it's been absolutely sound though.
I quite fancy one of the mini wind turbines, but we're too close to the trees apparently
The solar panels don't do well here for most of the year. We are all very white (and that's not racist! just reality) because that strange yellow ball thing rarely appears in the sky, and when it does it's usually hazy.
My hands, in March sunshine a couple of years ago.
I wasn't much darker by the end of the Summer
M
And there are the reasons, in a nutshell, why trying to address climate change will never work. It will be both expensive and inconvenient for everyone, so they won't do it.
You keep telling yourself that if it helps you to sleep in your convenient, fossil fuel heated home Mary. It is what most people do.
Oh I don't know, a fair few can't afford to heat them.In fairness, the vast majority have no option to do anything but live in a convenient fossil fuel heated home.