Climate change and old world philosophy


Philosophy is about proposing possible solutions where no other can be found. In a sense, it’s about human logic versus reality. Good stories garner a following, and things that seem normal are often turned on their heads when evidence to the contrary is available. That goes for climate change versus old world philosophy and incorrect notions that whatever God does is good and that an eternal paradise awaits us.

The true God is the Great Spirit of the Universe, as my reincarnation experience proved. With that drive, the goal of separating fact from assumption has never diminished and my life has been one of searching. Consequently, my search took me far and wide into corners of human development that few wanted or could tread. So what is reality?

Nothing is closer to it than the fact that the world is fast approaching its end. Even with that in mind, the arguments against climate change are almost as blatant as those for it. In other words, humans are more confused than ever about what is happening to them and the planet.

In Australia we are facing catastrophic conditions all summer as fires rage through New South Wales and Queensland. They will accelerate with the cyclonic winds over forests and plains conditioned by drought. They are impossible to stop as the environment is ripe for mass destruction.

Even in the face of this, the government refuses to see climate change as the cause. With many parliamentarians blinded by the religious philosophy that the world was created in six days and will not end until Jesus Christ returns, there is no way to persuade them.

What is needed to change this vision to something closer to the facts? Nothing could happen in old world thought that opposed the religious view that only what is established in the holy books is fact. This is naive and wrong when it comes to what is happening now.

While many politicians are religiously oriented, they seem to have no intention of accepting climate change as a reality. They are prone to accepting the nonsensical view that heaven awaits them and that the god they worship will not destroy the planet. A major philosophical miscalculation is obviously behind this, along with the money factor that leads you to believe it.