 |
|
Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
|
|
|
|
In
2003,
the late Dr Michael Crichton, a best-selling author with more
than 200 million books in print including Jurassic Park and State of Fear, was asked what he thought was the most
important challenge facing mankind. He explained: “The
greatest challenge facing mankind is the challenge of
distinguishing reality from fantasy, truth from propaganda.
Perceiving the truth has always been a challenge to mankind,
but in the information age it takes on a special urgency and
importance. We must daily decide whether the threats we face
are real, whether the solutions we are offered will do any
good, whether the problems we're told exist are in fact real
problems, or non-problems.”[1]
Daily we are inundated with doom and gloom assertions dressed
up as fact, that mankind is destroying the planet. Left
unchallenged they can all too easily become part of a
prevailing belief that human life itself is the enemy...
needing to be controlled by bigger and more prevailing
governments. That is not to say
that environmental concerns are not valid – of course they
are - but they must be based on science not extremism.
Among the more common beliefs that masquerade as
fact is that the world is becoming grossly overpopulated, that
man-made global warming is reaching a catastrophic tipping
point, and that industrialisation will create a peak oil
crisis and deplete the earth’s reserves.
The reality is that such predictions border on science
fiction. As the former Science and Technology Editor of the Economist,
Matt Ridley points out in his best-selling book The Rational Optimist there is no global population crisis.[2] While
the notion that the number of people on the planet will
continue to rise uncontrollably to create an over-population
crisis has been embraced by the environmental lobby, since the
1960s the rate of increase in the global population has been
in decline. While the causes are complex, it appears that as
living standards improve and infant mortality declines, people
voluntarily have fewer children. And thanks to technology and
innovation, instead of food supplies running out they have
increased. Humans are now healthier and living longer than
ever before. That is not to discount the fact that there are
still many people facing famine, but ironically, the
responsibility often lies with corrupt political regimes. Once
people gain access to running water and electricity, so their
living standards will gradually improve.
A glaring example of how faulty activism can materially affect
social well-being is evident in the United Nations’ campaign
against man-made global warming. The UN has not only convinced
governments around the world to convert precious food
resources into inefficient bio-fuels, but they have also
successfully persuaded them to impose energy restrictions on
their populations, creating hunger and fuel poverty - all in
the name of preventing a cataclysmic environmental Judgement
Day. The fact that the predicted ‘tipping point’ has not
occurred and that the Earth appears to be doing just fine has
not discouraged these activists. They, like most species on
Earth, are displaying a remarkable ability to adapt to suit
their own self-interest: they are now claiming that every
inclement weather event is an adverse effect of mankind’s
presence on the planet. On the silver screen such a
development would be comic, but unfortunately in the world of
politics even fantasy necessitates a bureaucratic
‘solution’, and our emissions trading scheme is a fine
example of a mechanism designed to slow New Zealand’s
economic growth by driving up the price of electricity and
fuel.
In spite of each D-day for peak oil passing unnoticed, claims
that the world is running out of resources continue on
unabated. Perhaps the new report from Harvard University, that
shows that around the world there are huge volumes of
conventional and unconventional oils still available to be
developed, will not only convince the doomsayers that global
fuel reserves are secure, but also, thanks to technological
advancements, that fuel will continue to get cheaper and more
plentiful.[3]
Even once reputable media outlets now appear to have fallen
into the trap of reporting propaganda as though it were fact.
This failure to fulfil their fundamental watchdog role, of
presenting unbiased information and promoting a balanced
debate, is undoubtedly a factor in their declining audience
numbers. It is not just the media that are contributing to
this situation, but politicians and political lobby groups as
well - there is power in scaremongering, especially for
doomsayers who predict cataclysm… unless we do what they
say!
The non-fictional account of the state of the planet is that
it is not in danger. The earth is not running out of resources
– innovation is creating new reserves. Humans are not
getting sicker and poorer – each new generation is healthier
and living longer than the generation before it. Sure there
are endless big challenges that need to be addressed – but
that is how it has always been and always will be.
The reality is that if mankind is under any threat at all, it
is the threat posed by the doomsayers against the free market
and the virtues of self-interest. It is these two powerful
forces that are largely responsible for mankind’s continual
improvement in living standards.
These ideas were first described by the legendary economist
Adam Smith as an invisible
hand. In The
Wealth of Nations, written in 1776, he outlined the
principle in the following way: “It is not from the
benevolence of the butcher, the brewer or the baker, that we
expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own
interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to
their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities
but of their advantages.”
In other words, by trying to maximise their own gains
in a free market, individuals can harness their own ambition
in a way that provides benefits to society as a whole.
This blending of self-interest and problem solving is the
great strength of the free market. Few activists understand
this, hence their addiction to catastrophic scenarios. The
market place is a servant to its consumers. When the free
market is utilised, millions of minds and billions of dollars
are marshalled to satisfy consumer needs and wants, and to
overcome their problems. However as Adam Smith noted so many
years ago, there must be something in it for them – they
must be able to personally profit from the benefits they are
providing to consumers. Those who seek to condemn the free
market and self-interest, risk destroying the very thing that
is making our lives better.
But the pursuit of self-interest is not only seen in commerce.
The Olympic Games is a great example – striving for a gold
medal is a hugely powerful motivating force for athletes, and
the end result of all of their hard work and dedication, not
only leads to enormous success for themselves, but for their
coaches, their clubs, their sport, their family, their
community, and the whole country! Politicians love it too as
it offers them good news stories from which they can justify
the multi-millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money that they
spend on sports funding.
The invisible hand of self-interest works in almost every area
of human endeavour – researchers striving for breakthroughs,
such as finding a cure for cancer, are not only pursuing their
personal ambition to solve a major problem facing humanity,
but they know that success would bring fame and increased
research funding. Politicians striving for publicity always
have an eye on the polls and getting re-elected. The union
movement wants to sign up more workers and increase their
funding base. Environmental activists like Greenpeace and the
Environmental Defence Society hope to gain followers and more
importantly their donations. The media runs sensational
headlines in order to attract a bigger audience to improve
their ratings and therefore advertising revenue. The United
Nations uses its inter-governmental networks to impose its
political agenda on nations to become more relevant as a
governing body.
Unfortunately the impact of the United Nations is all too
evident here in New Zealand. This week’s NZCPR Guest
Commentator, Dr Ron Smith, Co-Director of International
Relations and Security Studies at the University of Waikato,
and an NZCPR Research Associate, highlights a case in point
whereby the University of Waikato has committed itself to a
radical environmental campaign being run by the United Nations
and promoted during the Rio+20
Earth Summit in June:
“The Vice-Chancellor’s signature on this
declaration commits the University to teach ‘sustainable
development concepts’ so that future graduates ‘have an
explicit understanding of how to achieve a society that values
people, the planet and profits in a manner that respects the
finite resource boundaries of the earth’.
The whole thesis that there is a ‘sustainability’
crisis and that it requires urgent global attention, depends
on a substructure of belief in such things as global warming,
irreplaceable resource depletion ‘footprints’, and
gathering problems of poverty and disease.
All of these are, to a greater or lesser extent,
disputable, and ought to be disputed, if unnecessary and
counter-productive action is to be avoided.
For a university to institutionally prejudge these
things is an offence to scholarship and a serious disservice
to the community on whose support they depend.
Whether the University leadership knows it or not, it
has now made itself part of a global political campaign, which
goes beyond the promotion of a persistent ‘narrative’ that
human beings are destroying the planet, to the advocacy of a
world-order which has the potential to radically alter the
social and political rights of New Zealanders.” To read Sustainability
and the role of the university, please click here>>>
At this
stage the University of Waikato and the Unitec Institute of
Technology appear to be the only New Zealand tertiary
education institutions that have signed up to the United
Nation’s Higher
Education Sustainable Development Initiative. One would have
expected institutions of higher learning, that are meant to
promote academic freedom and act as the ‘critic and
conscience’ of society, would have given more thought to the
wider implications of committing themselves to a political
agenda driven by the UN.
Political agendas are now deeply embedded in our schools, in
government institutions, in academia, the media, and many
other areas of our lives. The challenge is to recognise what
is going on and not be swayed. As H. L. Mencken, the
influential American journalist and writer put it: “The
whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace
alarmed - and hence clamorous to be led to safety - by
menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them
imaginary”.
This
week’s poll asks: Do
you believe activists overstate the environmental threat in
New Zealand?
Click here for poll >>>
Footnotes:
1.Michael Crichton, Remarks
to the San Francisco Commonwealth Club
2.Matt Ridley, The
Rational Optimist
3.Leonardo Maugeri, Oil
– the Next Revolution
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send to friend
Your
Comments:
Reader's
comments will be posted on the
NZCPR Forum page click
to view >>>
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send
to a friend:
|