@ Gordon, the rain was connected to La Nina… and La Nina was connected to the - climate change… and the climate change makes a worse - El Nino, so we shake them rains about, yeah, shake them rains about....
God promised there would always be rain… but the bible doesn’t spell out when, where, or how frequently it will rain, does it? There comes a point where “militant agnosticism” is just trotting out straw-men and is not what you claim it is.
@ Mike,
The end of what though Mike?
I’m not talking about “THE” end — that’s God’s bit. But the starvation of millions of humans, we’re quite capable of doing that to ourselves. This is not “THE” apocalypse — just potentially “an” apocalypse… and I don’t know why that is so alien to Christians who have free access to Revelation. When one looks at the history of humanity misusing its resources, such as the Irish potato famine and Mao’s “Great Leap Forward”, these terrible events of mass starvation should leap out as self-induced mini-apocalypses… for after all, how are we to use that word if not to describe these events?
I don’t know which of our modern environmental crisis are the most serious… global warming or peak oil, toxic build up in the global food chain (so that mines in China could have given my son cancer in here Sydney), or many others I could go on about such as global fisheries collapse and the freshwater crisis.
But I have a hunch which crisis will get people really talking about “limits to growth” first ... check out this Financial Times.
But with the oil price at a record $126 a barrel, more than 1,000 per cent higher than a decade ago, fears of the end of the hydrocarbon age have seeped into the mainstream. Many in the industry itself now accept that supply constraints are shaping the price as much as rampant demand.
... So are the peak oilists right? A series of recent events certainly appears to lend credence to those who argue that the world’s ageing oilfields are being sucked dry amid China’s and India’s determination to lift themselves out of poverty and the west’s reluctance to give up the luxuries of modern oil-dependent life.