Let’s say the quiet part out loud here

The current pope is almost certainly aware that Earth is above carrying capacity and that post peak oil it’s very likely a lot of people – many of them Catholics – are going to starve. He’s still egging on the fork bomb that is religious humanity by not encouraging birth control. Why? Market share.

That’s also what this abortion thing is really about. A bunch of scared old white dudes afraid that whiteness might lose market share. (God I Hope so. We are quite often a plague on the world)

It’s true that if you don’t care about misery – and obviously abrahamic religions like to *cause* misery whenever they can get away with it – probably gives the priests a feeling of power but certainly boosts their pocketbooks – pushing people to have Babies Ever After is a good way to boost your market share.

And, lately, we’ve observed another interesting problem – if the minority is willing enough to cheat – and majority is not willing to call them on it and do whatever it takes to undo their cheating – then the minority gets to have tyrannical power over the majority. I get the feeling this was predicted in the federalist papers.

I guess it’s not a surprise that religious folks are authoritarian. It is kind of a surprise how many people believe the blatant and easily proven false lies of the right. One of my favorites is about how we can’t switch to electric vehicles because the power grid can’t take it. Get this – a gas car uses more electricity (by the time the oil is pumped and refined) than a electric one. And if we count *total* watts – well, let’s just say moving oil around has a lot more line loss, so to speak, than moving electricity around.

But, the conservatives never stop the lying. They’ll claim that solar panels and wind turbines use more power to make than they generate – when the amount of power either generates in a week would turn it into incandescent gas several times over.

2 Responses to “Let’s say the quiet part out loud here”

  1. Kayti Says:

    Regarding it being predicted, I’ve often thought Donald Trump’s was what people meant when they said the U.S. would stop being a super power. His election was a good while later, but some of the predictions were that the U.S would stop having faith in the outcomes of its elections, and that part certainly came true. Makes his whole MAGA thing even more strikingly ironic, imo.

  2. Kayti Says:

    Regarding it being predicted, I’ve often thought Donald Trump’s presidency was what people meant when they said the U.S. would stop being a super power. His election was a good while later, but some of the predictions were that the U.S would stop having faith in the outcomes of its elections, and that part certainly came true. Makes his whole MAGA thing even more strikingly ironic, imo.

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