Threats to civilization

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Revision as of 21:37, 15 March 2007 by Woozle (talk | contribs) (→‎Overview: clarification of "destruction of civilization")
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Overview

This page is for identifying and discussing issues which threaten to destroy civilization if not countered, where the working definition of "destruction of civilization" entails anything from (on the "light" end of the spectrum) a global abandonment of democratic-style government and return to some form of feudalism to (on the "heavy" end) destruction of most or all known life.

This page may be more suitable as an Issuegroups-style page, but the status of Issuegroups is currently in limbo. See Issuepedia:Issuegroups.

Imminent Threats

global issues

United States

To the extent that civilization within the United States is itself threatened, that represents a threat to the world at large for the following reasons:

  • Any force powerful enough to overcome the US, arguably "the world's only remaining superpower", is powerful enough to overcome any other country or alliance on Earth
  • If the United States is taken over from within by forces inimical to the idea of civilization, then the US itself could become a threat.

Current threats to civilization within the US include:

Tools of Destruction

Some of the tools via which the various threats are being propagated:

  • terrorism provides a distraction by which democratic citizens can be fooled into unnecessarily trading their freedoms for apparent safety
  • religion is often used as a tool for spreading attitudes harmful to a free civilization:
    • discourages individual initiative
    • squelches scientific investigation, especially in the biological and environmental sciences
    • centralizes authority outside of the rule of law and beyond the reach of rational discussion
    • encourages dogmatic thinking at the expense of rationality
  • gerrymandering is a tool (primarily in the United States) whereby the established parties negotiate political control amongst themselves, thus negating much of the democratic process
  • weapons of mass destruction wield unusually high amounts of destruction in proportion to their cost. These include: