Higgenbotham wrote:
The first sentence in the quote is a specific example of what I summarized in general. There is an underfunded minority of organic farmers and activists who are diligently working against this. In this case, whether the moral fight will be able to be fought in the future can depend on whether there are any crops left that aren't contaminated, since contamination is the predicted, known, and anticipated effect.
This is so far removed from what the average person is even aware of, let alone would understand if they were aware of it, that it illustrates another point about our society.
The society of the United States has become so technical, and so specialized, that every reasonable person must rely on the professional ethics, and personal integrity, of the professionals, and technical specialist we are dependent on.
It appears impossible to even replace the elite political class, which are legally replaceable every two, four or six years, as the case may be, with a set of moral replacements. The problem is, there are not enough available replacements who can both be elected and have any morals. The problem is even greater in the case of CEOs, global warming scientists, and other technical specializes. There is simply no way for the average voter to have any input on firing them, even if the average voter had the slightest clue as to which ones should be fired.
Given that, the only way to press the reset button will be to replace the society after this one self destructs. That is not something any sane person would hope for, however, neither sane people, nor the hopes of sane people, may have anything to do with those who make the decisions leading to such a self destruction.
Some of the issues that feed into the upcoming election will be understandable to the average person, and the vote will give them a chance to weight in.
Obama-care throwing sick people off of their health care, lies by the President leading to sick people losing their health care that is keeping them alive, and the debate going on over Immigration, legalization of illegal drugs, persecution of religious people in the name of gay rights, and job creation in the United States, all have a moral component.
It will be interesting to see if the country as a whole embraces the elite's immoral blue print for our society, or rejects it in a significant way.
( Just for the record, I do not equate saving the country, with rejecting the Democrats and their morals [the problem being: Republicans will be the ones elected in their place], but the one thing the political system historically has been good at, was throwing the bums out, so it will be interesting to watch).