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Environmentalist religion explained

Freeman Dyson, one of the most highly-regarded physicists in the world:
There is a worldwide secular religion which we may call environmentalism, holding that we are stewards of the earth, that despoiling the planet with waste products of our luxurious living is a sin, and that the path of righteousness is to live as frugally as possible. [From, "The Question of Global Warming."]
Dyson is not the first to point out that environmentalism has morphed into an actual religion in its own right. In Global Cooling Ain't so Hot, Either, I pointed out:
Michael Crichton and J.R. Dunn have written highly insightful essays about how environmentalism is a religion in its own right. See “Environmentalism as Religion” by Crichton and Dunn’s piece, “A Necessary Apocalypse,” in which he shows how gobal-warming environmentalism is not merely a religion, it is an apocalyptic religion. Its deity is Mother Earth (Gaia), for whom human beings are mortal enemies. NBC’s Matt Lauer inadvertantly gave away Gaiaism’s central article of faith thus:

Earth’s intricate web of ecosystems thrived for millions of years as natural paradises, until we came along, paved paradise, and put up a parking lot. Our assault on nature is killing off the very things we depend on for our own lives … The stark reality is that there are simply too many of us, and we consume way too much, especially here at home.
My second son was required to take ecology his junior year in high school; he related to me that the curriculum basically said there was nothing wrong with earth that the disappearance of humanity wouldn’t cure.
There is, I think, a close correspondence between the main articles of religion of Judaism-Christianity and those of contemporary environmentalism, so much so that I would say enviromentalism's religious template is culturally derived from Christianity and its parent, Judaism. However, enviromentalism offers neither paradise nor "life more abundant." But there is more than mere religiousity at work in environmentalism. H.L. Mencken observed, "The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule it." And so it is, I think, with environmentalism today.

Read the rest at Sense of Events.


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