Would this be why you seem completely unable to find any fault with the article?
The article is wrong. It places too much emphasis on the possible harm, largely ignores the massive problems with the ban, and ignores a great deal of evidence as to the relative safety of the pesticide. I already quoted a response (which is missing in the wiki article) to the article in Lancet cited. The article cited, while better written than the wiki article, contains the same problems. Possible carcinogenic risks which MAY affect this or that are not to be weighed against millions of people dying now.
Which of the following technologies, which would greatly aid in reducing CO2 output if implemented on a wide scale, would make things worse?:
Wind power, solar power, developing more fuel efficient engines, tapping into geothermal energy, wave power, tidal power, etc. etc. ?
I notice you fail to list nuclear power. The best current course of action would be to invest a good deal of money in nuclear power, particularly in the US, where most of the facilites are age old.
What an idiotic statement, and patently false. If kyoto is signed, and all it does is put of the same affect for 5 years, this is NOT helping, particularly if it means spending trillions. The idea is not to throw money at a problem but to find solutions that work.
But given that such treaties lead to research which in turn leads to better technology they are certainly steps in the right direction.
Why not skip the spending trillions on a plan which won't do anything, and instead put milllions into R&D in the first place? This is exactly the kind of thinking I am addressing with the ddt analogy. "Every little bit helps" except that while all you have accomplished is to put off the same warming conditions for a few years, you have spent trillions which not only is taking money a way from people, economies, businesses, etc, it is also taking it away from research for better ideas.
Bollox. If you were really concerned about the economic argument then ending the dependence on middle eastern oil would have been your top concern? Because, as seems to be clear, your concern certainly isn’t the science.
My main concern? My main concern is whether there is any point to life at all. Limited to public policy, my central concern is massive amounts of people dying from diseases, genocide, and other problems. As far as depending on foreign oil, I would like to be drilling in alaska, but more importantly investing in nuclear energy (which would drastically reduce carbon emissions, but which is prevented by the same environmentalists crying for America to sign the kyoto treaty). As far as the climate is concerned, I would rather see more money put into research for the technologies you listed above, but most of all nuclear energy, rather than fitter it away on plans that we don't even expect to do anything.