The Age of Stupid - new documentary
The Age of Stupid - new documentary
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Discussion

mackie1

Original Poster:

8,168 posts

256 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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him_over_there

970 posts

229 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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Great, more leftie crap to brainwash the ignorant masses into feeling guilty about not being lentil eating, mung-bean using, repugnant waste of skin hippies.

A1GOY

1,521 posts

225 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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Just what I need: To be patronised by some berk named Frannie.

Eric Mc

124,822 posts

288 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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Is Pete Postlethwaite in this? he was rabitting on about it on Simon Mayo's programme this morning.

Sciroccology

29,908 posts

253 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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Eric Mc said:
Is Pete Postlethwaite in this? he was rabitting on about it on Simon Mayo's programme this morning.
"The Age of Stupid is the new four-year epic from McLibel director Franny Armstrong. Oscar-nominated Pete Postlethwaite stars as a man living alone in the devastated world of 2055, looking at old footage from 2008 and asking: why didn’t we stop climate change when we had the chance?"

Oh dear.

Nobody You Know

8,422 posts

216 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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Sciroccology said:
Eric Mc said:
Is Pete Postlethwaite in this? he was rabitting on about it on Simon Mayo's programme this morning.
"The Age of Stupid is the new four-year epic from McLibel director Franny Armstrong. Oscar-nominated Pete Postlethwaite stars as a man living alone in the devastated world of 2055, looking at old footage from 2008 and asking: why didn’t we stop climate change when we had the chance?"

Oh dear.
Thats sounds like the stupedist film ever. Mad Max 2 is probably a more accurate prediction of the future.

chris watton

22,547 posts

283 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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This was on the Politics Show, last Sunday. I am not sure if I heard correctly, but I think the UK Green Party are very heavily involved in this. If true, it isn't really a documentary in any sense of the word, but just an extended extra dull, complete with scare tactic garnish green party political broadcast.

Swilly

9,699 posts

297 months

Wednesday 25th February 2009
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The age of stupid..... they can say that again !!

mackie1

Original Poster:

8,168 posts

256 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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It certainly looks alarmist to me but I'm told it's not. The fact that it shows a flooded London within a 50 year timescale would seem to suggest otherwise.

However I'm also told it draws the conclusion that there's f**k all we can do about climate change so we are better of spending time, money and effort on fixing the problems we can do something about. Didn't someone work out that the money spent on Kyoto could provide clean drinking water to every person on the planet?


off_again

13,917 posts

257 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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Ah, thanks for that - I now know that I need to avoid this. Positive assistance from PH, brilliant...

AlexKP

16,484 posts

267 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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I am not commenting on the accuracy or not of this film, but it does sometimes surprise me just how quick some PH'ers are to condemn anything remotely connected with environmental awareness or concern. Often before they have even seen it.

Surely there are two sides to every argument, and sometimes it is the argument itself that is important - the fact that it is under debate. To simply dismiss one side of a debate automatically and out of hand renders the individual just as guilty of bias and narrow mindedness as they accuse those of being they disagree with.

Without doubt there has been a huge amount of erroneous information from the pro-environmental lobby - this is to be expected - they have an agenda and like many "new" subjects there is a lot of conflicting information and research. The media have not reported many of the issues well or in a particularly balanced way either.

But there has also been irresponsible arbitary dismissals and refusals to explore the issues from the anti-environmental lobby. This makes them just as guilty of selectivity and bias as those they accuse.

As always, the truth is likely to be somewhere between the two extremes. But given the possible scale of the catastrophe if some of the worst climate predictions were to come true, I would rather we had the debate in a mature manner, and made contingency plans.

The predictions may turn out to be wrong, I hope they are, and I believe most of them will come to nothing. But if I am wrong, then the scale of the disaster will be unprecendented. If we have learned anything from the banking crash it should be that doing nothing and just hoping it will all be ok is not sufficient.

Edited by AlexKP on Thursday 26th February 09:16

Don

28,378 posts

307 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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Grammar Police: The Age of Stupidity!

Therefore anything to do with this from hereon in is irrelevant and worthless fruit of the poisoned tree. yes

Alex you do have a point. But if you look at anythingany of this lot ever propose it's generally to do with politics - not common sense.

Be green. Save money. Don't burn fuel on st you don't want and st you don't need. Save it for the stuff you DO want and DO need...like your TVR, for example.

buggalugs

9,269 posts

260 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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"The age of stupid" - Oh good, that sounds ballanced and informative, must check that out...

Martial Arts Man

6,703 posts

209 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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Don said:
Grammar Police: The Age of Stupidity!

Therefore anything to do with this from hereon in is irrelevant and worthless fruit of the poisoned tree. yes

Alex you do have a point. But if you look at anythingany of this lot ever propose it's generally to do with politics - not common sense.

Be green. Save money. Don't burn fuel on st you don't want and st you don't need. Save it for the stuff you DO want and DO need...like your TVR, for example.
yes the irony made me chuckle the first time I heard the title.

AlexKP

16,484 posts

267 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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...but back to the subject of the thread... and as per my earlier post...

Is there an instant over-reaction here on PH to any suggestion that there could be some problems with the global climate?

Eric Mc

124,822 posts

288 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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Probably - but mainly because we don't see these changes as "problems" - more "natural occurences" which we must learn to live with.

sadako

7,080 posts

261 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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I think I'd rather watch Idiocracy...

Moose.

5,345 posts

264 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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Eric Mc said:
Probably - but mainly because we don't see these changes as "problems" - more "natural occurences" which we must learn to live with.
yes

Maxf

8,441 posts

264 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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anonymous said:
[redacted]
I think we are tired of the 'problem' being followed by proposed increas in taxes and restrictions on personal libery.

The climate probably is changing, it probably is a natural cycle but we are spending billions trying to stop this while we could be spending the money on adapting. Adapt or die as they say!

Don

28,378 posts

307 months

Thursday 26th February 2009
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Eric Mc said:
Probably - but mainly because we don't see these changes as "problems" - more "natural occurences" which we must learn to live with.
Smack on target with that one, Eric.

Our Climate IS Changing. Exactly how we're not sure - not thirty years ago the whole scientific community was worred about a new Ice Age. Exactly why we're not completely sure - but have some ideas. We know climate is affected by the natural cycles of the planet's orbit and inclination (sp?) to the sun. We know climate is affected by the position of the landmasses on the surface of the planet and we know these move through a phenomenon dubbed plate tectonics. It's possible, I grant you, that human activity affects climate - and if it does, it could so only locally or, less likely, globally?

In any event the likelihood of us being able to actually affect our climate deliberately to "correct" some "error" seems to me to be very low. Cool it or warm it up? Don't think so.

What we should be doing is

1) Not deliberately hamstringing our economies which will be required to
2) generate enough cash for infrastructure projects to
3) deal with the inevitable

Seems obvious to me.

Wetter climate = better flood defences and don't build on flood plains.
Flooding of the Thames = Start moving things away NOW
Crumbling coastline? Barriers to help - ban on building anything close.

If our best climate scientists can actually foretell anything useful surely we should be planning on building stuff to cope with it - instead of wringing our blinking hands and actually doing NOTHING other than bang on about politics that is shag all to do with climate and everything to do with wealth redistribution!