Author Topic: Ecocide: Should Destruction of the Planet Be a Crime?  (Read 334 times)

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rangerrebew

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Ecocide: Should Destruction of the Planet Be a Crime?
« on: June 15, 2021, 08:39:21 pm »
Ecocide: Should Destruction of the Planet Be a Crime?
To prosecute and imprison political leaders and corporate executives would require a parsing of legal boundaries and a recalibration of criminal accountability.
By David Sassoon
April 7, 2021
 

    The EPA Calls an Old Creosote Works in Pensacola an Uncontrolled Threat to Human Health. Why Is There No Money to Clean it Up?
   
At many moments in history, humanity’s propensity for wanton destruction has demanded legal and moral restraint. One of those times, seared into modern consciousness, came at the close of World War II, when Soviet and Allied forces liberated the Nazi concentration camps at Auschwitz and Dachau. Photographs and newsreels shocked the conscience of the world. Never had so many witnessed evidence of a crime so heinous, and so without precedent, that a new word—genocide—was needed to describe it, and in short order, a new framework of international justice was erected to outlaw it.

Another crime of similar magnitude is now at large in the world. It is not as conspicuous and repugnant as a death camp, but its power of mass destruction, if left unchecked, would strike the lives of hundreds of millions of people. A movement to outlaw it, too, is gaining momentum. That crime is called ecocide.

Pope Francis, shepherd of 1.2 billion Catholics, has been among the most outspoken, calling out the wrongdoing with the full force of his office. He has advocated for the prosecution of corporations for ecocide, defining it as the damage or destruction of natural resources, flora and fauna or ecosystems. He has also suggested enumerating it as a sin in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, a reference text for teaching the doctrine of the faith.

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/07042021/ecocide-should-destruction-of-the-planet-be-a-crime/

rangerrebew

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Re: Ecocide: Should Destruction of the Planet Be a Crime?
« Reply #1 on: June 15, 2021, 08:47:19 pm »
This is about as stupid as anything eco warriors have ever come up with.  China is putting up about one coal burning plant/week.  They are  not exactly known for how clean the country is to begin with.  Is someone, or an army, going to march into China to arrest Xi?  The same with Russia.  How do they plan to measure the pollution in a country which denies access?  And of course third world nations in S. America and Africa are going to take those two polluters to task and demand they clean up their messes.  Yeah, right.  Europe leaders a too chicken sh*t to do anything.  That leaves a mental degenerate like Biden to take the communist nations on by himself, which he probably would.  Completely, utterly insane. :woohoo:

Offline Joe Wooten

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Re: Ecocide: Should Destruction of the Planet Be a Crime?
« Reply #2 on: June 16, 2021, 01:27:46 am »
Well, such a law applied fairly, will convict the commie bastards who ran the old USSR and still run China, North Korea, and Vietnam. Their eco crimes dwarf anything the western nations have done.

Offline thackney

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Re: Ecocide: Should Destruction of the Planet Be a Crime?
« Reply #3 on: June 16, 2021, 12:18:53 pm »
Old Creosote Works in Pensacola

I've been there.  Enron rented a portion of the facility for storage during a pipeline project (Florida Gas Transmission expansion) during the 90s.  It was a really large facility.
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