| Or you just have no idea what you’re talking about, because you live in a nice cushy region. [https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/malaria] - kills over half a million people a year. [https://science.utah.edu/news/toxic-dust-hot-spots/][https:/... [https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/chagas-diseas...] [https://www.un-igrac.org/sites/default/files/resources/files...] ground water arsenic levels, nice maps start on page 5. [https://sustainability.stanford.edu/news/new-study-allows-re...] All are driven by these factors, and there are many many more. And that isn’t even factoring in things like natural ground water Arsenic and Uranium contamination which poisons millions in many areas. Near as I can tell, you’re just living in areas that are the equivalent of ‘the good side of the tracks’. If you think Nature works at smaller scales than man, you’ve never spent time in Nature. Can we make things worse? Sure! But there are also plenty of real, large scale, natural hazards out there. |
First your response to “the non-human environment is an astoundingly efficient circular system” was “nuh uh, nature makes things that smell bad and are ugly too!”
Now your response to “nature doesn’t produce refuse of the same type or scale as humans” (clearly referring to the massive amounts of obscenely stable and probably-toxic-to-most-creatures plastic that we produce) is “MALARIA EXISTS, rich guy!”
Take a breath. Try to find where I said “nature works on smaller scales than humans.” When you find a line that looks similar but says something quite different, get curious about that difference! That’s where you’ll find what I’m actually saying.