Now, vapid
comparisons to Pascal aside (though, in fairness, Pascal's argument
for the rationality of dedicating oneself to God is more nuanced
and much better than this chaff offered up by Mr. Bloomberg),
this really is a transparently stupid argument. Consider this
parallel reasoning, and then wince on behalf of Mr. Bloomberg
(who likely cannot wince on his own behalf):
We have
four possibilities from the combinations of the following either/ors:
either invisible dinosaurs are going to start killing people,
or they aren't; and either we do something about it, or we don't.
One of these would be utterly disastrous compared to the others
(if the invisible dinosaurs really are going to start killing
tomorrow, and we do nothing to try to prevent it). Therefore,
we MUST start running around like chickens with our heads cut
off, RIGHT NOW, voluntarily forfeiting massive portions of our
own wealth and forcing others who are slower to see the danger
to do the same, so that we can try to avert this disaster. It
is simply not reasonable to risk being wrong about this.
There is
no logical difference, none whatsoever, between this dinosaur
argument and Bloomberg's climate change argument. If Bloomberg's
argument works for his conclusion, then the same form of reasoning
works just as well for freaking out about invisible dinosaurs.
You can literally create this kind of argument for any conclusion
you want to draw.
I'll leave
a pedantic explanation of the logical mechanics behind this
disaster of argumentation for another time, but anyone at all
acquainted with the climate change discussion already knows
that bad arguments for climate change legislation are the rule
rather than the exception. But even so they are not usually
this bad. But please, people of a lost nation, begin
to see: the Michael Bloombergs of the world do not care about
the consequences of the plans they want to foist upon everyone;
they do not even care enough to try to build plausible arguments
for those plans. They just want us to agree to forfeit massive
amounts of our wealth (and our children's wealth) because they
tell us it is for our own good. The politically-connected (along
with some well-meaning useful idiots in the cheap seats) are
willing to lead the economies of western nations into an abyss
(though the politically-connected like Bloomberg will all make
out okay, of course). This is precisely why they lie and say
that "the science is clear." They are trying to provide some
sort of backing for their transparent power grab. But people
who say things like "the science is clear" are usually only
making one thing clear: that they know very little about how
scientific inquiry and advancement actually work (or, more sinisterly,
they are making clear that they simply don't care how such things
actually work).
It is time
we start using rhetorical judo back against these self-important
knaves. What is good for the goose is good for the gander.
There are
four possibilities: 1. Michael Bloomberg is secretly a serial
killer, and we do nothing to stop him. 2. Michael Bloomberg
is secretly a serial killer, and we invest large resources into
trying to stop him. 3. Michael Bloomberg is not secretly a serial
killer, and we do nothing. 4. Michael Bloomberg is not secretly
a serial killer, and we invest large resources into trying to
stop him from killing people. One of these is unbearably horrible.
Therefore... we can all do the math.
Meanwhile,
Mr. Bloomberg is going to be on "Meet the Press" this Sunday
morning. It will be interesting if he uses the same horrible
argument again, and, if he does, whether David Gregory will
have the perception or interest to call him on it (highly unlikely).
We should at least build a compendium of these terrible arguments
that statists use for their various evil causes, so that a future
generation will be able to read for themselves just what lazy
thinkers the "elites" were. It would also testify that at least
not all of us went along so gently with such naked wickedness
couched in bad reason.