Diverging back to the practical for the moment:
Al wrote (I added numbers):
1. And there ARE easily accessible answers to all the questions out there.
2. You just gotta' know where to look, and whom to ask.
Both true, of course. But (1) is useless, because within the realm of answers out there is every possible contradiction imaginable. That throws it all on (2).
Regarding (2) As to whether or not the earth is warming, I look for answers not from the people who take cruse-ship rides, or follow the rantings of a politician whose primary agenda is to get votes from anyone they can. It is a scientific question, the useful answers will come from scientists.
As to whether or not it is "our fault," who cares? That's not useful information.
As to whether or not we can do anything about it, that too gets a "who cares?" I allow some take great pride in not becoming involved in any effort that must fail. Well, me too, to a degree. So you look for other things, aside from the yes/no answer to "controlling global warming." "How much" is probably useful to modify "fail/don't fail."
And just by the way: In spite of the political rantings everywhere you look, what we need to get this economy moving is
not an influx of capital. This "downturn" is different. There are 10s of billions of dollars sitting in the vaults of Fortune 500 companies, banks, and investment companies right now. The money is targeted for investment, but isn't being so used. That's not an opinion, that's a fact.
The question is, why it isn't being invested? I'm sure your favorite politician will tell you why, just as soon as he figures out what you want to hear.
But here is the column B thought. In business you learn to try & maximize your return on investment. That's not business school, anyone pumping gas knows that. (In business school, they all it "Return on Net Assets.")
OK, take a mature industry. By in large, any increase in return is going to come from lowering the costs of manufacturing, or lowering the costs of performing the service. The two easiest ways to do that both involve reducing labor costs, either by moving the labor to a market where it is cheaper (AKA outsourcing jobs to Asia -- actually, to most anywhere except Europe & the US), -- or by lowering labor costs by investing in plant -- in effect, reducing the number of labor hours it takes to turn out the product or provide the service.
Neither of these is helpful to America just now. Anyone who cares about America needs to turn to the industries that are NOT mature, where the answers are not known, and invest in coming up with them. Yup, it's a risk. Oh. And train their children for that kind of activity, too.
The other answer in a high-cost labor market is to have a series of niche producers, who aren't really competing with "Asia." My company is one of those. And if you want to say "Boutique" instead of "niche," I can't argue. Twenty years ago, it was an answer for a 50-year-old-guy with existing skills. It is a small market, Asia doesn't bother with it, at least, not yet. It is no answer for an entire country, and no answer for your kids.
If anything made America great, it was a willingness to explore, experiment. If you don't believe that, you're left with the explanation that America had the only surviving industrial plant after WWII, and we just exploited that for a while.
Al Gore was wrong. True or not, our fault or not, Global Warming isn't inconvenient.
EDIT:
Lord, I can't end sounding that pollyannish. It is inconvenient for the large industries who want to keep on without change. But as the American Auto industry just showed, when hit on the head with a large club, they *can* come out doing just fine. As patriots, we should help them. Put some of that investment money into making large clubs.