I’ll define “whole world” as every country that is making the curbing of greenhouse gases a priority. That would include China, Europe, North America, much of South America, Much of Africa, Indonesia, Australia, Japan, England, and the Vatican. While some of these countries may be doing very little, they have all acknowledged the reality and the problem of climate change.
Couple of things about that comment-
First of all- don’t confuse the actions and positions of politicians with the actions and positions of individuals who they claim to serve. It is wrong to assert that a) politicians act in accordance with the wishes of their constituents or that b) politicians enjoy unanimous or even majority support of their country. In the US, for example, fewer than 50% of people actually vote, and only about 45% of those voters voted for the person who wins the election- so it would be ridiculous to claim, for example, that the actions and positions of the US government actually reflect the wishes of all or even a majority of the american people.
It thus follows that your claim that “most people” believe anything based on positions expressed by their government bureaucrats is wrong.
Secondly, many countries, particularly third world countries, have a lot to gain from global-warming legislation because so much global warming legislation is focused on wealth redistribution. It could just be that countries that stand to reap financial gain from the sale of carbon credits, for example, don’t believe in or care about global warming so much as they believe in and care about finding a way to -]steal money from/-] uh, -]cash in on/-], mmm…sell carbon credits to first world countries.
At this point I’m more interested in discussing solutions than trying to convince skeptics on this issue. If we wait for 100% consensus before addressing the problem we are putting 100s of millions in unnecessary danger.
So you’d rather just go ahead and force people to act in accordance with your beliefs, even though they disagree with you?
What if I said that we should forcibly convert all non-christians because I believe that allowing people to remain unconverted puts “100s of millions in unnecessary danger?”
Sure, those non-christians might disagree with me, but like you, I am more interested in discussing solutions than trying to convince skeptics on this issue.