Brazil is a great place with great people who from my observations are in fact very sensitive to these issues despite the hardships they present. Maybe our elitist attitudes should be a little more informed.
Hear, hear!
The hypocrisy of the NIMBYs and the environmental left is inexcusable, not only because their per-capita consumption miniscules that of those terribly afflicted by their prejudices, but because, as a whole, they are typically much better educated and, therefore, should be aware of the largely incompassionate, regressive consequences of their activism.
As I noted on another thread, I was in a hotel in Austin, TX last week that hosted a large conference dealing with the law and the environment. The place was hopping. The participants were lawyers, regulators, government folks, NGOs and "the affected". This was no LaQuinta, and according to the concierge, the attendees weren't eating at Rudy's or drinking from the lower shelves. No doubt that first-class and private aviation did very well that week. Perhaps some assuage their conscience with a voluntary carbon tax payment or a donation to an organization which promises to plant trees in the Amazon (I wonder if these ever get audited).
My son travels to Brazil a couple times each year and loves the place so much that he'd like to live there for awhile some day. He believes that it is on a great track economically, and with the energy, the optimism, and warmth of the people, as well as its great natural resources, the country has fantastic potential. I hope that the government is able to find the proper balance with development and the effective care for the environment so both people and nature can prosper. Anyone who has traveled can't help to note the direct link between economic development and the condition of the environment.