Getting so worked up over it that you turn a few specious comments into a full-blown argument almost entirely on your own is certainly symptomatic of being dogmatic.
if you say so
Well now you're just being silly, especially with that last comment. You are saying that in the face of a TRUE SPECIES-DESTROYING EVENT, the culture of individuals should be considered equal with the SURVIVAL OF THE ENTIRE SPECIES AS A WHOLE? So we let our species go entirely EXTINCT if we cannot save it while guaranteeing that every single culture will also survive entirely intact? Ridiculous.
What is ridiculous, is your notion of a single "species-destroying event". First of all, I have no idea wtf you're talking about when you mention that. There are species being 'destroyed' by climate change at this given moment, and there has been for decades. Ever heard of the Global Amphibian Decline??
Secondly, your naiveté of the issue is in full-display, in your conception of the human 'species' begin destroyed in a single event. It doesn't work like that. It's gradual.
First the oceans will rise-- then the oxygen levels in the water will deplete. Then the atmosphere will warm. As you can imagine, the Earth is vast, the habitat of its citizens are vast, and different people will be affected to different extents as the climate of the planet changes.
Anyways, let me get back to your point:
Well now you're just being silly, especially with that last comment. You are saying that in the face of a TRUE SPECIES-DESTROYING EVENT, the culture of individuals should be considered equal with the SURVIVAL OF THE ENTIRE SPECIES AS A WHOLE?
Lol, again, not what I said at all. That is what, three straw men in a single thread?
Rather, I just pointed out your tunnel-vision in appropriating the culture of an east-Asian with "grandma's food, and historical monuments". I specified the importance of conserving culture-- I did not say that this goal reigns supreme, and superior (or even equal to) that of human survival. Quit being so melodramatic. Also, as I mentioned earlier, this is not going to happen all in one event, like
The Day After Tomorrow or something. Get this idea out of your head. Obviously you in Nevada, with your AC, and little dependence on seafood will be fine. Can we say the same for 1 billion people who rely on aquaculture, or the 634 million people who are currently at risk from rising sea levels, despite contributing relatively nothing on their carbon footprints relative to North Americans?