Peripheral vision is important

The Atlantic magazine had a piece about what’s behind Trump irritating Greenland. The bigger perspective is what is important rather than Trump’s shenanigans about “buying” Greenland at any cost. From the magazine:

“As polar ice melts away, superpowers are vying for newly open shipping routes in the Arctic Ocean and largely unexplored mineral and fossil-fuel reserves. Arctic warming could pose a direct threat to America’s security interests too: Alaska could have new vulnerabilities to both China and Russia; changes in ocean salinity and temperature might interfere with submarine detection systems; the extremes of climate change, including permafrost thaw in Russia, could drive economic instability, social unrest, and territorial claims.

During the Biden administration, the U.S. military and NATO had both started to treat global warming in the Arctic as a matter of real military concern. Whether that will continue under Trump is an open question. Even as the president has tried to erase U.S.-government action on climate change, when he talks about Greenland, he’s tacitly acknowledging that rising temperatures are rapidly changing that part of the world—and U.S. interests there.”

This is an example of peripheral vision because it encompasses four large issues: global warming and international economics as the world economy suffers under the changes brought by AI and the changes brought by natural resource shortages. One could spend days talking about each issue independently but in this case, the four together add clarity to every issue.

Another example is the increasing frequency of earthquakes and volcanoes, two terrible human experiences that can wipe out small nations. The two peripheral issues are global warming and the Earth’s behavior as a planet in the Solar System. On the one hand, global warming is having a chemical effect on the planet. Subterranean gases like Methane have begun to escape into the atmosphere or explode underground and can be the fuse to begin an eruption; warm oceans affect temperatures of the floor under them. This is caused largely by global warming. Geologists have mentioned that the largest volcano in the world, located in Antarctica, is rumbling.

On the other hand, the Earth’s rotation is becoming an issue because the molten core is spinning faster than the surface. Mariner has written earlier about this circumstance which will increase earthquakes and volcanoes and in the future will cause a compass reversal at the poles – something that already can be evidenced in the Baltic Sea and the South Atlantic where reports of compass irregularities have been reported.

Many issues in life that are not in the news may be dealt with more efficiently if one looks peripherally at the issue. Odds are more than one condition may make an issue perplexing. Further, using peripheral vision also exercises one’s comprehension of life in general.

Ancient Mariner