Bobcat:
Much in the spirit of discussion over coffee, I respond.
Even as I write, on the radio they are debating this winter's US weather in the context of climate or environmental change. Admittedly, climate change or global warming are beyond the scope of this topic - save for one point: Did Russell, Rutherford or the Bible Students even suggest that that was on the table? I remember them writing of anarchy, socialists and destruction of churches, and somewhere of Russell claiming that the Earth was warming in advent of it becoming a more habitable paradaisical place... And I'm not sure if it even comes up now in the roll of doom enumerated each year. But let's consider it for a moment.
CO2 is a marker for Greenhouse capabilities of the atmosphere. I have a circa 1978 text which had the trends from Hawaii and Antarctica with seasonal variations - you can straight line it to the present 400ppm concentration in the atmosphere - and do the same back way into the 19th century. Beside that we have ice sample atmospheric concentrations from all over the world and back millenia.
There is no sudden discontinuity in 1914.
At the turn of the century (19th to 20th) in the US the Passenger Pigeon and the bison were just about wiped out.
The last passenger pigeon died off in 1913.
The buffalo recovered enough that you can buy a burger for a little more than one made from beef cattle.
Global and local variations of climate and environment vary. The Cuyahuga River in Cleveland hasn't caught fire from emissions since the early 1970s if I remember right or spelled it correctly. A lot of other rivers have been cleaned up under a Clean Water Act. We don't use fluorocarbons for spray cans anymore...And that seems to help on ozone. On the other hand, moving all our smokestack industries to China or elsewhere helps local environment here but not there and global environment not at all. But it does give Chinese an opportunity to live better than they do in the countryside. So are things just getting worse, or perhaps they are not getting as bad as they could be?
But saying that, and if I were Chinese liking in Peking and in any measure aware of my own nation's history, how would I greet the news of someone knocking on my door with a pamphlet "What the Bible Really Teaches"? Had the pioneer heard of the year 1912, or the year of the end of the Dynasty and the establishment of the Republic? The Rape of Nanking? The year 1949 and the end of the Long March? Events since the death of Mao? All these events affected a quarter of the population of the world directly.
What's the proposition in this derivative little red book, riding on claims of interpreting the works of others?
I second Phizzy's notion about Tom Holland's (or others ) books. I had read not read Rubicon, but I did read "In the Shadow of the Sword". In its pages recounting the reverses and struggles of the 4th to 7th centuries, there is plenty of room to reflect on how the prophecies we re-cycle today were used to justify or predict events then. The plague of Justinian (circa 580 AD - bubonic) is just about forgotten. A third of the civilized Mediterranean, Christian world died. Just after it was all united ( pushed back the Zoroastrian Persians, suppressed Samaritans and Jews) under an absolute, orthodox THEOCRACY, the Arab invasions swept it all away.
Makes you really want to worship a runaway Brooklyn printing press.
Best regards,
Kepler