@Jim S
ETA: And, no, I'm not trolling. It's a serious question.
I ought to know better, but some days I just can't see a can of worms without reaching for a can opener, so...
Ok, lets presume 'nature' includes mankind, that like beavers building a dam, our reservoirs are a natural response to a need. If that is the case, then when karactr suggests we have responsibilities to our planet, one of those is a false statement.
The only life form on this planet that can conceive a responsibility to the planet, is humankind. It is generally accepted that we can damage the planet through industry, war, over population, deforestation, etc. It is also true that only humankind has the ego to presume that the planet can be controlled by us.
Apparently the way to control the planet is to pay special taxes whilst paying extra for products deemed organic etc.
Regardless of which 'side' you are on, regardless of how difficult and/or stressful your convictions make you feel, stop for a moment and consider how much more difficult and stressful it will be in the future when our sun begins to wither and die.
There are those who believe that before our sun dies we will have the ability to travel to other planets. Many of those people would call the police if gang-bangers moved into their garden/park/golf club. Yet they never seem to consider that if there is intelligent life out there in space, their most logical response to our voyaging into space is to shoot the shit out of us. After all, why allow those who trashed their own home to move into yours?
The concept of 'Gaia' is inventive nonsense. A typically human response to fulfilling a need. "We are not helpless, 'Gaia' will look after us, will correct the imbalance, etc."
The biggest threat to mankind isn't the sun dying or the ice caps melting, or even a global virus. We are our biggest threat and no amount of taxation or political spin is going to stop the inevitable.
So isn't man's place atop the evolutionary pyramid part of the natural order of things and, therefore, man's works regarding nature part of the, well, natural order?
It depends upon how you define "the natural order". If you mean the inevitable rise and fall of various species over time, then yes. If however you mean the human construct of how we can control the natural order, then no.
If every single person on earth decided tomorrow to commit to every measure that would stop 'global warming' AND they all accepted that their lives would change drastically, that many would suffer and die, but that that was worth it, necessary. So tomorrow we stop pumping, processing and using oil, coal, gas, pesticides, plastics in any form. No more chemicals, pollution, etc. Would that stop global warming? Would it be worth the suffering and death that resulted?
By all means call 911 for an ambulance, they'll send the next horse and cart available. An electric ambulance? Oh no sir, we scrapped those because battery manufacture and disposal poisons the earth, never mind all that illegal plastic those cars were made with... No more plastic oxygen masks, no more surgical steel implements. No way to melt or forge metal without those nasty fossil fuels...
Thanks to all that suffering and all those deaths, the ice caps are growing, the seas are no longer rising. Oh and it is now possible to walk from England to France. No, not because the sea level has dropped that much, but because the ocean currents have deposited millions of tons of plastic debris in the bottleneck...