Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like it’s too late to stop it - which is what I keep hearing from the climate Chicken Littles, anyway.
So can we just accept that it’s happening and nothing can be done about it?
Besides, with birth rates falling like they are, we’ll be lucky to have 3 billion humans left on the earth in 100 years. It’ll be pretty hard to sustain anthropogenic climate change without people.
Even with falling birth rates the world's population is projected to continue rising until about 2090, peaking over 10 billion and then perhaps slowly declining. So climate change is likely to get even worse unless we work harder to address the problem. I disagree that nothing can be done about. Solutions exist. There are examples of wealth countries with relatively low CO2 per capita. France, for example, has a high GDP-per-capita but has a GDP-per-capita that is just one-third of the level in the U.S. While we cannot stop climate change, we can decelerate it, with a combination of nuclear power and increased renewables.
Above, I meant that France has CO-per-capita that is one-third the level of the US.
France also uses nuclear power to generate about 85% of the electrical power.
Maybe if all the American leftists, progressives and environmentalists got onboard with nuclear power we could diminish our own carbon footprint, too?
But nope. They won’t.
Which illustrates clearly that the environmental movement in America isn’t about the environment at all. It’s about consolidating political power.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like it’s too late to stop it - which is what I keep hearing from the climate Chicken Littles, anyway.
So can we just accept that it’s happening and nothing can be done about it?
Besides, with birth rates falling like they are, we’ll be lucky to have 3 billion humans left on the earth in 100 years. It’ll be pretty hard to sustain anthropogenic climate change without people.
Even with falling birth rates the world's population is projected to continue rising until about 2090, peaking over 10 billion and then perhaps slowly declining. So climate change is likely to get even worse unless we work harder to address the problem. I disagree that nothing can be done about. Solutions exist. There are examples of wealth countries with relatively low CO2 per capita. France, for example, has a high GDP-per-capita but has a GDP-per-capita that is just one-third of the level in the U.S. While we cannot stop climate change, we can decelerate it, with a combination of nuclear power and increased renewables.
Above, I meant that France has CO-per-capita that is one-third the level of the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The other thing I believe is that there are natural changes that the earth goes through. Nothing stays the same over a zillion years. I think climate change is real but I also think that our expectations if weather and geography - shit changes and it doesn't stay the same for 40" years you know? If you build a house in Miami on the beach well sorry but in 400 years it may not be there and that's because the earth changes! We can't expect our desires of what we want to last forever. Life doesn't work that way - things die and seasons happen and that's not just climate change that's cycles and lufe.
Our best efforts to understand the past climate and the present climate indicate that global average temperature is now changing at a record pace. The rapid pace of change is what is most alarming -- not the fact that the climate is changing. The study that was cited earlier in this thread indicates that average temperature over land in the northern hemisphere is increasing by 1.0F every 14 years.
https://www.soa.org/resources/research-report...global-warming/#fig5
If that pace continues over the next 100 years, then by 2124 the average in North America will be 7 degrees Fahrenheit higher than it is today. This is a disturbingly large change across a short time period.
I understand the attitude that there is nothing that can be done because the problem is so big and complicated. But I find it too depressing to do nothing at all. I've altered my own CO2 footprint quite a bit, cutting it in half, from about 10 tons a year to 5 tons a year. I have eliminated many luxuries that I used to enjoy. So much CO2 is generated simply by excessive consumption, rather than by the production of life's necessities. The least I can do is shed some of the high-CO2 luxuries.
Good for you. Live your life of austerity and sleep well knowing that all your sacrifices are being negated by orders of magnitude by China and India. In the end the result will be the same, we’ll be a half dozen degrees warmer, sea levels will probably rise a bit, plants will grow in marginal places they couldn’t before, and life will go on.
That’s not worth me sacrificing because I know it’ll be negated by China and India. F’ it. I’m not doing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The other thing I believe is that there are natural changes that the earth goes through. Nothing stays the same over a zillion years. I think climate change is real but I also think that our expectations if weather and geography - shit changes and it doesn't stay the same for 40" years you know? If you build a house in Miami on the beach well sorry but in 400 years it may not be there and that's because the earth changes! We can't expect our desires of what we want to last forever. Life doesn't work that way - things die and seasons happen and that's not just climate change that's cycles and lufe.
Our best efforts to understand the past climate and the present climate indicate that global average temperature is now changing at a record pace. The rapid pace of change is what is most alarming -- not the fact that the climate is changing. The study that was cited earlier in this thread indicates that average temperature over land in the northern hemisphere is increasing by 1.0F every 14 years.
https://www.soa.org/resources/research-report...global-warming/#fig5
If that pace continues over the next 100 years, then by 2124 the average in North America will be 7 degrees Fahrenheit higher than it is today. This is a disturbingly large change across a short time period.
I understand the attitude that there is nothing that can be done because the problem is so big and complicated. But I find it too depressing to do nothing at all. I've altered my own CO2 footprint quite a bit, cutting it in half, from about 10 tons a year to 5 tons a year. I have eliminated many luxuries that I used to enjoy. So much CO2 is generated simply by excessive consumption, rather than by the production of life's necessities. The least I can do is shed some of the high-CO2 luxuries.
Anonymous wrote:
The other thing I believe is that there are natural changes that the earth goes through. Nothing stays the same over a zillion years. I think climate change is real but I also think that our expectations if weather and geography - shit changes and it doesn't stay the same for 40" years you know? If you build a house in Miami on the beach well sorry but in 400 years it may not be there and that's because the earth changes! We can't expect our desires of what we want to last forever. Life doesn't work that way - things die and seasons happen and that's not just climate change that's cycles and lufe.
Anonymous wrote:With this many people we won't be able to stop global warming. It'll be impossible from the perspective of the efforts and sacrifices that will require all of us collectively. We may slow the progression but I doubt that we will ever change the course we're on. I do not feel people appreciate the challenge, in lieu of a huge technical advancement or invention, of stoping climate change. We have created a problem that is a problem because it's needed by humans to live. Are we all just suddenly automatically going to stop everything in a snap? I don't see us pausing industry, convenience, logistics or choices collectively to turn the tide.
The other thing I believe is that there are natural changes that the earth goes through. Nothing stays the same over a zillion years. I think climate change is real but I also think that our expectations if weather and geography - shit changes and it doesn't stay the same for 40" years you know? If you build a house in Miami on the beach well sorry but in 400 years it may not be there and that's because the earth changes! We can't expect our desires of what we want to last forever. Life doesn't work that way - things die and seasons happen and that's not just climate change that's cycles and lufe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Makes you wonder when our politicians will finally pay attention and make policies that address this threat to our survival. Ostriches. Feeble ostriches, one and all.
Our politicians are paid for corporations that only care about quarterly earnings. A good portion of the population doesn't even believe in climate change. The time to have made policies was 30 years ago. We are so beyond screwed.
Anonymous wrote:Makes you wonder when our politicians will finally pay attention and make policies that address this threat to our survival. Ostriches. Feeble ostriches, one and all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like it’s too late to stop it - which is what I keep hearing from the climate Chicken Littles, anyway.
So can we just accept that it’s happening and nothing can be done about it?
Besides, with birth rates falling like they are, we’ll be lucky to have 3 billion humans left on the earth in 100 years. It’ll be pretty hard to sustain anthropogenic climate change without people.
Even with falling birth rates the world's population is projected to continue rising until about 2090, peaking over 10 billion and then perhaps slowly declining. So climate change is likely to get even worse unless we work harder to address the problem. I disagree that nothing can be done about. Solutions exist. There are examples of wealth countries with relatively low CO2 per capita. France, for example, has a high GDP-per-capita but has a GDP-per-capita that is just one-third of the level in the U.S. While we cannot stop climate change, we can decelerate it, with a combination of nuclear power and increased renewables.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like it’s too late to stop it - which is what I keep hearing from the climate Chicken Littles, anyway.
So can we just accept that it’s happening and nothing can be done about it?
Besides, with birth rates falling like they are, we’ll be lucky to have 3 billion humans left on the earth in 100 years. It’ll be pretty hard to sustain anthropogenic climate change without people.