Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who is middle class by dcum standards will be fine. They will be happy and healthy.
But it will be a sad world. There will be famines and wars and epidemics in many places.
There will be less skiing, less snorkeling, less swimming in natural bodies of water. Sports will be played inside.
Doubtful. Even the wealthy can’t avoid air and water pollution and weather catastrophes. The technology for a fully self-sufficient biodome isn’t there yet.
Anonymous wrote:LOL heck no, that is a stupid fear.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone who is middle class by dcum standards will be fine. They will be happy and healthy.
But it will be a sad world. There will be famines and wars and epidemics in many places.
There will be less skiing, less snorkeling, less swimming in natural bodies of water. Sports will be played inside.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I used to think the serious problems of climate change would come in another three or four generations. Now I wonder whether my young teen will see the end of human existence as we know it.
Anonymous wrote:I have two wonderful girls - one three and one five. We are thinking about having a third but holding off with that decision right now. Every now and then I get this sick feeling worrying about what their Ives will be like in the future with global warming. I have family in the Middle East and already the temperatures are soaring. I worry about the future of my nephews and nieces as well. Don’t get me wrong. I’m usually a happy person and generally will go about my day not thinking about the distant future. But lately I can’t help but think about it and am feeling down. I feel like we have very little time to reverse the effects of global warning and I doubt there is political will to do anything about it. Not sure why I’m posting here but my husband seems to be a more optimistic person or at least the type who thinks that we shouldn’t worry about things that are outside our control.