And apparently it's not even close to an existential risk, even in worst case scenario — ChatteringMonkey
It's nothing like an astroid hitting the earth where we either prevent the impact or die immediately — ChatteringMonkey
And sure he leaves out a whole lot, but science does seem to support the things that he does say. — ChatteringMonkey
It's not an existential threat, not even close. — ChatteringMonkey
The 17 experts, including Prof Paul Ehrlich from Stanford University, author of The Population Bomb, and scientists from Mexico, Australia and the US, say the planet is in a much worse state than most people – even scientists – understood.
“The scale of the threats to the biosphere and all its lifeforms – including humanity – is in fact so great that it is difficult to grasp for even well-informed experts,” they write in a report in Frontiers in Conservation Science which references more than 150 studies detailing the world’s major environmental challenges. —
It's not an existential threat, not even close.
— ChatteringMonkey
Based on what we understand now, this is true. — frank
My question: So, those who claim that global warming/climate change is a fact are claiming if it suddenly starts snowing all over the world, temperatures drop below freezing, rivers and lakes in the tropics freeze over, it's all caused by global "warming"? :chin: — TheMadFool
Remember climate change is about extremes - that cuts both ways (h9t or cold). Ergo, global warming can lead to global cooling. Paradox or climate change is a hoax, a well-orchestrated one. — TheMadFool
But I'm honestly confused as to what you mean by get things moving. Do you mean get things moving to avoid 4 degrees by 2050? If so, I doubt that's really possible. — Albero
If the Hothouse Earth Hypothesis is correct, then stabilising at or above 2°C would lead to a gradual but inevitable drift up to 4°C by say the yea — Albero
I actually read most of the articles and papers linked too here, and if anything a lot of scientists seem agree that climate change is very unlikely to be an existential risk. — ChatteringMonkey
And while I do think climate change is a serious problem that needs to be resolved, I don't think this kind of rhetoric serves that cause really. I think it damages their credibility, handing out free ammunition to climate deniers... and maybe more importantly accurate assessment of risks is important to determine what kinds of drastic solutions we need to consider to solve the problem. — ChatteringMonkey
And there is some evidence to support the notion of "tipping points." Or do you think this is all nonsense? — tim wood
And, while others will speak for themselves, I for one don't find overall positions such as that of Xtrix's in any way discordant to the issue I've just addressed. — javra
Read The Long Thaw by David Archer. He says there is no reason to believe humans won't survive the changes. — frank
Human extinction due to AGW? Who said that? — frank
I don't know of any legit scientists who say we're doomed either way. — frank
But you realize that this is a long-term problem? — frank
Well, then we should not say that the goal is to save the World, but just to say to help us and the few next generations of humans after us. — ssu
The thing is though is that most climate scientists aren't really saying we only have "12 years" to save the world. The people who are giving this "12 years" slogan are journalists who in my opinion don't actually have the proper credentials or time to sift through dense papers and technical models on the climate. — Albero
Here is a paper published and peer reviewed by several sociologists who specialize in human geography, climate change and public policy who disagree with the 12 year deadline idea. — Albero
And here is Michael Mann talking about doomism and its dangers:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/climate-deniers-shift-tactics-to-inactivism/ — Albero
You have a right to feel urgency about it, but all I'm saying is that the science shows the most extreme and out there scenarios aren't even on the table anymore thanks to the pledges. A 4 degree rise was once a possibility, but the current rise is projected to be 2.5 degrees by 2050 and is expected to lower even more as pledges ramp up in the coming years — Albero
Nowhere does this blog say "everything is fine, go back to consuming" it just said "not as bad as the media makes it out to be". — Albero
But you don't have to be disagreeable and go "oh you're just delusional, you don't know anything. We're fucked and you're an idiot." — Albero
That's fine and all, but scientists aren't infallible. I could easily flip what you're saying around and just say this particular scientist is being alarmist and going against established literature. — Albero
Hell, even Michael Mann who tends to exaggerate the severity of the issue admits that the "we're doomed" mindset is a new form of denialism. — Albero
I agree with you that the other poster here is being silly-free market capitalism isn't the proper solution to climate change, but it's also false that current governments aren't doing anything about climate change. Many are doing the bare minimum, but a lot of other countries (most notably China) consistently manage to overachieve their IPCC pledges. — Albero
According to new analysis from the Center for American Progress, there are still 139 elected officials in the 117th Congress, including 109 representatives and 30 senators, who refuse to acknowledge the scientific evidence of human-caused climate change. All 139 of these climate-denying elected officials have made recent statements casting doubt on the clear, established scientific consensus that the world is warming—and that human activity is to blame. These same 139 climate-denying members have received more than $61 million in lifetime contributions from the coal, oil, and gas industries.
While the number of climate deniers has shrunk by 11 members (from 150 to 139) since the CAP Action Fund’s analysis of the 116th Congress—largely in the face of growing and overwhelming public support for action on climate—their numbers still include the majority of the congressional Republican caucus.* These climate deniers comprise 52 percent of House Republicans; 60 percent of Senate Republicans; and more than one-quarter of the total number of elected officials in Congress. Furthermore, despite the decline in total overall deniers in Congress, a new concerning trend has emerged: Of the 69 freshmen representatives and senators elected to their respective offices in 2020, one-third deny the science of climate change, including 20 new House Republicans and three-of-four new Republican senators. Of note, no currently serving Democratic or independent elected officials have engaged in explicit climate denial by this analysis’ definition. —
I think that it is about people waking up individually and the scale of this can have a real impact. It also involves people challenging older structures. But, I believe that the process does need to happen quickly, in relation to conflicts between nations and political factors, as well as ecological factors, and these are all interconnected. — Jack Cummins
When people make a profit, it's because they've provided value to the economy, — Kasperanza
Ayn Rand makes me happy; I think she's a beautiful thinker. So I'll stick to it. — Kasperanza
I don't give a squawk what the climate does — Kasperanza
Restrictions take away freedom. People need freedom to be happy and flourish. Really basic concept. — Kasperanza
Actually, I think people like him have it really good in life. So often, ignorance in fact is bliss. — baker
If we have any hope of dealing with climate change, it's allowing capitalism to come up with solutions with competition and innovation, not the government controlling people like animals. And depriving them of fossil fuels, which is our only means of survival from the climate. — Kasperanza
It makes zero sense to me.
— Kasperanza
Because you're apparently completely unwilling to consider future consequences. — Echarmion
Hmm.. aren't greenhouses good for the environment? It is a "green" gas. That's good for nature. Having a hot climate like a the dinosaurs did sounds great! Maybe our climate can change to a more dino-like biosphere. — Kasperanza
And how do you know this is all due to CO2? What if the planet is going through a generational shift, or getting solar flares from the sun? And do you really think the climate would stop changing if we stopped releasing CO2 in the air? Would it slow it down enough to stop climate change? Why limit fossil fuels if climate change is inevitable? — Kasperanza
Under capitalism, people wouldn't be waiting around for the government to fix the issue, — Kasperanza
I mean yeah it will effect us, but I don't see any impending doom. You talk like humans won't be handle this. When problems arise, people adapt. Also, fossil fuels are the greatest defense against these issues. — Kasperanza
Haha wow, fishing will be affected. Okay so fishing affected? So what all the fish die. People can find food elsewhere.
When some lands become dry and barren, new lands will open up. Maybe Canada and Russia will become much warmer and inhabitable.
If the sea levels rise, just move. It's great there will be mass movements of people. Immigration is good. — Kasperanza
I mean I grew up the American education system. I was fed your perspective my entire life and I believed it for most of my life. — Kasperanza
I just wonder what your solution is to climate change. — Kasperanza
I'm not expecting you to agree, but it would be nice if you could understand some of the points that Alex Epstein makes. I don't think he's some lunatic. — Kasperanza
But I guess the perspective still is on our own asses, because life on Earth will surely adapt to situations where the polar caps have melted etc. We humans on the other hand might have huge problems. — ssu
And a bit more perspective to those changes: — ssu
Well, carbon capture is also an option for the right (and oil companies) to run on too since it doesn't require a big change in the current status quo. That is probably where I imagine the lines will be drawn politically in the future. Not ideal, but frankly that would be much better than where we are now with one side accepting the problem and the other thinking that it doesn't even exist. — Mr Bee
It's actually HG Wells dumbshit. — frank
We're either going to make it happen or we're dead.
— Xtrix
I don't think that's true. There's not one thing to make happen. There are lots of apocalyptic scenarios, but also lots of survivalist scenarios. — Kenosha Kid
Climate is not weather, but it disrupts the weather. We’re seeing it happen before our eyes. The pattern is obvious, provided we can read a graph.
— Xtrix
For most people, this is too abstract. It seems to me that unless people experience climate change directly, in a way that doesn't depend on trusting others, they can't really relate to it. — baker
Have you read the Moral Case for Fossil Fuels by Alex Epstein? — Kasperanza
I believe the climate is changing, as it always has. — NOS4A2
Most of the human race should revert to a Stone Age level. — frank
But the question for philosophy is not, is it happening or is it going to be bad, but how do we need to reimagine ourselves and our societies to include our dependencies on environment? — unenlightened
There's also geoengineering, which I fear will be the political right's "easy" response to the crisis once they can no longer ignore the asteroid that they've been downplaying for decades, but I don't think we're at that phase yet for them. — Mr Bee
I'm all for clean, green, and hip energy if it can be sustained under capitalism and not through government intervention. — Kasperanza
121 degrees F, 49.6 C, in Canada, more associated with moose and permafrost. More than 500 deaths associated with heat, and the village of Lytton BC totally destroyed by fire.
'Climate emergency' is not political rhetoric, it describes exactly what is happening. — Wayfarer
Oh, things are too hot? Blast the air conditioning. Things are too cold? Turn up the heat. I don't really see why it matters what the climate does. — Kasperanza
It's climate CHANGE not climate destruction. — Kasperanza
Change is neither good nor bad. — Kasperanza
Climate change is happening. So what? I'm not denying that. I'm saying we should burn more fossil fuels anyway. — Kasperanza
Don't you realize that you're guilty of what you just criticized me of?
You're ignoring someone who disagrees with you and only choosing to talk to people that fundamentally agree with you. — Kasperanza
What I do not see mentioned above is the interests of the young as expressed by them. I'm too old to worry much. But the children of the world are looking down a real gun barrel that's pointed at them. When enough of them understand that and grasp that as a fact, then they will start to change things, and pretty quickly. Nor do I see them indulging in great patience - why should they? I give it one generation. — tim wood
I say we burn more fossil fuels — Kasperanza
Let the earth change; it's ridiculous to assume that we can stop it. — Kasperanza
The news really likes to amp up "tipping points" and "earth will be venus" crap but these scenarios are usually cherry picked or blown way out of proportion. Hell, the IPCC doesn't even think "collapse of civilization" is on the trajectory despite what the Guardian articles make you think — Albero
In fact, their debunk here on the "Venus Earth" scenario really soothed a lot of my fears
https://debunkingdoomsday.quora.com/Not-as-scary-as-it-seems-Planet-at-risk-of-heading-towards-Hothouse-Earth-state — Albero
Is it already too late?
— Xtrix
I suspect it might be if one thinks of significantly slowing the process. I don't see the nations of Earth coming together in a meaningful way, but I could be wrong. — jgill
I'm usually an optimist but my gut feel is that democracies will reject any government that makes meaningful commitments. — Kenosha Kid
This however pivots on how much most of us care about future generations. At the very least the kids we're related to. — javra
Is there ANYONE out there who still doesn't consider this the issue of our times?
— Xtrix
Yes. Most of the people I’m surrounded by, for starters. Then there is a fair sum of the same in government. Also in the media … — javra
If so, will we reach tipping points no matter what policies we enact?
— Xtrix
Kinda hard to say since no-one knows what the tipping points are exactly, but I think it's unlikely enough will be done to avoid very serious climate changes. — Echarmion
The best way is probably to organise and join in mass protests. No individual consumer level decisions are likely to be very effective. Or rather the effective decisions are very impractical and so unlikely to be adopted by enough people to make a difference. — Echarmion
Climate change is not a disease, it's a symptom. I know quite a few doctors and they all say, while relieving the symptom has its merits, treating the disease is the primary goal!
What, in your opinion, is the disease? — TheMadFool
If so, will we reach tipping points no matter what policies we enact?
— Xtrix
First you should define just what is the tipping point you refer to. Or what you have in mind with climate change. — ssu
