Do you really now? — Janus
Well, after you put it that way, I suppose not. But I would like to. — Merkwurdichliebe
China has not quite finished its industrial revolution. . .Don't worry, chaps, China will catch up as soon as we have a green technology worth stealing. — unenlightened
Would you move to an underground city to reduce energy expenditure? — frank
Never, and if mandated by PTB, I would resist to the death. Underground cities are a bad omen for humanity. — Merkwurdichliebe
I don't know, I think it would be cozy. And there could be huge parks on the surface to enjoy nature. It's an Isaac Asimov idea. — frank
But it would have to allow free and unimpeded transit between the underground and the surface, which would have to be explicitly codified into law as an inalienable human right. — Merkwurdichliebe
Sounds like you have a touch of claustrophobia. — frank
But it would have to allow free and unimpeded transit between the underground and the surface, which would have to be explicitly codified into law as an inalienable human right.
— Merkwurdichliebe — frank
Definitely when it comes to invountary confinement. I know I wouldn’t thrive in a prison cell. — Merkwurdichliebe
Or a nuclear sub probably. They go out for six months straight sometimes. — frank
Do you think it would be preferable if all human movement was monitored and regulated in our hypothetical underground city? — Merkwurdichliebe
I don't know what the point would be? Terrorists? — frank
I think people who would volunteer to live underground would be mostly boring people. I really like the idea of the surface being left to go wild. I love the wilderness. — frank
There is zero evidence that China gives two shits about environmental sustainability. — Merkwurdichliebe
Control and power would be the point. And in a confined underground city, we would have a veritable panaptacon.
Terrorism would definitely be a pretense for more control. — Merkwurdichliebe
There is nothing truer than the wilderness, and i love weather, i find it life affirming and reinvigorating. — Merkwurdichliebe
It doesn't require evidence — unenlightened
At the moment humanity as a whole gives less than a half shit about environmental sustainability. — unenlightened
There is zero evidence that China is too stupid to appreciate this. On the contrary, they are busy ensuring access to important greening resources such as lithium, and developing solar technologies.
Your naivety is to think that baddies must be stupid. — unenlightened
They would probably also start doing genetic engineering to make tiers of capability like alphas would be beautiful geniuses, betas would be nice looking functionaries, all the way to epsilons who are retarded. Plus they're all medicated so they're happy all the time. — frank
Then you show up out of the wilderness and do something revolutionary. And through the great adventure, you discover that you're not a cowardly lion after all. I mean you're a lion, but not cowardly. — frank
When I'm in the woods something unwinds inside me that I didn't even know was up tight. — frank
I like that. I'm a huge fan of caste systems based on looks. Retards and uglies would have to be classified together. And will-depleting drugs are always necessary. — Merkwurdichliebe
You said it brother, there is no greater feeling of freedom than doing your duty out in the wilderness. — Merkwurdichliebe
EROI is already much better, and if you factor cost of externalities is no contest.
Whether or not there is enough time is the second issue I mentioned earlier. But that too is because of lack of political will. Nothing has been done for so long, despite warnings and pleas from the science community and the public (and the globe), that it may indeed be too little, too late.
But we don’t know for certain, and in any case it’s a ridiculous position to take if it’s thrown around to justify doing nothing, or rationalizes casually and idly chatting about it. — Mikie
Anyway— what “people” do you refer to? You seem to want to continually shift the majority of blame upon the average citizen. — Mikie
You’re also exaggerating the costs and making a lot of assumptions about human beings which I don’t see much support for. I think average “people” care about their kids and grandkids’ futures, and would prefer that the world as we know it wasn’t burned or under water. This shows up in polling too — they want their governments to do more.
People aren’t against heat pumps or efficient public transportation or solar panels. They’re not against utilities generating electricity from renewables. The costs are way down, and should be subsidized further (as we’ve done with oil and gas for decades). There are indeed problems when it comes to NIMBYISM regarding transmission lines, losing jobs, etc — and that can be dealt with. Not insurmountable at all. — Mikie
Still largely a success— although phasing out nuclear was a mistake. — Mikie
Well, then all I can repeat is that I don’t think you’ve looked into this aspect enough.
Jimmy Carter had solar panels on the White House roof in the late 70s. Torn down by the fossil fuel shill Reagan. Imagine if instead we started a large renewable push in the 80s, and gradually transitioned? How much better would we be today?
I’d also Google Lee Raymond. — Mikie
And we haven't really been subsidizing oil and gas all that much. — ChatteringMonkey
Very little would be truly viable if you factor in all externalities. It's not as if the external costs aren't huge for renewables too. — ChatteringMonkey
I think ultimately all of this is more an unfortunate accident of history/evolution. — ChatteringMonkey
Governments have unprecedented debt already. — ChatteringMonkey
They [fossil fuel companies] certainly don't help, but I don't think we would have solved climate change even without their propaganda. — ChatteringMonkey
Imagine if instead we started a large renewable push in the 80s, and gradually transitioned? How much better would we be today? — Mikie
Yes you seem to think these evolutions are allways driven predominantly by idea's or ideologies. — ChatteringMonkey
The fact of the matter is that photovoltaics were nowhere near as good as fossil fuels back then, and that is the main reason they didn't gain a lot of traction — ChatteringMonkey
Over $20 billion a year (conservatively) is a lot, especially when compared to renewables. And this isn’t factoring in other subsidies. One estimate — the IMF — quotes in the trillions, which you seem to want to discount.
So to argue we’re not subsidizing oil and gas “that much” is a joke. — Mikie
Another canard.
Not nearly as much. Unfortunately, we don’t live in a black and white world. Yes, solar and wind require a lot of energy up front. But then they basically run themselves, making up for the initial emissions by a lot.
Compare to fossil fuels and there’s no contest. — Mikie
It’s not an accident. It’s a deliberate choice, and one made because of greed. Capitalism isn’t a natural law. — Mikie
Right— so let’s lay down and die. Let’s let the world burn because it’s not economically viable to save it.
Funny how the “debt” gets brought up very selectively.
If we can spend $1 trillion a year on the military, we can spend that on saving the planet. — Mikie
So you didn’t Google Lee Raymond. That wasn’t motivated by sheer greed, I suppose?
Has nothing to do with ideology, unless greed is an ideology. The propaganda campaigns were deliberate, and were conducted by fossil fuel companies and the think tanks that this industry funded. Which staffed the Reagan administration and set the policy agenda.
But I suppose we can shut our eyes and make believe all of this was just an “accident” and a natural outgrowth of “free markets” based on “human nature,” etc… — Mikie
but if you look at land use, which is the main cause of bio-diversity loss, it isn't great, — ChatteringMonkey
Mining for all the resources to build them is devastating too. — ChatteringMonkey
all the waste — ChatteringMonkey
I dislike capitalism as much as anyone, but I don't think it's the main culprit, industrialisation is. Communism was and is at least as bad for the environment. — ChatteringMonkey
I just can't see it happening — ChatteringMonkey
I just don't think any one person, or even a group of people, has that much influence in the larger scheme of things. — ChatteringMonkey
How do you explain the rest of the world doing little to nothing to reduce emmission? — ChatteringMonkey
Yeah— they do better than fossil fuels in all these areas. With the exception of solar panels and land use, which is comparable to coal but not gas. But what’s your point? That this will be hard and that we’ll have to deal responsibly with the process? No kidding. — Mikie
But it has to happen and will happen. So since it’s happening, I’m not sure what good it does saying how hard it will be, how big it is, how expensive it is, or how there are costs associated to it. Yeah, no kidding. We’ve been dealing with those issues for years in an industry that has killed millions and ruined the planet — called fossil fuels.
It does serve one purpose I guess. It enables us to sit back and say “we’re doomed — it’s never gonna happen” and go on with our lives. Sorry kids.
I don’t share that sentiment.
So-called communism. But the USSR and China were/ are state-capitalist economies. In any case, the US industrialized long ago and knew of this issue long after— they had the technology to change, and didn’t.
China faces a similar problem now — and is doing much more than we were at that level of development. They’re quite right when they say they shouldn’t have to bear the brunt of this work given historical emissions.
The reason the US didn’t decarbonize wasn’t because of the public. It wasn’t because of free markets. It wasn’t because the technology wasn’t available. And it wasn’t because of industrialization. — Mikie
I couldn’t see heat pumps outselling gas furnaces in my lifetime…but it happened last year.
Maybe none of it happens. That’s a possibility. But we work hard anyway. What we don’t do is sit down and help guarantee nothing happens. — Mikie
The rest of the world doesn’t emit much compared to a handful of wealthy countries.
And they are doing a great deal, in fact. Denmark, Netherlands, Morocco, many south sea islands, France, Germany — even China, by some measures.
There are many reasons why it’s slow moving. There’s economic reasons and propaganda just like in the US. But other times it’s simply the early stages of development and lack of funds (India, Africa). Much of it is lack of global leadership (US), with only mild steps forward coming the last few years.
I didn’t say it was one cause. In the US, however, it’s very close to one cause— and it’s obvious. — Mikie
we'd better find out what all the different costs are of the available options. — ChatteringMonkey
The reason all of them carbonized was industrialisation. — ChatteringMonkey
That’s been done. — Mikie
Industrialization and modern capitalism goes hand and hand — Mikie
You really believe that there no more debate to be had about how we are going to solve this? — ChatteringMonkey
Communism relies on industrialization too — ChatteringMonkey
The Industrial Revolution started in Britain — Mikie
Plenty. I’ve seen none from you whatsoever other than “I doubt it can be done. — Mikie
That doesn't mean there isn't a real discussion to be had about how we are going to solve it. — ChatteringMonkey
I don't see how one can be so certain about something with this many moving parts. — ChatteringMonkey
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