Machiavelli
Well-known member
The problem with the spectre of climate change, is that no one really has a reference point for how bad it could be. And that makes it hard to understand, difficult to comprehend.
In many ways, I think we all felt a bit of that at the start of last year. Despite it becoming increasingly obvious that something very significant was headed our way in the shape of the pandemic, I think for most of us (myself included) there was a sense of “but that would be horrible, therefore it can’t possibly be happening”. I’m not sure it’s really ignorance in the truest sense, but rather basic human nature. We’re hard-wired not to ruminate over our own, inevitable deaths as doing so would overshadow our lives and throttle day-to-day existence. The same is true of world-changing events.
But as we know from medical science, sometimes it’s our own safety mechanisms that do the damage, that ultimately see us off. I don’t really know how we tackle that, but if the last 18 months have taught me anything it’s that shit really does happen. And if THIS shit happens, then we potentially are well and truly fúcked - perhaps sooner than most of us could have imagined.
I’m not sure what it will take for the penny to drop, and admittedly it only just has for me, but things need to change very rapidly if we are to avoid a very dystopian future for our children. The kind of future that makes the Covid years look like absolute paradise.
This is mostly a good post, although two points:
-- there's no such thing as human nature
-- one of the better things about CV19 is that it's encouraged us to slow down and get off the hamster wheel, and I think it's helpful to compare CV19 with the climate crisis, but the most immediate difference between the two is one of temporality. CV19 was pretty much immediate, and the world was exposed to it incredible haste. CC, by contrast, is a slow burner, and its effects are being felt with different intensities and in different places at different times. I'm of the view that CC is more serious than CV19 and, given what we've achieved in reducing its effects, just think what we can do with CC. The problem isn't the will of the public, it's the will of most politicians who are most interested in carrying out the interests of big business.