£1.99
Well-known member
- Mar 3, 2008
- 1,233
Not gonna lie. I thought this thread was about our search for a striker.
Not gonna lie. I thought this thread was about our search for a striker.
It isn't at all. I think the boiling frog analogy works remarkably well here; we are quite literally chilling in blissful ignorance as our environment heats up around us, until such a time it's too late and it becomes our ultimate demise.
This is the problem with climate change, it's not instant, it's unspectactular. Just think about public and government mentality for a second. Islamist terrorist group commits an atrocity? Let's wipe the ******** out. Russian secret service deploys chemical weapon on British soil? Let's beef up our home security budget (because we can't very well go and wipe 'em out). June in the UK is the hottest ever on record? Nice one - let's crack out the sun cream and get the barbie fired up!
In terms of urgency, it's just not the same is it? Covid was similar in many ways, albeit it condensed into months rather than decades. It took a good ten weeks between news of the outbreak in Wuhan hitting western screens before shit really began to hit the fan and people realised "uh oh, this is bad...". There was a collective shrug of the shoulders - "Yeah, it could be nasty that, but it'll probably be alright. Same again, lads?".
I'm not clever enough to know whether we're already past the tipping point, but either way there needs to be a massive, collective global effort to have the worlds leaders and their people wake up to the monumental turd we've got in the mail. People need to wake the f**k up, myself included, as I sit here with a diesel SUV sat on my driveway.
The story linked above is deeply disconcerting, but is no higher up The Guardian homepage than Jack Grealish's £100m move to Man City. I wonder which story will have the greatest significance on our lives over the course of the next 10, 20 or 30 years?
The covid pandemic is going to seem like a walk in the park compared to what's about to happen.
It literally isn't, 3rd world will be pretty much wiped out.1st world problems
I expect the Green Party will become a real force in politics once the penny collectively drops and it’s actually far too late for them to do anything.
We here in western and northern Europe can be as ecologically alert as we like,... unless there is a shift from the heavily populated and industrialised nations in Asia and the sub continent, our relatively small lifestyle adjustments have little or no effect on the global picture.the green movement has already been succesful with a large amount of policy change. we've already done a great deal to reduce emissions directly and continue to. this story is typical of group talking up their own research and catasrophising, as shown by stating it could be decades to hundreds of years away. i.e. they dont really know, they have a model that something might be possible, given a extreme set of variables.
Just been perfectly well explained on Radio 4 by the actual scientists that understand it. And guess what? Firstly it's based on modelling and secondly the Guardian is mis-reporting the science in order to scare people.
The Gulf Stream is not about to collapse as they so dramatically state. The Gulf Stream is a wind pattern in the atmosphere that will remain. However, changes to AMOC may see it shift southwards fairly permanently. IF this happens then the UK will see a reduction in temperature and more "beast from the East" type events, countries south of us will get more warm rain. But the worrying kicker will be far more droughts in Africa similar to the 1980s.
Let's face it, none of the above is good but it is NOT the collapse of the Gulf Stream either. Nor can they say if it will happen or when. Once again non-scientific journalists mis-report science for political gain. On a personal note, I'm a died in the wool Guardianista but I've not read it since their early Covid reporting and feel far better for it.
We here in western and northern Europe can be as ecologically alert as we like,... unless there is a shift from the heavily populated and industrialised nations in Asia and the sub continent, our relatively small lifestyle adjustments have little or no effect on the global picture.