• Fisting for Freedom
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    5001 year ago

    Man, I’m so glad this global warming thing is leftist propaganda or I’d really be freaking out right now.

    • @WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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      1991 year ago

      Luckily, we can choose to reject reality and believe whatever makes us feel better.

      I feel best believing the biosphere is gonna force humanity to “find out” for the last century of fuckin around with a recklessly unplanned terraform.

      • genoxidedev1
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        1221 year ago

        Love how the collective of humanity needs to find out because the richest few fucked around.

        • Striker
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          1 year ago

          You can always find these people and make them find out. They are actively committing genocide against the human race.

        • very smart Idiot
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          -1091 year ago

          But the rich are supplying a demand. And a ton of innovation wouldn’t be there without them.

                • @minorsecond@lemm.ee
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                  281 year ago

                  I don’t know how I feel about it. On one hand, it makes for less of an echo chamber. On the other hand, their thoughts are fucking stupid and it hurts my brain to see them.

              • Bleeping Lobster
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                181 year ago

                Happy to have them here. I almost never agree with them, but not only is it good to have your opinion challenged (though often wearying to have to repeat yourself), it’s good for THEM to have their opinion challenged too. Maybe only 1/100 will change their opinion after being challenged and seeing that their opinion is very much in the minority, but that’s 1/100 more than if we were all chatting away in a safe space with no opposing views.

                (and to be clear, no I don’t think shit like nazis, devout racists etc is an ‘opposing view’ that deserves any debate)

              • AngrilyEatingMuffins
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                181 year ago

                Idk. I’m on kbin and haven’t experienced that. Usually when I wish violent death on conservatives I get a ton of upvotes.

                • @minorsecond@lemm.ee
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                  61 year ago

                  I mean, I think they’re definitely still in the minority. It seems like there’s a larger proportion of them here than on reddit. I see more of their opinions here. Maybe that’s just how the algo works here regarding upvotes & downvotes and how comments are displayed.

              • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                71 year ago

                For every person that choose to leave reddit…

                There’s 5-10 “conservatives” who were ip banned and dont have a choice between Reddit and Lemmy.

              • @ShakyPerception@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                They are not getting down-voted into nothingness for refusing to tow the party line.

                I appreciate the variety of opinions presented here. Plus (in my experience) the conversation has been civil.

                • Refurbished Refurbisher
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                  1 year ago

                  Yeah. I hardcore disagree with conservatives as a libertarian socialist myself, but I always want to hear what people who disagree with me (and people who agree with me) are saying, and engage in civil conversation with people who actually believe what they say.

                  The problem for me comes when shills (people who don’t believe what they say but get paid to say it) come into the conversation, or when people use outright disingenuous arguments (usually strawmans).

            • very smart Idiot
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              -551 year ago

              But they kinda do. Imagine Samsung or Apple stopping innovation. Company goes bankrupt.

                • very smart Idiot
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                  -251 year ago

                  No, but it takes a person to control a company. A Person to direct the goals of a company. So I guess Tim Apple is somewhat involved if there is innovation or not.

                • very smart Idiot
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                  -411 year ago

                  Man I am kinda sorry, that I invade your worldview.

                  But rich people don’t have all their money stored in a vault like Dagobert Duck. It’s all stocks.

                  And boy, if one of the companies make losses, then their money goes downhill. It’s volatile.

                  And due to immense concurrence in innovation in the tech sector, every investor has a huge interest in innovation.

                  And with many investment, the start of a company is ensured.

                  The current capitalism is the system that works best.

                  Especially the US capitalism is one hell of a driver in innovation. I live in Germany and many companies wouldn’t be possible here. Even though we have capitalism, it’s much softer than its US counterpart.

                  The downside of course is poverty for cheaper labour.

                  And that’s brutal, but it’s the reality we live in.

                  Though I wouldn’t want to live in the US without healthcare, on the counter side I wouldn’t want to start a company here in Europe.

          • Refurbished Refurbisher
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            81 year ago

            Are you sure it’s not the demand driving the demand? The rich are the supply-side of “supply and demand”.

            • very smart Idiot
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              -61 year ago

              Demand driving the demand?

              Does needing something increase the need for it by itself into infinite need?

              • Refurbished Refurbisher
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                1 year ago

                The demand side of the economy is the consumer population. The consumers decide what they do and do not want to purchase, therefore driving demand.

                “Infinite need” implies that infinite supply could exist, or that infinite growth is sustainable, both of which are not true. Infinite need also doesn’t exist.

                I will argue that people (for example) needing clean water increases the demand for clean water. This is why companies like Nestle are profiteering off of selling bottled water, and why the CEO said that water should not be a human right.

                • very smart Idiot
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                  -81 year ago

                  Wait. But someone has to bottle the water, right? Or is nestle supposed to do it for free?

                  Furthermore they have to compete with tap water. So the value of bottled water can only be the water itself + bottle + energy used to fill bottle + interest because their “service” is not for free. There is a justified interest to make a profit from one’s efforts.

            • very smart Idiot
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              -61 year ago

              Demand driving the demand?

              Does needing something increase the need for it by itself into infinite need?

              • Decoy321
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                51 year ago

                … Do you really not know how combustion engines work?

                They use combustion.

                • very smart Idiot
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                  -41 year ago

                  English is not my primary language. I believe it was explosion motor what you have written at first.

                  And while I am no expert of the workings of a modern combustion engine, I do indeed have an understanding of how a combustion engine works.

                  I also know what reaction takes place and I know the average fuel consumption of an average European car.

            • very smart Idiot
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              -21 year ago

              I give you that. Just a few were directly involved in innovation.

              But the rich do quite successfully create the framework conditions for innovation and development. Mostly driven by profit, but a world based purely on goodwill fails at the first doubter, the first who does not want to participate. So capitalism is what we got. And so far it has proven to be more resilient than other systems.

    • @angrymouse@lemmy.world
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      811 year ago

      My uber driver said that global warming is actually true but have literally nothing about human influence.

      Some years ago these persons were saying that global warming was a hoax, now that only the human influence is a hoax.

      • @LetMeEatCake@lemmy.world
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        631 year ago

        I always hated that argument from people.

        Even if they’re right — which we all know they are not — it wouldn’t matter. Climate change is going to devastate human life if we do nothing. If, somehow, the source of the warming wasn’t human-caused, we’d still need to find a way to counteract it. It’s not our fault doesn’t prevent it from being our problem.

        • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          “it has nothing to do with human influence”

          “Ok, then let’s prepare for the inevitable, strengthen infrastructure, prepare for mass migrations, improve our crops to sustain bigger variances in weather, evacuate people from flood danger zones, ensure our supply chain doesn’t collapse, fund poor countries so they can survive better, etc. You know, prepare for the crisis”

          :|

          >:(

        • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          I had a guy tell me once that maybe climate change is just the Earth getting closer to the sun, and we should send an astronaut up to the Hubble telescope so they can look through it and measure the distance to the sun…

          I’ve known this guy for over a decade, and it’s not that he’s stupid, he’s just completely ignorant about climate change and doesn’t put in any effort to learn about science.

      • @atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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        451 year ago

        Ahhh, yes. The conservative backpedalling.

        It’s not happening. It’s happening but it’s all cyclical. It’s not cyclical this time but it’s not our fault. It’s our fault but global warming is good ackshually. Global warming is bad but there’s nothing we can do about it. We could do something about it but it’s too expensive/late. Maybe it’s not too expensive but THE CHINESE!

        • @Juris_LLM@feddit.nl
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          91 year ago

          In stage one we say nothing is going to happen.

          Stage two, we say something may be about to happen, but we should do nothing about it.

          In stage three, we say that maybe we should do something about it, but there’s nothing we can do.

          Stage four, we say maybe there was something we could have done, but it’s too late now.

        • @SaltySalamander@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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          21 year ago

          but global warming is good ackshually.

          My dad unironically used this argument when we were talking about this last week. Some people have their heads so far up their own ass, it’s just sad.

      • Sjatar
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        311 year ago

        Had a argument with a person on YouTube, he thought that increased CO2 in the atmosphere would be beneficial. It would help plants grow better!

        Also that humans was not behind it.

      • @corey389@lemmy.world
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        121 year ago

        The sad thing is we’re supposed to be in a ice age. The plant is further away from the sun about the same plane since the last ice age.

        • Bleeping Lobster
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          31 year ago

          If you’re based in the UK, then all you can do is smile at the shit we have to deal with government-wise. If you don’t laugh, you’ll go mad, kinda thing.

          That ‘Four Stage Strategy’ is horribly, horribly apt even today.

      • Hup!
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        1 year ago

        I’ve found a clever way to counter those folks is to say, “you might be right, and as the apex species it’s our moral obligation to seize control and protect the natural order of things for as long as we are able to slow the coming of hell on earth. Just like our right to shoot guns. Yee haw.”

    • Pisodeuorrior
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      471 year ago

      What I hear some acquaintances say is like “who cares, I’ll go to the beach, turn the AC on, what’s the big deal” .

      As if the floods we had in Italy this year, or the wild fires, or the storms, or the draughts, or the Alps without snow, the glaciers disappeared, the sea turned green, the invasion of jellyfish weren’t connected.

      Some people, most people, are just too fucking stupid.

      • @QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        To be fair, I think both sides blow it out of proportion and that can stifle discussion. It won’t be the “end of the world” where everyone will die, but we will have the “end of the world” as we know it.

        I think one of the main points that need to be stressed to the kind of people in your example would be droughts.

        Droughts will continue to get worse and will affect everyone. With a bad enough drought, we won’t be able to feed entire cities. And that’s when things really start to fall apart.

        • platysalty
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          51 year ago

          Yeah, people expect the earth to suddenly start cracking and spitting out hot lava or something.

          No, it’s gonna be a slow, steady march towards the end, just as it always has been. Slow enough that we feel like we can put it off for another day.

          Slow enough that one day we will look up from our phones, see the oceans of fire and shrug. Too late now, just switch on the AC and go back to scrolling.

        • @persolb@lemmy.ml
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          21 year ago

          As an example of this, the North America wildfires this year don’t really seem to be due to climate change… but people keep tying the ideas together.

          The extreme weather swings and the droughts are bad enough. And it is guaranteed to get worse. No reason to stretch the truth.

  • @Celivalg@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    991 year ago

    Yeah, sad thing is we are already signed up for the next 20 years, as in even if we stopped emitting everything tomorrow, we would still have +2°C in 20 years…

    And how realistic is stopping everything tomorow?

    +3°C… we would need to have a new coronavirus crisis every years, not just a new one, but stack them on top, in terms of emissions. Ofc you can’t have more then one global confinement at a time (doesn’t make sense to double confine someone) so that wouldn’t even work.

    We. Are. Fucked.

    • @alvvayson@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      We aren’t locked in for the next twenty years, only the next ten years.

      We could build a thousand RBMK like nuclear reactors in a decade and then suck out 50 ppm of CO2 out of the atmosphere in another decade.

      Would cost $500B to $1T or so.

      We just don’t really think global warming is serious enough to warrant an action plan at the scale of the Manhattan project, Apollo program or Messmer plan.

      • @entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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        381 year ago

        We’re not locked in for the next 20 years. Not for the next 10.

        The carbon in the atmosphere is going to be there for the next millenium and the temperature won’t level out till the 2100s if we stopped all carbon emission right this second.

        Furthermore, if we did stop all emissions right now, the planet would get 0.5-1.5 °C hotter within a year or two due to the end of the aerosol pollution cooling effect that’s been cutting the effects of carbon induced climate change in half this whole time.

        This year is so hot because they put limitations on sulfur emissions from shipping boats in the Pacific. Those emissions were cooling the atmosphere, but the aerosol emissions (which that sulfur is one of) only last in the atmosphere for about 2 weeks before they’re rained out of the air.

        We’re fucked.

          • @entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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            41 year ago

            It was taken out because the pollution was directly responsible for tens of thousands of deaths per year. If we need to geoengineer an aerosol to cool the planet, we can do better.

            • @jarfil@lemmy.world
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              51 year ago

              Deaths from increasing temperatures are estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands a year already, how many of those could the aerosols have prevented? Was that more or less than tens of thousands?

              • @entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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                41 year ago

                I’m not saying it can’t be done or it shouldn’t necessarily, I’m just trying to express why this decision happened at a political level. Politics only occasionally leads humanity to the logical course of action.

      • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        251 year ago

        Removing CO2 from the atmosphere is a speculative technology at the moment.

        Like, yes, we “can” do it, if you ignore all the materials and energy needed to perform that process. And that’s just in theory, in practice its bound to be far more difficult.

        No matter how you put it, it’s easier to just… Not release the pollution in the first place. If it’s too difficult to stop polluting, it will certainly be too difficult to remove that pollution that has been already released. Entropy and all that.

        Removing CO2 from the atmosphere is something we should only really start thinking about when the world already runs nearly entirely cleanly.

    • Talaraine
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      I’ve started telling people to prepare for the Mad Max times. Yeah it’s hyperbole, but it actually makes them pause for half a second.

      What’s disturbing is the gleam in some alt-right people’s eyes.

    • @Guster@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      I think that there need to be a specific tipping point/trigger when everyone and their mother direct funding towards fixing the problem.until then the majority of people won’t simply care

      • @Mog_fanatic@lemmy.world
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        131 year ago

        I’m genuinely curious at this point if that point even exists. Like, I’ve had legitimate conversations with multiple people and i’ve asked them “what would need to happen for you to believe in human’s causing climate change?” The answer is generally something along the lines of “I’m not sure it’s even possible for humans to have that big of an effect on the earth.”

        I would imagine there are tons of people out there who think the same, people with VERY deep pockets and in equally powerful positions that would never change course on their money making machines. Literally the only way I see substantial change happening is if it becomes incredibly profitable.

        • @jarfil@lemmy.world
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          81 year ago

          The tipping point was going to be “our cheap labor is dying out and profits are going down”… except now with automation it’s going to be “our robots are breaking down and we need a few more experts to fix them”, so no need to care about 99% of the population.

      • Refurbished Refurbisher
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        51 year ago

        The rich and powerful have to see very direct problems that affect them. Kind of like when social conservative politicians take an anti-LGBT position, then turns out their kid is trans, so then they pivot to being pro-LGBT in rhetoric so they can keep talking to their kid.

  • @HeavenAndHell@lemmy.world
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    821 year ago

    Someone at work said “If climate change is real, then why don’t rich people sell their beach properties?”

    And before you ask, yes they are a boomer.

  • Netto Hikari
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    751 year ago

    Jokes aside, this is very concerning. And sad. Humanity will never be able to pull on one string.

  • @Knightfall@lemmy.ca
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    611 year ago

    Considering here in Winnipeg, Canada, where it reaches -35C or even colder, it was pretty wild having weeks on end of +30C to even +39C temperatures, and so soon into our summer.

    I never want to complain about the heat when we have snow for 7 months, but that was ridiculous.

  • kamen
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    591 year ago

    The planet isn’t going anywhere. We are!

    - Carlin

    • @FollyDolly@lemmy.world
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      351 year ago

      You can put damp towels in the freezer and wear them around your neck. My AC broke in August once and I lived on the third floor.

      • @DiagnosedADHD@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        It’s wise to have a small toaster oven if you absolutely need to cook something. They preheat fast and obviously put off less heat than a full oven. I don’t really bother with the oven much these days as it’s getting over 110 here at the moment. Also cook after the sun sets

    • @jossbo@lemmy.ml
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      -16
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      1 year ago

      Thank fuck for that. Now if we can only turn off all the other a.c. as well, we’d have made a start!

      Edit: this was a joke, but wow, you Americans are really defensive about your AC. I live in the UK and the rare times it gets very hot we are miserable because our building almost never have AC, and are built to retain heat. So I do see how much more comfortable it makes you.

      Someone, who was trying to argue in favour of AC, said it uses 10% of all electricity globally. Thats insane! I guess we actually do need to turn it all off.

      • @Kittenstix@lemmy.world
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        Well, you can’t so celebrating one poor guy’s AC going out in a heatwave is kind of a dick move, besides, it’s not AC in it of itself that is causing global warming, i’d bet that if we ran all AC on solar we’d still be fucked.

        Also it’s businesses cooling (empty) offices that are the bulk of the % of AC watt hours used.

        • @jossbo@lemmy.ml
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          01 year ago

          One guy said it makes up for 1.5% of all the energy we use! That’s huuuuge. I was joking originally but I’m pretty convinced now.

          • @Kittenstix@lemmy.world
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            111 months ago

            I’d say 1.5% is a fucking steal for the benefit it provides, if I could only have one modern convenience i’d take AC every fucking time

        • @jossbo@lemmy.ml
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          -11 year ago

          One guy said it makes up for 1.5% of all the energy we use! That’s huuuuge. I was joking originally but I’m pretty convinced now.

      • Troy
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        231 year ago

        AC uses about 10% of all electricity globally. However, that’s electricity, not energy. If you include fossil fuels burned in engines in the energy equation, it drops to closer to 1.5%. There are bigger fish to fry.

        Numbers: global energy production (all sources): ~650 EJ (exajoules). Total electricity consumption is ~23000 TWh – about 85 EJ.

        • @jossbo@lemmy.ml
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          01 year ago

          1.5% of all energy used is huge. Actually insane. I was joking, but you’ve convinced me that we do actually need to turn all that off. As well as stop shipping so much, flying so much, burning so much oil, etc. But fucj me 10%of all electricity and 1.5% of all energy. Wow.

      • @CoderKat@lemm.ee
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        171 year ago

        Do you know how many people literally die every summer because they don’t have AC (let alone simply suffer)? AC is becoming a growing necessity.

        Besides, AC is pretty small game compared to the big polluters.

        • @jossbo@lemmy.ml
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          -11 year ago

          A lot of people will die because of climate change as well. A lot more, in fact.

          • @TauZero@mander.xyz
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            11 year ago

            Death by heatwave while lacking AC is one of the main ways that climate change will be killing people. A Texas grandmother died from heat last week (among a dozen more people in her town) being too afraid to turn on her air conditioner because of the expense.

            When the choice is between running the AC while potentially contributing to the global energy consumption driving the climate change and turning the AC off and literally dying, you don’t need to be a hero.

    • @elskertesla@lemmy.world
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      471 year ago

      My father in law is in complete denial. According to him they moved all the measurement equipment so that it favours “the Agenda” and gives wrong readings. He also claimes CO2 isnt a greenhouse gas. Sigh…

        • Match!!
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          461 year ago

          fear of having lived your life entirely wrong and being too old to accept responsibility in changing it

        • @Kanzar@lemmy.world
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          131 year ago

          Acknowledging the truth means accepting that we’re fucked, that even if we weren’t individually responsible (maybe) we are still going to have to deal with the ramifications… And that’s scary. It’s far more comforting for there to be a secret cabal controlling everything and that really life is gonna be ok and you don’t have to change anything at all.

          • @TauZero@mander.xyz
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            11 year ago

            In their fairy tale, inaction may even be the moral choice, because any reaction would be playing right into the secret cabal’s evil plans.

        • @80085@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          I’ve spent years working at a fossil-fuel-adjacent company, and I’ve noticed that even some intelligent people (consciously or unconsciously) avoid any information that that might make them think they may not being living a perfectly moral life, or information where the obvious solution goes against their “values” (pro-business, free market). They also grasp for any information that affirms their values and lifestyle, no matter how easily discredited the source.

          It’s kinda worrying that it always seems to result in Nazi-like conspiracy theories like “the Agenda,” “Elites,” “groomers,” “cultural marxism,” etc.

        • @Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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          51 year ago

          It’s not being dumb, it’s being that stubborn.

          If they hadn’t “picked a side” already, they would be very easy to convince.

  • @MyDogLovesMe@lemmy.world
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    451 year ago

    Pair this with the Atlantic Ocean temperatures this year and you can anticipate an enormous, global shortage of food.

    How does a city if 1 Million, or more, feed itself when all surrounding regions can’t grow food?

    We’re fucked, so fucked.

        • @Rufio@lemm.ee
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          151 year ago

          I mean, in the scenario described where we literally can’t grow food in the surrounding land, it’s hard to say what the political landscape or legal institutions even looks like at that point.

          • @Cybermass@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            Once people start going hungry and killing rich people then suddenly the rich will wake up and realize they have to do something, hopefully by then it’s not too late.

        • Hup!
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          31 year ago

          Mankind is roughly 9 meals between civilization and chaos.

        • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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          31 year ago

          Its less about affordability… and more about distribution models. Can you get stuff out to the suburbs in a way that makes sense? Do we need to even have the trational suburban model or can it be repurposed for agriculture? There are going to be a lot of people cramped into smaller spaces in the next century.

          We’re a stones throw away from workers rising up anyway, so that’s a topic for another conversation.

      • @chico75@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        Do you have any sources? I doubt we would see similar economies of scale compared to current farming.

  • SpringMango
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    441 year ago

    This absolutely terrifies me, especially since so many people deny climate change. What is it going to be like in 5-10 years?

    • @GreaterDane@reddthat.com
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      361 year ago

      In the next 5-10 years, we may see mass migrations begin as a few locations become too hot to bear, and corrupt religious authorities seeking power will pin the more hostile climate on recent social changes rather than the actual immorality of corporate greed. This sets the stage for tensions over land and resources to escalate into wars and civil violence in later years.

      There is no better time for action than now! Climate Changemakers is a low-commitment way to get involved, if you’re in America.