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Climate Emergency
Comments
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cantersaddick said:MrOneLung said:SporadicAddick said:It wasn't that long ago on a thread on this site that someone posted this map (or an equivalent) stating it as inevitable fact.
You don't have to be a climate denier to acknowledge there's a lot of nonsense spouted about the inevitability of our doom.
As with this - under the worst possible climate scenarios if we take no mitigations then this is very likely a viable scenario. But mitigations will be taken and we can hope we don't end up in the worst possible scenarios.
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MrOneLung said:SporadicAddick said:It wasn't that long ago on a thread on this site that someone posted this map (or an equivalent) stating it as inevitable fact.
You don't have to be a climate denier to acknowledge there's a lot of nonsense spouted about the inevitability of our doom.1 -
I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.11 -
SporadicAddick said:It wasn't that long ago on a thread on this site that someone posted this map (or an equivalent) stating it as inevitable fact.
You don't have to be a climate denier to acknowledge there's a lot of nonsense spouted about the inevitability of our doom.- Foulness Island - quite likely, it's a huge expanse of marsh and farm land with hardly anyone living there. It's an easy sacrifice. A bit worrying for me though as my village, Great Wakering, would become the first line of sea defence.
- Wallasea Island (not named on the map, but next to the top of Foulness) - very likely, at least on a seasonal basis. Half of the island is marsh that's been created from Elizabeth Line excavations. This was deliberately built to soak up sea water which is seen as a more efficient way to hold back the tide than building expensive walls. All the wading birds there will love it.
- Canvey Island - I'd be very surprised. Much of the Island (including, famously the local football ground) is already below sea level, but it's not underwater courtesy of higher sea walls than most other places; these a legacy of earlier flooding. And with a population density that is greater than several cities including Wolverhampton, Cambridge and Norwich, surely there'd be too much public outcry. Perhaps the marshland to the west of the Island will go but I can't see the water being allowed near the road.
- Tilbury - Where the docks are? I think not.
- Stratford - Are we talking about the same Stratford that's had £12 billion worth of investment and whose railway station handles 50 million passengers a year? Nah.
- Westminster - Does anyone seriously think they'll let Tate Britain go under water? Let alone some even more famous buildings just up the road.
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blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
The solution is for net greenhouse gas emitters (people) to make the changes necessary to reduce them. Not doing so makes the problem worse, and those who point to others they believe are worse offenders to justify their own harmful actions, those I call the 'look at everyone else, but not at me brigade,' don't fool anyone that they're free from responsibility in contributing to the problem.3 -
swordfish said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
The solution is for net greenhouse gas emitters (people) to make the changes necessary to reduce them. Not doing so makes the problem worse, and those who point to others they believe are worse offenders to justify their own harmful actions, those I call the 'look at everyone else, but not at me brigade,' don't fool anyone that they're free from responsibility in contributing to the problem.
Climate change will not affect me as I shall be long dead.
But I have 2 children and 4 grandchildren.
It's them I worry about
Not me1 -
blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
Many countries (including China and India) are now experiencing birth rates below two and are going into sharp reverse and encouraging rather than discouraging people from having children.
The growth in the number of 70 - 90 year olds over the next twenty years is inevitable because of the huge rise in births around 70 years ago. We can easily predict the number of 70 year olds there will be in 20 years. Just count the number of fifty year olds there are now!
But the number of children living now is actually less now than there were 20 years ago. So we can be sure there will be less 20 - 30 years olds in twenty years time than there are now. Combined with the falling birth rate caused by birth control and accessible pensions, this could be disastrous.0 -
stevexreeve said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
Many countries (including China and India) are now experiencing birth rates below two and are going into sharp reverse and encouraging rather than discouraging people from having children.
The growth in the number of 70 - 90 year olds over the next twenty years is inevitable because of the huge rise in births around 70 years ago. We can easily predict the number of 70 year olds there will be in 20 years. Just count the number of fifty year olds there are now!
But the number of children living now is actually less now than there were 20 years ago. So we can be sure there will be less 20 - 30 years olds in twenty years time than there are now. Combined with the falling birth rate caused by birth control and accessible pensions, this could be disastrous.0 -
Stig said:stevexreeve said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
Many countries (including China and India) are now experiencing birth rates below two and are going into sharp reverse and encouraging rather than discouraging people from having children.
The growth in the number of 70 - 90 year olds over the next twenty years is inevitable because of the huge rise in births around 70 years ago. We can easily predict the number of 70 year olds there will be in 20 years. Just count the number of fifty year olds there are now!
But the number of children living now is actually less now than there were 20 years ago. So we can be sure there will be less 20 - 30 years olds in twenty years time than there are now. Combined with the falling birth rate caused by birth control and accessible pensions, this could be disastrous.
Add that to a ridicuoisly brutal work culture (12 hours a day, 6 days a week being the norm for many) and you've got a serious recipe for disaster.3 -
SporadicAddick said:It wasn't that long ago on a thread on this site that someone posted this map (or an equivalent) stating it as inevitable fact.
You don't have to be a climate denier to acknowledge there's a lot of nonsense spouted about the inevitability of our doom.0 - Sponsored links:
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blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue9 -
The Red Robin said:cantersaddick said:MrOneLung said:SporadicAddick said:It wasn't that long ago on a thread on this site that someone posted this map (or an equivalent) stating it as inevitable fact.
You don't have to be a climate denier to acknowledge there's a lot of nonsense spouted about the inevitability of our doom.
As with this - under the worst possible climate scenarios if we take no mitigations then this is very likely a viable scenario. But mitigations will be taken and we can hope we don't end up in the worst possible scenarios.
We have to assume that at a certain point things will go so far that mitigations will be put in place to slow down climate change. There's also the point about mitigations (flood defenses etc.) To deal with the consequences of climate change even if we've done nothing to prevent it. Unless it happens very suddenly (there is a school of thought that we will see sudden changes) we won't just let London look like that!1 -
Here's some figures for you.
World's population decade by decade.
1970. 3.6 Billion
1980. 4.4 Billion
1990. 5 2 Billion
2000. 6.1 Billion
2010 6 9 Billion
2020. 7.8 Billion
Anyone saying that this is not a problem and is sustainable is kidding themselves.4 -
cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue0 -
Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue
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Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue3 -
Leuth said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue8 -
blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
There is also huge amounts of the planet that people aren't living in if you want to prevent that from happening and to overcome resource levels you move to renewables.
The 2050 map's headline is hilarious, massive headline MAP SHOWS UK AREAS UNDER WATER BY 2050. With a description of areas that could be. It's not the science organisation who are using scare tactics.0 -
Friend Or Defoe said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
There is also huge amounts of the planet that people aren't living in if you want to prevent that from happening and to overcome resource levels you move to renewables.
The 2050 map is hilarious, massive headline MAP SHOWS UK AREAS UNDER WATER BY 2050. With a description of areas that could be. It's not the science organisation who are using scare tactics.
It doesn't have to be accurate does it, and it's not provable for a long time yet. The narrative is that sea levels are rising and there are going to be widespread population migrations as a consequence, some happening already.
I read somewhere that the Gulf stream could collapse as early as 2025, but if not, then before then end of the century. How's that for inaccuracy. Should we ignore it as scare mongering then, even though the threat is real?
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swordfish said:Friend Or Defoe said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
There is also huge amounts of the planet that people aren't living in if you want to prevent that from happening and to overcome resource levels you move to renewables.
The 2050 map is hilarious, massive headline MAP SHOWS UK AREAS UNDER WATER BY 2050. With a description of areas that could be. It's not the science organisation who are using scare tactics.
It doesn't have to be accurate does it, and it's not provable for a long time yet. The narrative is that sea levels are rising and there are going to be widespread population migrations as a consequence, some happening already.
I read somewhere that the Gulf stream could collapse as early as 2025, but if not, then before then end of the century. How's that for inaccuracy. Should we ignore it as scare mongering then, even though the threat is real?0 - Sponsored links:
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blackpool72 said:Leuth said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue1 -
swordfish said:Friend Or Defoe said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
There is also huge amounts of the planet that people aren't living in if you want to prevent that from happening and to overcome resource levels you move to renewables.
The 2050 map is hilarious, massive headline MAP SHOWS UK AREAS UNDER WATER BY 2050. With a description of areas that could be. It's not the science organisation who are using scare tactics.
It doesn't have to be accurate does it, and it's not provable for a long time yet. The narrative is that sea levels are rising and there are going to be widespread population migrations as a consequence, some happening already.
I read somewhere that the Gulf stream could collapse as early as 2025, but if not, then before then end of the century. How's that for inaccuracy. Should we ignore it as scare mongering then, even though the threat is real?
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cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:Leuth said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue2 -
O-Randy-Hunt said:swordfish said:Friend Or Defoe said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
There is also huge amounts of the planet that people aren't living in if you want to prevent that from happening and to overcome resource levels you move to renewables.
The 2050 map is hilarious, massive headline MAP SHOWS UK AREAS UNDER WATER BY 2050. With a description of areas that could be. It's not the science organisation who are using scare tactics.
It doesn't have to be accurate does it, and it's not provable for a long time yet. The narrative is that sea levels are rising and there are going to be widespread population migrations as a consequence, some happening already.
I read somewhere that the Gulf stream could collapse as early as 2025, but if not, then before then end of the century. How's that for inaccuracy. Should we ignore it as scare mongering then, even though the threat is real?
It's not the people on the QE2 Bridge I'm worried about, it's the poor buggers in the tunnel.4 -
Stig said:SporadicAddick said:It wasn't that long ago on a thread on this site that someone posted this map (or an equivalent) stating it as inevitable fact.
You don't have to be a climate denier to acknowledge there's a lot of nonsense spouted about the inevitability of our doom.- Foulness Island - quite likely, it's a huge expanse of marsh and farm land with hardly anyone living there. It's an easy sacrifice. A bit worrying for me though as my village, Great Wakering, would become the first line of sea defence.
- Wallasea Island (not named on the map, but next to the top of Foulness) - very likely, at least on a seasonal basis. Half of the island is marsh that's been created from Elizabeth Line excavations. This was deliberately built to soak up sea water which is seen as a more efficient way to hold back the tide than building expensive walls. All the wading birds there will love it.
- Canvey Island - I'd be very surprised. Much of the Island (including, famously the local football ground) is already below sea level, but it's not underwater courtesy of higher sea walls than most other places; these a legacy of earlier flooding. And with a population density that is greater than several cities including Wolverhampton, Cambridge and Norwich, surely there'd be too much public outcry. Perhaps the marshland to the west of the Island will go but I can't see the water being allowed near the road.
- Tilbury - Where the docks are? I think not.
- Stratford - Are we talking about the same Stratford that's had £12 billion worth of investment and whose railway station handles 50 million passengers a year? Nah.
- Westminster - Does anyone seriously think they'll let Tate Britain go under water? Let alone some even more famous buildings just up the road.
It's great that the reserve is being expanded; the reasons for it happening, rather less so.
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Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:Leuth said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue5 -
Stig said:Stig said:SporadicAddick said:It wasn't that long ago on a thread on this site that someone posted this map (or an equivalent) stating it as inevitable fact.
You don't have to be a climate denier to acknowledge there's a lot of nonsense spouted about the inevitability of our doom.- Foulness Island - quite likely, it's a huge expanse of marsh and farm land with hardly anyone living there. It's an easy sacrifice. A bit worrying for me though as my village, Great Wakering, would become the first line of sea defence.
- Wallasea Island (not named on the map, but next to the top of Foulness) - very likely, at least on a seasonal basis. Half of the island is marsh that's been created from Elizabeth Line excavations. This was deliberately built to soak up sea water which is seen as a more efficient way to hold back the tide than building expensive walls. All the wading birds there will love it.
- Canvey Island - I'd be very surprised. Much of the Island (including, famously the local football ground) is already below sea level, but it's not underwater courtesy of higher sea walls than most other places; these a legacy of earlier flooding. And with a population density that is greater than several cities including Wolverhampton, Cambridge and Norwich, surely there'd be too much public outcry. Perhaps the marshland to the west of the Island will go but I can't see the water being allowed near the road.
- Tilbury - Where the docks are? I think not.
- Stratford - Are we talking about the same Stratford that's had £12 billion worth of investment and whose railway station handles 50 million passengers a year? Nah.
- Westminster - Does anyone seriously think they'll let Tate Britain go under water? Let alone some even more famous buildings just up the road.
It's great that the reserve is being expanded; the reasons for it happening, rather less so.
So if anyone thinks climate change isn't affecting them, they're wrong as it already is, in paying out for precautionary measures, and to remedy the damage caused by it.
Let's be honest, the London map won't look like that projection by 2050, but to prevent it becoming like it will come at a greater cost to us, and that's not so funny.
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cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue
I looked this up and I'm assuming it's from an Oxfam report as they make a couple of similar points:-
"Eight men own the same wealth as the 3.6 billion people who make up the poorest half of humanity" (Oxfam 2017).
"The richest 1 per cent of the world’s population (77 million people) produced as much carbon pollution in 2019 as the five billion people who made up the poorest two-thirds of humanity". (Oxfam 2023).
I'm struggling to correlate the two in relation to that statistic, unless the top 20 are disproportionate within the 77 million?
Not saying any of this is good...
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cantersaddick said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:Leuth said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue
The growth delusion needs to end. For society and for the climate.
To take it back to the population point I find it ironic that the political right has for decades said "dont have kids if you can't afford them"* and now people are doing that they are losing their shit about birth rates.
*which in itself is a horrendous thing to say when you take the smallest step back and apply some critical thinking. It shows a fundamental lack of understanding of the world and lack of empathy. People's circumstances change, they lose jobs, they get ill, have accidents, their kids need extra care or a family member needs care. It also ignores the fact that a third of kids in the UK are in poverty and 75% of those are in working households4 -
cantersaddick said:cantersaddick said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:Leuth said:Stu_of_Kunming said:cantersaddick said:blackpool72 said:I am by no means a climate changing denier because it's real.
My problem is with people who deny that the population of the world is increasing has nothing to do with it.
The greater the human population becomes the greater our demand on the world's resources.
People are scared of confronting this problem because most of the counties contributing to this are nor White so are scared of being called racist.
Fucking glad I'm nearly 70.
With a different system and some redistribution, population isn't the issue
The growth delusion needs to end. For society and for the climate.
To take it back to the population point I find it ironic that the political right has for decades said "dont have kids if you can't afford them"* and now people are doing that they are losing their shit about birth rates.
*which in itself is a horrendous thing to say when you take the smallest step back and apply some critical thinking. It shows a fundamental lack of understanding of the world and lack of empathy. People's circumstances change, they lose jobs, they get ill, have accidents, their kids need extra care or a family member needs care. It also ignores the fact that 2 thirds of kids in the UK are in poverty and 75% of those are in working households2