Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

12 Comments

  1. If you have time, read “Uninhabitable Earth” by Wallace-Wells.

    He describes in great detail what we have got ourselves into.

    It truly is terrifying.

    1. I suggest people don’t read it. Ximon I think can be trusted to feed digestible pieces to us. We are in danger of being shocked into rigidity and need to spend most time time in reforming our thinking and finding similar others and working together towards an achievable and positive goal. It is a war that we are fighting – against annihilation of all the good our parents have tried to do, or their era, and we are being faced with unavoidable greed and foolishness of rampant egos – the people who have followed in Ayn Rand-s pretentious footsteps.

      So sort out who are true, good, capable, humorous or ironic and thoughtful capable people that you know and build your own network of whanau. All people on earth have been the tail left of WW1 atrocities under their idea of government and management, then 20 years later a vast world war plus nuclear. It is obvious that we have to reform – those of us that have a brain with time for meditation and a an affection for the amazing planet and we amazing creatures with so much possibility of transcending ourselves which is being misused, Start thinking right now and contact people you would like and have a beer and chat about how they feel about things to see if you can broach the further ideas that will seem more extreme. But you need to be face to face and outside the internet as it will happen that reliance on it will be a disabling effect for society as you can already notice.

    2. I suggest people don’t read it. Ximon I think can be trusted to feed digestible pieces to us. We are in danger of being shocked into rigidity and need to spend most time time in reforming our thinking and finding similar others and working together towards an achievable and positive goal. It is a war that we are fighting – against annihilation of all the good our parents have tried to do, or their era, and we are being faced with unavoidable greed and foolishness of rampant egos – the people who have followed in Ayn Rand-s pretentious footsteps.

      So sort out who are true, good, capable, humorous or ironic and thoughtful capable people that you know and build your own network of whanau. All people on earth have been the tail left of WW1 atrocities under their idea of government and management, then 20 years later a vast world war plus nuclear. It is obvious that we have to reform – those of us that have a brain with time for meditation and a an affection for the amazing planet and we amazing creatures with so much possibility of transcending ourselves which is being misused, Start thinking right now and contact people you would like and have a beer and chat about how they feel about things to see if you can broach the further ideas that will seem more extreme. But you need to be face to face and outside the internet as it will happen that reliance on it will be a disabling effect for society as you can already notice.

  2. Hey, Shane Jones, seems you’re backing the wrong horse – see link below

    The high cost of power is already negatively impacting our international competitiveness, thus we can’t afford to fall further behind ignoring the massive change (see link below) coming in the very near future.

    This is going to be a total game changer

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoX3ls_GjTA

  3. We do comprehend how bad catastrophic climate change is going to be.
    We are starting to reap the consequences now of what was flagged in the 1970s by climate scientists such as James Lovelock. That was when governments and corporations should have been making changes. Tipping points have been reached. It is too late to stop the consequences of what is already happening.
    If NZ was smart we would look to countries like Bhutan, put in heavy regulations and start planning for the difficult future. But we are not smart and the catastrophic future will be upon us before the next generation reaches old age.

    1. How can we go hard when we have signed up to the powerful corpses to be light-handed. They – the gumming only have the right to be heavy handed with us, the peeps.

  4. New Zealand had a Carbon Trading market which had the potential work relatively well – until the Labour Party bushwacked it for political reasons.

  5. Of great value is this item from RNZ – read now before it is interfered with or shoved to the backroom.
    https://www.rnz.co.nz/life/lifestyle/can-you-turn-off-generative-ai-from-social-media-and-your-phone
    “Diagram founder Tom Hovey, who helps organisations in NZ and the UK better understand AI, says developments in the industry are happening so quick that even the information he provides to clients is changing every day.

    “Never before have we had such changeable (some would say “buggy” and inconsistent) software being used at such a grand scale. The speed of change is insane.”:

  6. Climate breakdown, real events in real time, tipping points – what is there to argue about if the science is saying this is now on our doorstep and only going to get worse.

    What do climate change deniers have that reputable scientists and modellers don’t. Do they not trust science? Or is it the narrative they don’t trust? Even among those who are taking notice there is the belief that adjusting to the impacts of climate change can entail business as usual. Alternatively, there is the belief that business as usual can somehow be mitigated by the pull of policy levers. Reduce greenhouse gas emissions to limit the extent of future warming, right? Alter the ways energy is produced and consumed, shift to more sustainable agricultural practices – worthy goals but not so easy to change human behaviour and even harder to shift the current economic paradigm.

    Maybe climate change deniers have some trump card up their sleeve. What might that be? Ignorance? Don’t know what they don’t know? Distrust of science? Distrust of the narrative? A belief that extreme weather events are not unprecedented? There’s plenty of evidence to support that view:
    https://hwe.niwa.co.nz/search/summary/Startdate/n-a/Enddate/n-a/Regions/all/Hazards/all/Impacts/all/Keywords/none/numberOfEvents/20/page/1

    Yes indeed extreme weather systems hit New Zealand regularly. Remember Cyclone Bola nearly 4 decades ago? Cyclone Giselle that sank The Wahine in Wellington Harbour in 1968? Ad infinitum. More frequent and more intense? Well, that’s what the science says. And linked to global warming and caused by greenhouse gases emitted by the burning of fossil fuels, deforestation, and intensive agricultural practices.

    Perhaps that trump card is knowledge – an intuition perhaps – of the bigger picture. The MUCH bigger picture. I recall seeing in Bill Bryson’s A Short History of Nearly Everything a passage that equated the stretch of Earth history to the outstretch of both human arms, with the arrival of humans on Earth representing a mere filing off a finger nail. That’s a mighty short period of time. A blink of an eye. To think us humans have fucked it up big time in such a very short time is hard to accept – considerably less than a blink of the eye in fact if we consider the mass burning of fossil fuels has only been around since the Industrial Revolution. From that perspective perhaps the skepticism of climate change deniers is justified.

  7. Almost no one is going to voluntarily give up driving cars utes and tractors to ride bikes or stop burning gas for electricity or stop eating butter at the rate necessary to stop climate change.

    What would a War On Fossil Fuel look like?

    To blow up the coal gas oil industry would require a Manhatten Project that in the space of five to ten years could produce a Nuclear Fusion Reactor the size of a shipping container which could be mass produced. Plus advanced silicon battery technology to supercede Lithium ion for transport.

    That scenario could save the planet from industrial global warming. The climate will continue to change as ever.

  8. Oh yes, climate scientists working for oil and gas corps as far back as the 1950s flagged climate change as a result of the oil industry pollution.

Comments are closed.