Climate change happens over such a large scale space (the earth!) and such a large amount of time (decades!) that makes it very difficult to really comprehend. How do you tie a heatwave to CO2 emissions from cars? All that can be given are handwavey probabilities, even the weatherman gets it wrong and he's only predicting a week into the future!
I suspect as we move to more energy efficient tech this problem will eventually solve itself, but I can't see it being hurried up by climate change itself.
No, there is broad scientific consensus that the climate is changing at an unprecedented rate, and that human CO2 emissions are a key cause. See e.g. https://www.ipcc.ch/
Unfortunately, your optimism regarding energy efficient tech does not seem warranted either. Look up Climate Lag - apparently, if we stopped emitting CO2 tomorrow, it would still take decades for the effects to show.
I was thinking yesterday how different it would be if we hadn’t invented the Internet 40 something years ago and had to tackle climate change with the preexisting forms of communication.... i think it would be much harder to rally people behind the issue
I'm not so sure. The establishment was slow to grasp the true power the Internet provides them, but it's quite sure that the Internet is a tool and it's just as useful to the authoritarians and establishment as it is to grass roots organizations.
Point in fact: troll farms, fake news (both fake articles as well as the proclamation by politicians that anything against them is "fake news"), Facebook/Cambridge Analytica leak by design.
Especially without any way to validate trustworthiness of actors, the Internet is simply another medium that is polluted by monied interests.
Or it might be easier because the opposition - which is quite strong if you look at places all over the world (e.g. who won elections in Brasil or the US, and in my native Germany the new right-wing is far stronger than ever and not exactly a fan of climate change action - would have it harder to organize too.
In the past the leaders could get things done more easily - possibly, not quite sure. Of course that's a two-edged sword. I do believe that if we get through getting used to the new communication methods we will come out much better on the other side, but occasionally not having to listen to the crowd can be advantageous.
Historically, there was some effective climate action in the pre-internet era which led to the Montreal Protocol[0], a climate achievement which the post-internet era has yet not matched.
I think a lot of people under 20 view climate change as an immediate and existential threat. Students have been skipping education to protest this for most of 2019 all over Europe. I don’t think we’ve seen a movement like this since the hippies in the 60iea, and it’s only just picking up.
I also think our political climate will react way too late to this because the majority of voters are older than 40.
This reminds me of brexit : if the brexit vote had only been open to younger voters, "stay" would have won by a landslide.
Which makes me very uneasy, the people that won't have to feel the negative consequences of Brexit are the ones that voted for it.
Same for climate change.
I guess my reflexion will just end up in "democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time" since I don't see a solution to this.
There's a recent argument that younger people have the better right to a vote and are more in touch with the world.
I was wondering whether that newfound appreciation for younger voters extends also to cases where they vote in way that is probably not supported by whomever makes that argument - I hear a lot of that from British 'Remain' people, but had French young voters got their way, it would not have mattered however the British voted: there wouldn't have been much of an EU to remain in.
To reply directly to your point: people with more to lose don't get more voting rights than people with with less to lose. Had that been the case, the biggest difference would not be age-based - it would be giving wealthy people the vote while denying it to the poor. I thought that argument was settled.
Also, voters are not individualistic atoms, but have people they care about. It can be argued younger people face less consequences because they have less people to protect.
It's been pointed out that if these protests hadn't been used as an excuse for skipping school - that if they had generally been held on non-school days - then the turnouts would probably have been much smaller.
A couple of questions which need to be asked and answered: When Anchorage hit its previous record of 85F back in 1969, was that a "tipping point" and a sign of impending climate doom? Better yet, when Fort Yukon (which is almost 400 miles NNE of Anchorage, and just a mile from the Arctic Circle) hit its record (and all-time state high) temperature of 100F (!) way back in 1915 (!!), what that a "tipping point" and a sign of impending climate doom? Enquiring minds want to know.
No, I'm using them to discredit some of the thinking in the article. You did read the article, didn't you? It's pretty simple-minded stuff.
But I do have to ask: If that 100F temperature had occurred recently instead of over 100 years ago, how many people would be absolutely freaking out about it? And it would be all over the news, wouldn't it, complete with satellite interviews and talking heads and repeated insistence that "We must do something about climate change right now!"
As it is, though, it's just a historical footnote isn't it? And it seems that some folks are now trying to claim that it never really happened. (It appears to have been truncated out of the HadCRUT temperature data set, for example.) How inconvenient for them, then, there are other folks out there who have gone so far as to dig up the actual handwritten log for the weather station involved, which appears to be in good order.
Still other folks have noted that there are other logs out there for other stations which show equal if not higher temperatures, but Fort Yukon is called out as the official record high temperature for the state. I can only assume that investigation showed that those other stations weren't as reliable as Fort Yukon, but the possibility exists that they did in fact experience equally high or even higher temperatures.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 52.1 ms ] threadI suspect as we move to more energy efficient tech this problem will eventually solve itself, but I can't see it being hurried up by climate change itself.
Unfortunately, your optimism regarding energy efficient tech does not seem warranted either. Look up Climate Lag - apparently, if we stopped emitting CO2 tomorrow, it would still take decades for the effects to show.
Point in fact: troll farms, fake news (both fake articles as well as the proclamation by politicians that anything against them is "fake news"), Facebook/Cambridge Analytica leak by design.
Especially without any way to validate trustworthiness of actors, the Internet is simply another medium that is polluted by monied interests.
In the past the leaders could get things done more easily - possibly, not quite sure. Of course that's a two-edged sword. I do believe that if we get through getting used to the new communication methods we will come out much better on the other side, but occasionally not having to listen to the crowd can be advantageous.
[0] https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/09/montreal-protoco...
I also think our political climate will react way too late to this because the majority of voters are older than 40.
Which makes me very uneasy, the people that won't have to feel the negative consequences of Brexit are the ones that voted for it.
Same for climate change.
I guess my reflexion will just end up in "democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time" since I don't see a solution to this.
https://twitter.com/Yascha_Mounk/status/856228943464210433/p...
I wonder if the appreciation for younger voters extends there too.
I was wondering whether that newfound appreciation for younger voters extends also to cases where they vote in way that is probably not supported by whomever makes that argument - I hear a lot of that from British 'Remain' people, but had French young voters got their way, it would not have mattered however the British voted: there wouldn't have been much of an EU to remain in.
To reply directly to your point: people with more to lose don't get more voting rights than people with with less to lose. Had that been the case, the biggest difference would not be age-based - it would be giving wealthy people the vote while denying it to the poor. I thought that argument was settled.
Also, voters are not individualistic atoms, but have people they care about. It can be argued younger people face less consequences because they have less people to protect.
The point isn't about wealth distribution or whether I like that people vote for Le Pen.
But I do have to ask: If that 100F temperature had occurred recently instead of over 100 years ago, how many people would be absolutely freaking out about it? And it would be all over the news, wouldn't it, complete with satellite interviews and talking heads and repeated insistence that "We must do something about climate change right now!"
As it is, though, it's just a historical footnote isn't it? And it seems that some folks are now trying to claim that it never really happened. (It appears to have been truncated out of the HadCRUT temperature data set, for example.) How inconvenient for them, then, there are other folks out there who have gone so far as to dig up the actual handwritten log for the weather station involved, which appears to be in good order.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D-E1nQ_W4AEpC7D.jpg
Still other folks have noted that there are other logs out there for other stations which show equal if not higher temperatures, but Fort Yukon is called out as the official record high temperature for the state. I can only assume that investigation showed that those other stations weren't as reliable as Fort Yukon, but the possibility exists that they did in fact experience equally high or even higher temperatures.