I wonder if Congress realizes the mental health burden this lack of sufficient action has on their young population.
It's easy to feel powerless but if you want to be part of the solution one thing you could consider is donating 5-10% of your income to reputable charities that focus on direct action where it is needed most: https://www.givingwhatwecan.org/charities/founders-pledge-cl...
Another thing you can do is encourage people not to vote for politicians who claim climate change isn't happening and learn how to counter common misconceptions and the techniques that best change people's mind: https://www.edx.org/course/making-sense-of-climate-science-d...
I really hope our species can solve this collective action problem because I'd hate to imagine how future generations will look back on us. People seem to think technology is going to somehow make things go back to how it was. That things will get better. Things are never going to get better, they are only going to get worse. How much worse depends on what we do today.
I can't edit my other comment, but this is even better source to explain the lack of action from our governments.
"What is ecologically and socially necessary for sustainability is not polically feasible, but the politically feasible is ecologically and socially ineffective, if not catastrophic." (time @ 50.20)
As much as I hate to say this, I’ve lost almost all concern for the environment “crisis”. Not saying it isn’t real, but at 24 years old now I’ve been seeing panic-fuel since I was 10 on Disney channel about the hole in the ozone layer (that managed to fix itself), deforestation, the coral reefs, etc.
I’ve been told I should be scared of the world ending because selfish greedy humans are destroying it for literally as long as I can remember, and I’m over it. I can’t bring myself to always be anxious about it. It’s either live a lifetime of worry or say fuck it and live my life.
I recycle, I rideshare when I can, I take the steps that are convenient to me to help, but I just can’t be bothered getting that worked up over it anymore.
At 33 years old, I can say that what you’ve just expressed is probably not your end state mindset, nor should it be. I have definitely agreed with your sentiment in various portions of my life, but it stopped serving me. But if it serves you and your life right now, then that is good. It isn’t worthwhile to be worried about climate and never act on it. Live your life, but the problem isn’t likely going to go away or cease to affect you, in a macro sense.
The problem is that this is not scary enough for those who are young, because they do not know from direct experience how it was earlier and how it is today.
I am old enough to remember that when I was a child, where I live, in Europe, every winter there was permanent snow coverage since early December until late March.
On the other hand, in the last 10 years there was no more than a week of snow per winter, and in the last 5 years no more than a couple of days with snow per winter.
There are more than 10 years since I have used for the last time my winter clothes and boots.
Such a big climatic change in less than a human lifetime cannot be ignored and it is not at all certain how it will evolve and which will be the consequences.
Just wait until the mass migrations get even worse. We’re already seeing the waves from South America here. Europe’s seeing them come up over the Mediterranean. A third of the entire nation of Pakistan flooded this year… how many times can that happen before our supply chains start faltering?
I don’t blame you and agree it’s not worth getting anxious about it, but keep in mind you have grown up in an era of complete corporate take over, they’ve managed to make you believe nothing you can do matters and doing a few small things like recycling is really all you can do, when the reality if the complete opposite.
The Ozone layer was fixed because of an international agreement at the global level. Things can get fixed, and this is exactly the type of problem that can only be fixed by governments, but people have to care and get involved/vote or do whatever they can to impact decisions at a global scale.
I agree, and also, I'm not really sure what one nation is supposed to do about it. The US can reduce its emissions all it wants, but good luck convincing China to do the same when it means they'll have to slow down their economy. Not to mention all the measures taken thus far, like mandating EVs and phasing out ICE cars, is just stupid virtue signaling when a single supertanker causes as much emissions as every car in the US combined.
Are you seriously comparing the massive economic impacts advocated by these policies to children playing? And yeah, feel free to give me a ring when China purposely weakens their own economy because they saw the West doing it - I'll buy you a beer.
This stems from unfamiliarity with Chinese economy. China being a late comer to a lot of technologies means that a large portion of their research & patents are in relatively more recent fields, e.g. China has more expertise in manufacturing EVs compared to ICE cars, China is dominating the solar market when they are not as competitive in more traditional silicon industry. Not mentioning the "per capita" argument prevalent in most developing countries, in many occasions, the movement towards reducing emission is helping the economy instead of the opposite, signified by the recent surge of Chinese EVs rendering a lot of western brands obsolete there, VW among the most shocked. This applies or will apply to all the other third world countries such as India, as the mechanism behind this phenomenon is universal.
Ironically the example you cite of how not caring about things fixes them was actually a perfect example of a whole lot of people caring about something quite a lot and crafting policy to fix it.
Stop caring about the world around you at your own peril. I'd say at risk of moral hazard but clearly that's not an argument likely to interest you.
Could you elaborate on the first point? Ignorance isn’t necessarily arrogance or nonchalance, and I fall firmly into the former on this particular topic.
I'm a good bit older than you, for me the eye opener is by travelling the world and seeing how much has been trashed. When I was a kid it felt like there was a vast amount of nature out there (even then a lot of damage had been done, but many of the wildlife docs etc were just old enough that when filmed there was more nature).
Growing up in a modern western city I was far removed from it, but then travelling and seeing how much has been carved up and domesticated (as well as the cultural homogenisation), it really feels we are doing future generations a massive wrong.
And the anti-climate lobby is already writing press releases, dated 2025 and 2026, declaring that there has been no warming since 2023.
That's what they did after 1998, when we had an especially strong El Niño. Records were broken, and I saw a lot of graphs pointing out downward temperature trends. Those graphs never started in 1997 or 1999 or any other year, but always 1998.
In fact, I was already starting to see similar graphs starting at the last El Niño from 2019, and noting that 2022 was merely the sixth warmest year ever. By that time 1998 had dropped out of the top 10.
That cherry was no longer available for picking, but as long as the temperature doesn't monotonically go up, there will always be some other year to be "no warming since..." All they have to do is get through this year, probably with the line "weather isn't the same as climate".
So I appreciate the experts' new warning, but I wish I knew what to do with that information. All reasonable tactics of persuasion have long since failed. Maybe we'll get lucky: the heat dome this year just happens to cover a lot of people with an ideological predisposition to doubt climate change, and might just change a few minds even though it really is due to weather than climate.
There's no way to peacefully convince like 20 countries whose budgets all rely on selling fossil fuels to stop selling them, and the same goes for the countless buyers whose livelihoods depend on using them. Are you going to mandate they endure mass starvation and economic collapse?
So what is the point of going on about deniers and anti climate XYZ? Even if they all agreed with you, what would change? It seems like pointless scapegoating and divisiveness.
Forty years ago we could have accomplished something.
Now I just want everyone to know that climate deniers are liars and bad people. It won't save us from the disasters, but climate denialism also comes with a cluster of other horrific anti social behavior. The political party that makes climate denialism its official platform should not be voted for under any circumstances. That will not stave off disaster long term but it might let us have some cogent national discussion for once while we wait.
Forty years ago "we" could have forcibly stopped the use of fossil fuels, killing billions of people, to spare them the agony of dying at some point in the future from climate change?
Ah yes... the all or nothing school of black and white thinking appears.
I'm not a climate scientist, activist or am particularly conscious about the environment, but even I know that these effects stack on each other. Had we even flattened emissions, rather than going up and to the right at a steep rate, we could have slowed the problem. As it is, we have drastically increased the amount of impact any meaningful solutions will need.
My understanding of the subject is basic, but the changes we are experiencing happen slowly, then quickly and unpredictably.
30 comments
[ 1.6 ms ] story [ 70.8 ms ] threadI wonder if Congress realizes the mental health burden this lack of sufficient action has on their young population.
It's easy to feel powerless but if you want to be part of the solution one thing you could consider is donating 5-10% of your income to reputable charities that focus on direct action where it is needed most: https://www.givingwhatwecan.org/charities/founders-pledge-cl...
Another thing you can do is encourage people not to vote for politicians who claim climate change isn't happening and learn how to counter common misconceptions and the techniques that best change people's mind: https://www.edx.org/course/making-sense-of-climate-science-d...
I really hope our species can solve this collective action problem because I'd hate to imagine how future generations will look back on us. People seem to think technology is going to somehow make things go back to how it was. That things will get better. Things are never going to get better, they are only going to get worse. How much worse depends on what we do today.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNcGo6a-yKuIubvDb6mIy...
"What is ecologically and socially necessary for sustainability is not polically feasible, but the politically feasible is ecologically and socially ineffective, if not catastrophic." (time @ 50.20)
Dr. Bill Rees, 2021-12-01, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CVe8-eKSK8
I’ve been told I should be scared of the world ending because selfish greedy humans are destroying it for literally as long as I can remember, and I’m over it. I can’t bring myself to always be anxious about it. It’s either live a lifetime of worry or say fuck it and live my life.
I recycle, I rideshare when I can, I take the steps that are convenient to me to help, but I just can’t be bothered getting that worked up over it anymore.
We fixed it by significantly reducing our usage of the chemicals that were causing it allowing it to repair itself.
Humans fixed the ozone layer, via the Montreal Protocol
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montreal_Protocol
Humans stopped creating a hole in the ozone layer
I am old enough to remember that when I was a child, where I live, in Europe, every winter there was permanent snow coverage since early December until late March.
On the other hand, in the last 10 years there was no more than a week of snow per winter, and in the last 5 years no more than a couple of days with snow per winter.
There are more than 10 years since I have used for the last time my winter clothes and boots.
Such a big climatic change in less than a human lifetime cannot be ignored and it is not at all certain how it will evolve and which will be the consequences.
The Ozone layer was fixed because of an international agreement at the global level. Things can get fixed, and this is exactly the type of problem that can only be fixed by governments, but people have to care and get involved/vote or do whatever they can to impact decisions at a global scale.
People should be rioting in the street by now.
Or try.
And yes it makes a huge difference. China is not ignorant if the other world leaders change their whole economy to renewable.
On one site it's a huge market for China and it makes those countries independent. Energy rules the world.
And yes it makes a difference for me if I do my part and it didn't work out or if I did not.
And no I believe renewable is the next economy topic.
Transforming everything is a lot of jobs/work and will make energy cheaper and countries less dependent.
Stop caring about the world around you at your own peril. I'd say at risk of moral hazard but clearly that's not an argument likely to interest you.
Growing up in a modern western city I was far removed from it, but then travelling and seeing how much has been carved up and domesticated (as well as the cultural homogenisation), it really feels we are doing future generations a massive wrong.
That's what they did after 1998, when we had an especially strong El Niño. Records were broken, and I saw a lot of graphs pointing out downward temperature trends. Those graphs never started in 1997 or 1999 or any other year, but always 1998.
In fact, I was already starting to see similar graphs starting at the last El Niño from 2019, and noting that 2022 was merely the sixth warmest year ever. By that time 1998 had dropped out of the top 10.
That cherry was no longer available for picking, but as long as the temperature doesn't monotonically go up, there will always be some other year to be "no warming since..." All they have to do is get through this year, probably with the line "weather isn't the same as climate".
So I appreciate the experts' new warning, but I wish I knew what to do with that information. All reasonable tactics of persuasion have long since failed. Maybe we'll get lucky: the heat dome this year just happens to cover a lot of people with an ideological predisposition to doubt climate change, and might just change a few minds even though it really is due to weather than climate.
So what is the point of going on about deniers and anti climate XYZ? Even if they all agreed with you, what would change? It seems like pointless scapegoating and divisiveness.
Now I just want everyone to know that climate deniers are liars and bad people. It won't save us from the disasters, but climate denialism also comes with a cluster of other horrific anti social behavior. The political party that makes climate denialism its official platform should not be voted for under any circumstances. That will not stave off disaster long term but it might let us have some cogent national discussion for once while we wait.
I'm not a climate scientist, activist or am particularly conscious about the environment, but even I know that these effects stack on each other. Had we even flattened emissions, rather than going up and to the right at a steep rate, we could have slowed the problem. As it is, we have drastically increased the amount of impact any meaningful solutions will need.
My understanding of the subject is basic, but the changes we are experiencing happen slowly, then quickly and unpredictably.