The world has experienced its hottest day on record, according to meteorologists.

The average global temperature reached 17.01C (62.62F) on Monday, according to the US National Centres for Environmental Prediction.

The figure surpasses the previous record of 16.92C (62.46F) - set back in August 2016.

  • @Arayvenn@lemmy.ca
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    1811 year ago

    I used to think the more apparent and devastating outcomes of climate change were bound to hit long after I passed away, but now I’m not so sure. Local storms are becoming more and more serious with every passing year, each summer is less bearable than the last and the nearby forests are burning down for the 2nd summer in a row. We are definitely speedrunning this shit.

    • @ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      831 year ago

      Most of the climate change predictions I’ve heard in my lifetime have talked about stuff that would happen by 2050 or 2100. It’s always been bullshit, just a way of pushing out the consequences beyond a timeframe we can actually conceive of effectively. In reality this shit is already hitting us and accelerating hard.

        • z500
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          181 year ago

          My nephew will be 38 in 2050. Sure makes it seem a lot closer.

      • @miraclerandy@lemmy.world
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        231 year ago

        I’ve always thought those predictions were listed as “conservative” so the average is a lot closer but main media outlets pick the fastest out point in the bell curve so it’s not so doomed.

        • @wuddupdude@feddit.nl
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          201 year ago

          Yeah, it’s not bullshit to be conservative with climate models because they are incredibly complex. It’s good practice. However, because of the political climate around climate change, scientists probably er on the side of being extra-conservative, and the models are still dire! So, if the real world trends happen to go outside the bell curve, not in our favor, which keeps happening, we’re fucked.

      • @Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        2050 is less than 3 decades away. I am sure I will be dead by then, but someone born this millennium should absolutely be alive still. What is infuriating is how little importance many younger people put on this issue.

    • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      251 year ago

      I used to think the more apparent and devastating outcomes of climate change were bound to hit long after I passed away, but now I’m not so sure.

      Too many people thinking like that is exactly why we are where we are today. And why it will continue to get worse.

      Those of us who actually care about the world our children and grandchildren will have to live in have been trying to get some large scale action for decades, and we’re tired of beating our heads against a brick wall.

    • @ebfortin@lemmy.world
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      251 year ago

      It’s amazing how the human race realize the shit it put itself in only when it is a fraction of a second from hitting the wall at high speed. It’s like that every single time.

      • @Thadrax@lemmy.world
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        161 year ago

        Except the impact of climate change isn’t at all like a car crash. In a car crash everything stays fine until it suddenly goes to shit. Which I think is one of the issues why people have such a hard time dealing with it.

        Maybe we should think about it more like a sinking ship. We already got wet feet, which isn’t great but only the start and we really need to start shutting some bulk heads to keep the water from pouring in. And get some Wellies to deal with the water already in. But those won’t help if it keeps on rising.

        • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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          121 year ago

          On geological time scales, this is very much like your car crash analogy.

          Unfortunately, most people don’t seem to be capable of understanding time at that scale.

        • @ironhydroxide@partizle.com
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          101 year ago

          The rich are on the top decks where the valve controls are, they don’t have wet feet, why should they close the valves?

          • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Surely even the rich would prefer to be able to go outside without the air being full of smoke, and visit a forest that isn’t dead. But I guess there’s a minority for whom the amount of money next to their name is more important, and they happen to run everything.

    • @Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca
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      211 year ago

      If it doesn’t hit in my lifetime it will be soon after, which is one the reasons I choose to not have kids.

    • @Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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      211 year ago

      You constantly hear people say “oh, well we are in a warming cycle, so yeah, of course the Earth is going to get warmer”.
      These are people on the Right who have moved past the point of denying the problem of Climate Change and shifted their argument to admitting it is happening, but not admitting that it is man-made.
      In some ways, they are right - the Earth’s climate IS indeed shifting away from an Ice Age and moving toward a warming period, but what we humans have done is essentially thrown gasoline onto the already burning fire. We are accelerating the problem.

      • @minnow@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        And it’s that acceleration that’s the real problem. If this sort of warming happened over twenty or thirty thousand years, the ecosystem would have a chance to adapt and maybe humanity along with it. A couple hundred years? Nah mate, ecological collapse is going to happen and it’ll probably take us with it.

      • @bdiddy@lemmy.one
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        -161 year ago

        Yah and we were actually headed to a 100,000 year cooling cycle. So even their supposed science is wrong lol.

    • @lasagna@programming.dev
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      171 year ago

      It’s the way we tend to think of things as black and white. Someone decided to set some disaster increase threshold for the climate crisis events and called it a day. When it has always been about an increase in frequency and intensity of natural disasters and more, both of which we are already seeing.

    • @fidodo@lemm.ee
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      111 year ago

      We were warned. We were told it was a tipping point situation and things would seem ok until they aren’t.

  • @Kekzkrieger@feddit.de
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    1661 year ago

    At least companies created incredible profits for a small number of shareholders for a short period of time. Totally worth it

    • @tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      511 year ago

      That’s a pretty weak take. Do you know how profitable it is to hire a short-gain CEO, pump his stock, sell before the inevitable crash and follow him to his next venture? Immensely so.

      Think how great the world would be if everyone did that, jumping from sunken venture to sunken venture, burning through any and all good will, until the only thing that still has worth is the planet you’re on, but even that is nothing because Mars is the next frontier you can sink our money into.

      Think before you speak so poorly of those better than yourself

      • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s a joke from a viral editorial cartoon. Don’t be such an antagonistic jerk.

        edit: If you were attempting satire then I’ve fallen victim to Poe’s law because there are lots of people who sincerely believe exactly what you wrote. Hopefully that isn’t the case here, and if so I retract the jerk comment. If you do believe what you wrote, my comment stands.

    • @bykle@lemmy.world
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      421 year ago

      How about we go to the Winchester, have a nice cold pint, and wait for all of this to blow over.

    • @sudo@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      141 year ago

      Just add a little nuclear winter and we’re good. So there might be a little radioactive fallout, that’s just a problem for the poors to deal with. Billionaires will be okay in their acre sized underground bunker clubs and that’s what’s important.

      • I know it’s a joke but I actually looked into it and it turns out that nuclear winter only reduces temperature in the short term - the effects wear off and you’d just get hit with global warming abruptly when it wears off. I guess it could potentially buy some time to implement carbon capture or something.

      • @fidodo@lemm.ee
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        91 year ago

        Seriously the green rhetoric needs to change. The planet is going to be fine. Humans aren’t.

    • @Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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      41 year ago

      Just bury our heads in the sand, then our torsos, then while you are at it, might as well just start living underground.

    • @AllonzeeLV@vlemmy.net
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      1 year ago

      I thank the oligarchs and their willing consumption enthusiasts. This apocalypse is brought to you by unchecked, insatiably greedy capitalists and capitalism.

        • @Sparlock@lemmy.world
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          261 year ago

          Way to minimise the last 40-50 years of capitalists actively working to stop any real progress on climate change. Sure progress is being made now after they figured out it was getting bad and there was money to be made in green tech. That doesn’t excuse the decades of lobbying and and actual propaganda put out by capital interests that we are all paying for now.

          That you are spouting off about “communist propaganda” tells me you either grew up in the 80’s and really bought the red scare line or you bought the far right propaganda telling you to be scared of ‘CHI-NAH’ (to quote the orange traitor).

            • @Sparlock@lemmy.world
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              171 year ago

              “You couldn’t far wronger in this question lol”

              Sure. I couldn’t “far wronger”.
              What a thoughtful and fact filled reply that furthers conversation.

              Try making a point or defending your position if you want to be taken at all seriously.
              As it stands why should anyone think you might be correct in your statements and not just dismiss you out of hand as a moron who is far wronger?

                • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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                  141 year ago

                  laws were passed in capitalist countries to remove it promptly

                  Promptly on what timescale? Geological?

                  It’s always too little too late. If it wasn’t, we wouldn’t be in this mess. Reality speaks for itself.

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

                  During the latest decades they didn’t know very well about the damages they were causing

                  Yea, they (the capitalists) have known full well for at least two decades the damage they were causing.

                • @zysarus@lemmy.world
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                  131 year ago

                  Exxon has known the damage they were causing since at least the 80s and have spent absurd amounts of money alongside their competitors lobbying governments and paying scientists to keep the status quo. We had at least some evidence that burning fossil fuels was going to cause global warming at the turn of the 20th century.

                  What you’re saying isn’t entirely false, but it sure is bending over backwards to be nice to the capitalist societies that caused this problem. Also there aren’t any communist countries causing this problem, China is every bit as capitalist as the US in how their economy functions these days, they’re communist in name only. You’ve been influenced by capitalist propaganda friend.

                • @Sparlock@lemmy.world
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                  81 year ago

                  Holy shit you are delusional if you believe any of that. A simple google search on climate science coverup by fossil fuel companies (like Exxon, Shell, and BP) in the 70’s is just a single example and it would take you almost no effort to learn. That you haven’t even done the very LEAST you could to not be embarrassingly wrong, should serve to let anyone reading anything you comment on to simply dismiss your ramblings as misleading at best.

                  You need to take a look in the mirror and ask yourself if maybe you got this wrong since myself and MANY others have pointed out the various things you are just factually incorrect on.

                  I’m not holding out hope though, I am willing to bet you will just double down in your fantasy instead of facing reality. Feel free to prove me wrong, little would please me more.

                • @jhymesba@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  There’s actually a news article from the March 1912 edition of Popular Mechanics warning about how ‘the furnaces of the world’ are ‘burning about 2,000,000,000 tons of coal a year’, and how ‘when this is burned, united with oxygen, it adds about 7,000,000,000 tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere yearly.’ They conclude that adding 7 billion tons of CO2 per year ‘make(s) the air a more effective blanket for the earth and raise its temperature’ and that ‘the effect may be considerable in a few centuries’. Their only mistake was underestimating how much CO2 future generations would put in the atmosphere. They estimated a few centuries for 7 billion tons of CO2. I’m wondering what they’d make of 43 billion tons.

                  Capitalists ignored the clear warnings from scientists about pumping CO2 into the atmosphere for over a century because it wasn’t economical for them to do something about it. It was always somebody else’s problem. Until it wasn’t. Where do you live? New York, that has recently had some of the worst air quality in history thanks to Canadian wildfires? Or Denver, where it was our turn in April and May? Or when we got the horrible DECEMBER wildfire that burned into Boulder? Man, wildfires in fucking December. NOW it’s fashionable for Capitalists to at least pretend to care about the environment, but shit, if there could be a dollar made burning down the last forest, you fucking better believe that capitalists will gleefully play a Captain Planet villain while they do just that.

                  Edit: A fun link: https://bigthink.com/the-present/1912-climate-change-prediction/

        • @BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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          191 year ago

          Most environmental solutions are also being created in capitalist societies, and the richest countries (which by coincidence are capitalist) are the ones that are decreasing their emissions by a considerable amount.

          Only because those capitalists societies are offloading the work that generates those emissions on to poorer countries because it’s cheaper to do it there.

        • @AllonzeeLV@vlemmy.net
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          1 year ago

          I take no offense to being called a communist, even though I’m a socialist. I have a great deal of pity for the sycophants of capitalism, though, cheering their own exploitation and oppression as their masters terraform the planet to be hostile towards human life in the name of quarterly profit expectations.

          Your family will be burning from the global oligarch’s fine work, and you’ll be blaming the invisible communists and socialists that countries like the US used military means to decimate through global destabilization the world over to further capitalist interests. The capitalists won, are fully in charge, and have captured their own regulatory bodies in most of the world. This is the world of capitalists own making. They run the show, we are living in what the capitalists would consider their utopia, where they live like modern Pharoahs as most of the species subsists to further enrich them.

          We crossed that threshold years ago, man made climate alteration is a runaway train of multigenerational suffering at best, and possibly the end of human civilization for ages at worst. Have fun cursing the dirty commies when you’re thirsty with no recourse 🤣

    • @geissi@feddit.de
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      301 year ago

      That’s a false dichotomy. There are more power sources than coal and nuclear.
      Also electricity generation is not the only source of emissions. Car traffic, cruise ships, aiplanes, all need to be reduced and can’t just be replaced by nuclear power.

      • b3nsn0w
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        331 year ago

        In theory, yes. In practice, nuclear plants that are shut off are almost always replaced with fossils, with the specific fossil fuel of choice often being coal.

        Energy is not something where you can just pick one solution and run with it (at least, non-fossils, anyway). Nuclear is slow to ramp, so it usually takes care of baseline load. Renewables like wind and solar are situational, they mostly work throughout the day (yes, wind too, differential heating of earth’s surface by the sun is what causes surface-level winds) and depend greatly on weather. Hydro is quite reliable but it’s rarely available in the quantities needed. The cleanest grids on the planet use all of these, and throw in some fossils for load balancing, phasing them out with energy storage solutions as they become available.

        You can’t just shoot one of the pillars of this system of clean energy and then say you never tried to topple the system, just wanted to prop up the other pillars. Discussing shutting off nuclear plants without considering the alternative is pure lunacy, driven by fearmongering, and propped up by no small amounts of oil money for a reason.

        Replacing nuclear with renewables is simply not the reality of the situation. Nuclear and renewables work together to replace fossils, and fill different roles. It’s not one or the other, it’s both and even together they’re not yet enough.

        So when you do consider the alternatives, moving from nuclear to the inevitable replacement, fossils, is still lunacy, just for other reasons: even if you care about nothing more than atmospheric radiation, coal puts more of it out per kWh generated, solely because of C-14 isotopes. Nuclear is shockingly clean, mostly due to its energy density, but also because it’s not producing barrels of green goo, just small pills of spicy ceramics. And if your point is accidents, just how many oil spills have we had to endure? How many times was the frickin ocean set on fire? How many bloody and brutal wars were motivated by oil? Is that really what a safer energy source sounds like to you, just because there are two nuclear accidents the world knows about, and a thousand fossil accidents, of which the world lost count already?

        And deflecting to other industries is also quite disingenuous. Especially if your scapegoat is transportation, since that’s an industry that’s increasingly getting electrified in an effort to make it cleaner at the same logistical capacity, and therefore will depend more and more on the very same electrical grid which you’re trying to detract from.

        • @geissi@feddit.de
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          71 year ago

          nuclear plants that are shut off are almost always replaced with fossils, with the specific fossil fuel of choice often being coal.

          Being from Germany, I have often read such arguments and at least here that is simply not true.
          The decrease in nuclear power was accompanied by a decrease in fossil fuel.
          Could that decrease have been larger if nuclear had been kept around longer? Possibly.
          But if we are talking about building new power plants, the money is typically better invested in renewables. They’re faster to build and produce cheaper energy.

            • @geissi@feddit.de
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              21 year ago

              I’m not sure what the point is.
              German Electricity is dirtier than France’s therefor no other sources of electricity exist beyond coal and nuclear?
              That would be a weird conclusion seeing as both countries also use other power sources.

              • Azrael
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                1 year ago

                @geissi
                except from countries lucky enought to get a lot of electric damn, there is no example of countries having a stable network mainly reliying on renewable energy production, because they are not stable. Doing so requires a lot of new powerlines, storage solutions, … and at the end may still be unreliable during winter / summer peaks. Its is much easier to have a mix with the fundamental ensured by a drivable power plant and there are two ““clean”” choices: water and nuclear.

                • @geissi@feddit.de
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                  21 year ago

                  Its is much easier to have a mix

                  A mix of more than just coal and nuclear, right?
                  So other power sources do exits and we should use them?

          • b3nsn0w
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            21 year ago

            Germany, specifically, was one of the worst offenders in this category. They do renewables at maximum capacity (like everyone else) but there’s still a massive gap to fill, and with issues of strategic dependence around hydrocarbons, the obvious answer to fill in the missing capacity was coal. Most of the time you get a mix of coal and natural gas, whichever is easier, but in Germany’s case that mix was almost entirely on the side of coal.

            And without abundant hydro power, or an energy storage solution that could store a full night’s worth of energy even if the current deployment of renewables was able to generate that (which it’s pretty far from), there aren’t a lot more options. Germany’s strategy to shut off its nuclear plants out of fearmongering has been a heinous crime against the environment.

            When oil companies love your green party you know you fucked up.

            • @geissi@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              there’s still a massive gap to fill

              in Germany’s case that mix was almost entirely on the side of coal

              I’m assuming the ‘gap’ refers to the reduced nuclear capacity.
              So you’re saying that Germany replaced the power previously generated by nuclear power almost entirely with coal power?

              Do you have ANY statistics to support that?

              The only actual increase in coal energy I know of was an unplanned short time rise due to the war in Ukraine and the loss of gas imports.

              Edit: Also the original argument was that coal and nuclear is a false dichotomy. Your own comment mentions a mix of coal and gas, mentions renewables, so clearly there are more than those two options, right?

              • b3nsn0w
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                01 year ago

                There was a link in this very same thread (right here) that compares France to Germany. It’s a very simple case study: a country that does use nuclear pollutes 10x less per kWh than a country that actively destroyed its nuclear capability. It doesn’t get any more simple than that.

                Unless your argument is that if Germany didn’t shut down nuclear it wouldn’t have deployed renewables, which I hope it isn’t because it would be a completely lunatic point to make, the situation is the same no matter how you twist the mental gymnastics. Germany’s grid is one of the dirtiest in Europe largely because of the lack of nuclear baseline, which, if it was kept, would make it one of the cleanest.

                If your argument is that the renewables deployed in Germany should be counted towards replacing nuclear, then you must also accept that Germany failed to significantly cut into its fossil plants with renewables, which other countries managed to do in the same timeframe, because its entire renewable capacity had to go towards filling a gap the shutdown of nuclear left. It’s the same difference either way, and it suffers from the same fallacy that you’re pretty clearly intentionally making at this point: that you are unwilling to consider nuclear in the context of its alternatives, and are only willing to talk about it either in a vacuum, or in an idealistic situation where renewable capacity and energy storage are high enough that shutting off nuclear will not lead to an increased demand for fossils.

                I’ve addressed that idealistic future in this very same comment section by the way: as soon as we reach a point where we can eliminate fossils and any renewables deployed cuts into nuclear’s share, as opposed to that of fossil plants, I’m against nuclear. But that’s not the reality of the situation yet. The decommissioning of nuclear plants in Germany was extremely premature, and harmed the environment, both with increased radiation and with gargantuan amounts of CO2 output.

                Renewables > Nuclear > Fossils. It’s literally that simple. As long as we have fossils, replacing them with nuclear would be beneficial, and any decrease to nuclear capacity is a negative. If you can offset something with renewables, it should be fossils, not nuclear.

                • @geissi@feddit.de
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                  1 year ago

                  I’m saying that coal or nuclear is a false dichotomy, meaning there are other possible choices.
                  Comparing the carbon intensity of France to Germany does nothing to address this argument.

                  Your last comment then stated that Germany has replaced coal with nuclear.
                  Comparing the carbon intensity of France to Germany does not address this argument either.

                  If you want to show that Germany replaced nuclear with coal then you need to show the development of the energy mix in Germany and show where nuclear capacity decreases and coal increases.

                  Comparing Germany to France does not show the development in Germany.
                  And since both countries have a power mix with more than two energy sources, it certainly disproves that there are only two options.

                  Here is a map of carbon intensity of electricity generation:
                  https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/carbon-intensity-electricity

                  France has 85g/kWh, Iceland has 29g without nuclear.
                  Does every country have the same potential as Iceland? No.
                  Is nuclear the only alternative to coal? No.

        • @Shikadi@wirebase.org
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          61 year ago

          There is massive work being done to improve large scale energy storage (big batteries) so the renewables become less and less situational. Large scale energy storage is significantly less constrained than car batteries, because weight is a one time cost. Even gravity based batteries could become viable.

          Also, in response to the previous commenter, electricity generation is by far and large the main source of emissions accounting for more than half, with more than a quarter being agriculture. Transportation is 14%, and given the future transition to electric vehicles, one might argue that half of that can be tack’d on to electricity generation’s share. (Half because electric cars are more than twice as efficient at energy conversion than petrol cars. Toss in some power line losses and that’s a reasonable estimate)

          • b3nsn0w
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            All of that is great, and I’m all for it. Can’t wait for the first grids with no fossils whatsoever, once energy storage improves enough that it can take all the balancing load. When we reach that, it will mark the start of the era where nuclear is actually being replaced by renewables rather than fossils.

            My point here is that switching off nuclear is premature for now. It’s a very clean source of energy once you look at the per kWh numbers and nuclear waste management solutions are actually extremely safe. (The videos where they test the containers by smashing actual trains into them are kinda fun – and those tests are done with liquid water, which is far more susceptible to leaking than solid ceramics.) Of course, if we reach a point where wind, solar, and hydro can fully replace fossils and start eating into nuclear’s share then that’s gonna be a very different conversation, and I’m fully with renewables in that situation, but we should always keep the alternatives in mind when we shut something off.

            That’s why we’re not just shutting down coal plants altogether, because there’s just nothing to replace them. Although an energy policy where you just flat out ban renewables fossils and tell the market that that’s the supply, now go figure it out would certainly be interesting. Very expensive and terrible for the economy, but interesting nonetheless. (Definitely the based kind of chaos if you ask me.)

            edit: okay, that was a weird word to accidentally replace, lol

            • @Nataratata@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              There are more problems with nuclear energy, though. The biggest being that we burden future generations for literally thousands of years with a growing amount of waste. I am not sure why this is always missing from the discussions of people who are pro nuclear power.

              It is making the same mistake again as we did before: creating a problem for future generations to solve. And in this case the problem is dire and, because of the immensely long timespan, we have no way to reliably plan ahead for so long.

              • @sauerkraus@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                Spent fuel can be reprocessed in a modern reactor. Even if that wasn’t possible the storage is extremely safe.

              • b3nsn0w
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                01 year ago

                Because the actual amount of waste that has to be stored for that long is minimal and can be shoved kilometers down into the earth’s crust with the same tech that’s used to extract oil. Nuclear waste storage is a great headline topic but there have been a lot of innovations in the past ~50 years.

                As for lower tiers of waste (as in, less dangerous, more numerous, mostly consisting of stuff like tools used to work on the power plants, which is what actually goes in the yellow barrels usually depicted with grey goo), several reactor projects existed that actively used that radioactive waste for even more energy generation, usually targeted extremely hard by anti-nuclear activists because it would take away their talking points. The science exists, the opposition is usually political and driven by fear tactics. But this is why we store those lower tiers of nuclear waste on the surface, not because it’s the best place to put it but because it’s where we can retrieve it once we find a use for it.

                And again, consider the alternative. Fossils also fuck up the environment and it’s not a good thing that they do it faster. The only way their effect would go away that fast is mass genocide of the ecoterrorist flavor, and exactly what future generations are we talking about in that case?

        • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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          81 year ago

          I’m all for getting rid of the cruise ships. Floating land-whale-buffet reef-destroying pollution devices is what they are. I’ve seen firsthand the effect they have on Caribbean islands they make their destination, and it’s never good.

      • @jerkface@lemmy.ca
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        11 year ago

        It’s not a false dichotomy when it’s a zero sum game. Our consumption is essentially inelastic, because we are all complete assholes, so all we have control over is what kind of production we build.

        • @geissi@feddit.de
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          71 year ago

          it’s a zero sum game. Our consumption is essentially inelastic, because we are all complete assholes

          Even if that’s the premise there are still other power sources -> more than two choices -> false dichtonomy.
          But then, blaming “people who disregarded nuclear energy” - instead of people who don’t want to change anything in the face of a historically unprecedented worldwide disaster - seems a bit short sighted.

      • @Regelfall@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I’ll take a source for this one. Coal power generation has not increased in Germany whereas the Green party’s policies in 1998 led to the first large scale deployment of solar energy in the world.

      • @SageWaterDragon@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        God, that’s so depressing. I genuinely don’t understand how we - any of us, in any country - are supposed to be okay with these political mechanisms filled with incompetent, out-of-touch, self-interested codgers. I’m not willing to take action, but when our entire world is being picked apart by the public sector and sold for parts by the private sector, what are we to do?

        • @seejur@lemmy.world
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          -111 year ago

          Lobbies. The German “green” party if fully funded by Russia, which has a vested interest in keeping coal, but especially nat gas (which despite the CO2 emission is still labelled as “green”) being the primary source of energy.

    • @grue@lemmy.world
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      111 year ago

      We thank people who disregarded nuclear energy.

      Do you really think governments actually gave a shit about some deluded hippies? Nah, they were just the scapegoats the politicians used to pretend they weren’t in bed with the fossil fuel lobbyists.

  • Grant_M
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    1 year ago

    Every person living in a democracy can make a difference with their VOTE. Only vote for people who have plans and intentions of bringing change. Vote at all levels, and vote whenever you get an opportunity. Ask what candidates in municipal elections think about the climate emergency. Organize. Talk to doubters. We can do this.

    • @gthutbwdy
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      If voting worked, we would have solved this issue decades ago. You can vote for whomever you want, but at the end, no matter what they promise, they always end up doing nothing at all, because they are elected by using big oil donations.

      Only a self-organized revolution can stop this madness, people in some nations are already blocking oil tankers and oil rigs. We can’t win by only voting, you can vote for a day every few years, but we need to fight this everyday. Take turns blocking streets so no oil driven trucks and cars pass, only this will make an effect.

        • @ericbomb@lemmy.world
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          621 year ago

          I mean nonviolent protests DO work.

          Non-disruptive DOES NOT work though.

          MLK Jr didn’t peacefully sit in a park. They ran boycotts, sit ins, shut down streets, trespassed into white only areas, and drove businesses insane.

          If MLK Jr was your enemy you were going to have a miserable time when he rolled into town.

          Ghandi had people illegally burn documents and basically smuggled salt against all regulations.

          • @TassieTosser@aussie.zone
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            341 year ago

            MLK had the Black Panthers and Nation of Islam as looming threats. Gandhi is also the one who said “pacifism without violence is not pacifism, it is helplessness.” A violent counterpart to a non-violent movement helps by being the stick to the non-violent carrot.

            • @ericbomb@lemmy.world
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              81 year ago

              That’s fair, but either way we gotta give up on this nondisruptive nonsense.

              Gathering on the park outside of the white house at a time they agreed to doesn’t do anything and why it’s encouraged.

            • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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              21 year ago

              See US Constitution, Amendment 2 for another example of backing peace with capability of violence to earn respect.

                • @JudgeHolden@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  Especially since those guys are pretty much all lard-asses. There’s a reason why every competent military on the planet emphasizes physical fitness before anything else; it’s because real combat --as opposed to playing paintball with your fatbody friends-- is one of the most physically and psychologically punishing activities known to man.

                • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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                  01 year ago

                  Nor am I quaking in my boots when someone is armed in the same room as me. But I’m not gonna fuck with that person.

          • @ilir@lemmygrad.ml
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            11 year ago

            You are aware that besides Gandhi there was a lot of violent protest?

            Only violent protest makes the demands of the nonviolent acceptable to the ruling class. Without a violent part of a movement, the demands of the nonviolent are always ignored. Which is perfectly logical, because why accept the demands of someone you can ignore without consequences.

          • acargitz
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            181 year ago

            Violence is a sometimes (even often) unavoidable byproduct of revolution, not an essential characteristic. Don’t confuse the two.

          • Zoot
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            111 year ago

            You know, now that a good portion of people are on Lemmy, it just might be the perfect place to start organizing, whatever you feel that may be…

            • @ShakyPerception@lemmy.world
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              41 year ago

              Okay, when a government has completely collapsed, after the total collapse of the larger global leading entity; a peaceful revolution that results in something completely new, should be the top option.

              But I don’t think we have that much time

                • @ShakyPerception@lemmy.world
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                  41 year ago

                  In my personal (very, very amateur) opinion; less than 10 years, where things keep running as “normal”

                  Humanity is awesome at adapting so I think it’ll be a very long time before things become impossible to deal with, but there is going to be a lot of transition and disruption over the next 20+ years

          • @ArcticCircleSystem@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            And how the heck do we know that it have any reasonable chance of working out well and that it won’t be brutally suppressed or co-opted by reactionaries? And how would anyone even organize such a thing? ~Strawberry

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

              We don’t have any idea if it will work out or if it’ll be snuffed out.

              However, the lack of purposeful revolution will result in an aimless one, carried on not with thought and intent, but instead as a reaction to the immseration of the world’s people as we bake in and are flooded from our homes and cities.

              The only option is to try as the current hegemony will not solve the problems we face for the problems are a direct result of their desired politics in action.

              As for organizing one, that’s way too long of a conversation to occur here.

              • @ArcticCircleSystem@lemmy.world
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                01 year ago

                So we have no idea if it’s even remotely a good idea or if it’s likely to leave us in a similar position to before or worse, or how to do it? Great plan. ~Strawberry

      • acargitz
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        401 year ago

        Both. We need both. Voting matters. Grassroots organization matters. Now is absolutely not the time to give up on democracy. It is also absolutely not the time to give up on mass organizing at the grassroots. Both, we need both.

        • @ilir@lemmygrad.ml
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          1 year ago

          Now is absolutely not the time to give up on democracy.

          No one wants to give up democracy, we just recognize that liberal bourgeois democracy only serves to create an illusion of democratic voice. The only interests taken into account in the so-called modern “democracies” are those of capital, and that is no democracy at all.> Now is absolutely not the time to give up on democracy.

        • @gthutbwdy
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          11 year ago

          We need direct democracy. What we live in is no democracy at all, they choose for us and then we just pick the worst of two evils.

      • @ArcticCircleSystem@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        How the heck do you organize that as quickly and at as large of a scale as is needed for it to have a good chance of working out? ~Strawberry

        • PorkRoll
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          31 year ago

          I don’t mean to be a doomer but we can’t. We’re passed the point of no return. The best we can do is organize so that we can reduce the amount of death from here on out.

          • @ArcticCircleSystem@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            I mean working out as in making sure it doesn’t get a significant degree worse than it already is? I know we’ve already passed the point where we can avoid any damage. ~Strawberry

            • PorkRoll
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              11 year ago

              I think it would require some extreme changes to the oil, industry amongst other things. We’d also have to be vigilant that those changes don’t disproportionately affect the global south.

                • PorkRoll
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                  11 year ago

                  I don’t know everything we need to do, and/or by what means. I would like to think it can be all done peacefully but we have seen how oil executives will fight tooth and nail to keep their quarterly profit report line going up; so that may not be a viable way. We could all practice consuming less and reevaluating our lifestyles. Putting more thought into whether we really need to consume as much as we do is a good example.

        • @gthutbwdy
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          11 year ago

          By starting early enough and being persistent. It will take time, but we had this issues for decades and we will have it for decades more. Best time to start a revolution is yesterday, second best is today.

    • @spread@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Honestly voting now is to little too late. The Overton window isn’t anywhere near the point of allowing actually meaningful change and the 4-5 year cycle of voting is too slow. If we really want to solve anything, the change should be systemic. Still, voting is important.

          • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Dude the lockdowns started WW3. This narrative that only the rich people benefit from the economy is nonsense.

            WFH is available to those who work at desks. Thinking that’s the whole economy is blind.

            • @Sparlock@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              So many logical jumps here.

              “WW3” ? wtf…

              “narrative” that wasn’t mentioned.

              The “whole economy” that also was not mentioned.

              Try responding to the comment as written, not the voices in your head and it might appear more coherent to others.

              • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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                -51 year ago
                • WW3: Russia has invaded Ukraine. Multiple countries are providing arms to the two sides.
                • narrative: The comment before mine contained that narrative. If you can’t see it there I can’t help you see it.
                • whole economy: what the poster referred to as “working from home” was actually “lockdown”. It was lockdown that cleared the pollution from the air. For some people it was working from home; for others it was being forcibly removed from their job
                • @Sparlock@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  Your echo chamber is showing in how much you read into things. Wow.

                  Life Pro Tip for ya: Try engaging with the words on the screen as written not the voices in your head and your feed.

      • Grant_M
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        71 year ago

        Of course voting alone won’t do it. We need a lot more. Holding billionaires to account will go a long way as well.

    • @zombuey@lemmy.world
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      261 year ago

      I think its a statistical loss if we rely on denocracy. The stupid far outnumber the rational.

      • @TheDubz87@lemmy.world
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        111 year ago

        And the greedy outnumber us both. As long as these companies are lining politicians pockets, they will only act like they’re trying.

        • littleblue✨
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          51 year ago

          The “momentarily-embarrassed millionaires” don’t help, either.

          • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            -51 year ago

            I think you guys are onto something here! Democracy is not going to work because everyone outside your circle is either evil or stupid. And given you’re saving all of humanity from the thermoapocapypse, it is your mission to destroy democracy and seize control of power! (for the greater good of course not because you’re stupid and evil, because everyone else is stupid and evil and you’re doing it for their own good).

      • Grant_M
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        81 year ago

        Relying on democracy without participating in democracy is the only way to fail democracy.

          • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            -11 year ago

            You may be overestimating the degree to which judging people who disagree with you as stupid grants you license to disenfranchise them.

    • @SlowNoPoPo@lemm.ee
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      131 year ago

      Sadly no, show me a political party that the us, china or India could realistically vote for that would substantially reduce emissions in the next 10 years

    • @nomadic@lemmy.one
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      -31 year ago

      Absolute rubbish. People believing that their vote will bring change ensures climate disaster. The system is rigged and if you agree to participate in the system you are part of the problem. Thinking voting can have any meaningful impact highlights that you are unaware of how serious the situation is.

      • @Tsoi_Zhiv@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        Just want to join your downvotes by backing you up and saying you are right. Belief in the system and that voting is the answer is downright absurd at this point.

    • Obinice
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      -31 year ago

      Unfortunately, voting doesn’t help. Besides there being basically no parties with any real strong climate policies, when you vote a decent sounding one in, they just go back on their promises anyway.

      And even IF we vote in a party that truly brings about radical and positive climate change policies, that’s just our one country, a drop in the ocean. The rest of the planet would still drag us down with them, even in that wildly positive scenario.

      I don’t mean to be a doomsayer, I just don’t see a way out, I wish I did. Voting certainly doesn’t solve our problems, climate change or otherwise. The rich ruling class will do whatever they want, regardless.

      • Grant_M
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        91 year ago

        You’re incorrect. Giving up isn’t an option.

  • @jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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    841 year ago

    in other news my ultra conservative parents installed solar panels on their house, and for over a month now, they’ve been generating more electricity than they can use, feeding back into the system their surplus. when real world results are such, we can start using these incidents as examples of why it’s not only the morally correct thing to do (combat climate change and save our species), but also the economically savvy thing to do.

    who knows what will be the final straw that breaks their stubbornness.

    • R0cket_M00se
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      331 year ago

      Shit my ultra conservative parents literally left Arizona because it just kept getting hotter every season. Yet they continue to deny climate change is manmade and a real threat to the global ecology.

      Gotta love the pentecostals “it’s all just the end times!” Oh yeah, like it was when Paul wrote his letters, and like it was in the 1840’s when the millerites did their “math,” and like in the other dozen predictions since then that have all not come to pass.

      I don’t know how many thousands of years can be the “last days” but something tells me it’s just whenever an individual who believes in it is currently living.

    • @Kinglink@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You mean they had a financial incentive to partake?

      Your example just shows how economics incentives are designed to work, but that money does come from somewhere.

      I’d love to get solar but it’s not economically viable to encur 20k expenses that will need over twenty years to pay off when that money can be used elsewhere

      If someone gave me a Tesla I’d love it but I really don’t have the cash to get a car right now and even if I did the price of teslas and most electrics are so high it’s just not an option.

      People think he solution here is to remove cheaper options but that won’t work it will just keep people holding on to beaters far longer.

      If the economics make sense to change people will change but trying to shake people or force people to make economically disadvantage choices will never work long term

      My wife got a used Prius for 13K or 17k a couple years ago, it’ll be more expensive now I believe, but the thing is most people don’t have 13k or 17k to spend on a car. If people can’t scrape together 500 dollars from their savings in an emergency, they aren’t going to be able to get a hybrid or electric car for a very long time, and all legislation that tries to push people in that direction benefits the rich, and penalizes the poor when they remove options the poor can afford.

      • @Motavader@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        Just a heads up, most home solar installations are designed to pay for themselves in 7 to 9 years. But it does depend on net metering in your area, and whether you install a battery pack.

        • @n33rg@lemmy.world
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          31 year ago

          Figured I’d ask here since this thread seems to be getting informative. The number of door to door sales people for solar that come by my area really make solar feel like a scam. How should one go about finding a proper deal on getting solar without having to work with sleazy sales practices?

          Why I say it feels scammy: the area I’m in has a lot of older middle class (not upper middle class or anything) residents. From talking to some solar reps, this is their target. There are much wealthier neighborhoods a town or so over but the salespeople I’ve spoken to say the business would rather sell financed installations to collect incentives and that it’s easy to convince people they’ll save money in the long run. But in this community, we’re generally fine financially as long as nothing big hits. When they gave me the numbers, it fell into the category of a big upfront payment due to down payments and high annual costs that would only slightly be offset by electricity savings. I don’t recall the term, but it was not something we could budget for. The paperwork is all showing the future savings and the savings on electricity, until you look into the details. There are two houses that I’ve seem go for it nearby.

          • @TitanLaGrange@lemmy.world
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            51 year ago

            A lot of those door-to-door guys are indeed scams. Or if not outright scams, just incompetent.

            It’s hard to find good installers that aren’t completely booked for a year or more.

            Depending on your needs and skill level, a decent-sized solar setup isn’t hard to DIY. You don’t necessarily need to start with a huge system, you can set up a smaller system to run an AC system or some load like that. Then if you want scale up as you learn more.

            Also, solar doesn’t have to be photovoltaic, solar thermal is great for hot water.

    • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      111 year ago

      If they live in the Midwest you could even point to the drop in solar production from the smoke as an immediate negative economic effect

    • @cyberpunk007@lemmy.world
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      81 year ago

      For me it was a 20 year ROI and I would have had to ask my neighbors to take trees down. I don’t think I’ll be here for that long. And when the average joe is getting poorer and poorer it’s harder to afford. This is the problem.

      • @6jarjar6
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        51 year ago

        Definitely dont chop down the trees. Also I heard there’s payment plans for solar panels

      • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        -21 year ago

        Hey don’t worry though, that average joe’s poorness has nothing to do with all the money printed in the last few years.

        • @JudgeHolden@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          That’s only one relatively minor factor among many. Anyone who points to it without also mentioning the much more significant impacts of things like global supply chain disruptions and the war in Ukraine is either ignorant, or is trying to spin a particular narrative while being intellectually dishonest about their priors.

          • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            01 year ago

            What priors? Prior criminal offenses? I don’t know what you’re saying I’m being intellectually dishonest about?

            Yeah the supply chain disruptions have been horrible too. The war in Ukraine is a predictable effect of economic collapse so it’s kind of part of that same mix, but it also accelerates the decline in economic stability.

            Both arms of the lockdown fucked up poor people: the actual stopping of the economy as if it were a machine that could just be re-started again was ridiculously stupid, and the solution of printing money to make up for the stopped economy was double stupid. As a result, poor people are much poorer due to inflation. They claim it’s some single digit inflation, but everybody knows the things they buy have doubled in price.

            So we basically cut everyone’s income in half. Oh, except for people who own large amounts of productive capital. Those people’s incomes get to come back up as total activity increases again. Plus, the newly printed money was dumped into stocks, so stockholders got a little offset.

            But people who don’t have a lot of wealth, who are living paycheck to paycheck, got fucked by the lockdowns. Deeply, horribly fucked.

            And maybe that pain is transmitted pain from covid, maybe we avoided a bunch of covid deaths so the overall suffering is lower than it would have been. But I think people underestimate the suffering that can come from all the lower class people on Earth getting poorer than they were before.

            And I think that people’s insistence that it’s the rich who primarily get hurt when the economy falters, is abhorrent.

    • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      -141 year ago

      Liberals talk shit while “ultra conservatives” quietly solve the problem using their own resources? What world is this?

    • @Silviecat44@vlemmy.net
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      361 year ago

      “When life gives you lemons, don’t make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back! Get mad! I don’t want your damn lemons, what the hell am I supposed to do with these? Demand to see life’s manager! Make life rue the day it thought it could give Cave Johnson lemons! Do you know who I am? I’m the man who’s gonna burn your house down! With the lemons! I’m gonna get my engineers to invent a combustible lemon that burns your house down!”

    • MrZigZag
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      71 year ago

      The future could be a Mad Max-esque hellscape so while the people of the future may not look back on us fondly, they will look back on us enviously.

  • @AllonzeeLV@vlemmy.net
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    791 year ago

    Im just glad it’s shaping up to be so apocalyptic that there’ll be no safe haven for the owner class that caused it. Let them burn with the peasants they decimated for profit.

  • @Skanky@lemmy.world
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    521 year ago

    What the heck? I thought this was supposed to be fixed by all of us using paper straws and driving hybrids?

    • @Akulagr@vlemmy.net
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      Well in reality there isn’t much we can do as normal folk to reverse or slow down the impending doom of global warming.

      It’s all in the hands of the big corporations that we all know are the biggest contributors, to the whole debacle. They are not going to change a damn thing because is all about the extreme profiteering.

      • @pedalmore@lemmy.world
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        301 year ago

        Yes and no, I think. Obviously one single person can’t make a tangible difference all by themselves, but to stop the thought process there does a massive disservice to the importance of collective action. It doesn’t take all that many people to affect change, both politically and culturally. Join CCL (US focus here), vote and advocate for carbon fee and dividend and other beneficial policies, buy less shit you don’t need, ride a bike if you can, and if you have the means electrify your home/vehicle and support more ethical companies. Basically, don’t blame BP if you’re putting 20 gallons of their shit in your 4runner every week so you can commute to an office job with a permanent rooftop tent and a “save our winters” sticker on the back (yes I live in the front range). You’re not responsible for all of humanity, but you are responsible for your own actions when you have the means to choose a less carbon intensive option.

        • @_wintermute@lemmy.world
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          461 year ago

          This is just propaganda from the 90s/00s. The amount of carbon that any one middle class home generates is nothing compared to the private jet class and the corporate desolation of the environment. I hate capitalism. I hate consumerism. I hate cars. But don’t act like the onus is on what basically amounts to a peasant class that already pays for almost everything and does nearly all of the work (the middle class). It’s systemic greed, deregulation, and industrial rape of the world’s resources by shit governments and corporations that have put us here. Stop making the middle class responsible for something they have no power to change even though most of us are anxious as fuck about it. If enough individuals can simultaneously change their carbon footprint to the point that it actually affects the coming consequences, then we should have just formed a general strike already to reverse capitalism caused climate change. But we didn’t.

          • @Dyf_Tfh
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            The carbon emission from anyone in a developed country is a gargantuan amount compared to the poorest people on earth, especially if you consider the share of CO2 emissions since the industrial revolution.

            The “private jet class” you are talking about is the “peasant class” of the developed countrles.

            No one want to be accountable, corporate blame it on consumers, consumer blame it on corporate, and the state doesn’t want to act because they fear the backslash from both citizens and corporations.

            We urgently need drastic change that will undoubtedly and severely lower our quality of life. No magic tech is coming to save us.

            • @_wintermute@lemmy.world
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              121 year ago

              The “private jet class” you are talking about is the “peasant class” of the developed countrles.

              ???

            • @neanderthal@lemmy.world
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              51 year ago

              It is all the corporations but not how anyone thinks. Corporations want you to buy things. That is all. Corporations shifted it to the consumer with the whole reduce, reuse, recycle thing. The average person in the US buys way too many things. The FIRE movement recognized this in the 2010s. Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin figured it out before they wrote the book Your Money or Your Life in the 1990s. Every dollar you spend = emissions.

              Last, I present the great George Carlin:

              https://youtu.be/KLODGhEyLvk

              • @Dyf_Tfh
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                31 year ago

                I agree, we need to reverse the conspicuous consumerism that was promoted by corporate marketing departments. This is not going to be a simple task.

          • @pedalmore@lemmy.world
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            -31 year ago

            No, it’s propaganda to absolve people from their collective responsibility and blame the nebulous capitalist and corporatism boogeymen while ignoring things they actually can accomplish, like voting for policies and regulations that will have an actual impact. The Soviet Union and China have emitted a shit ton of carbon, but I suppose that’s all capitalism’s fault too. Your post is a walking contradiction - people have no responsibility or agency and shouldn’t bother doing anything, yet are also supposed to general strike and fix everything. Your attitude is pro-status quo and therefore serves the entrenched interests you claim to be rallying against.

            • @_wintermute@lemmy.world
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              131 year ago

              like voting for policies and regulations

              Ahh yes, the “just vote harder” argument. Speaking of “pro-status quo” lmao. What is your next advice to those of us who already vote (which is the bare minimum, not some silver bullet that ends all of our problems)?

              Climate crisis, corporate ownership of government, and governmental corruption are all reality because you didn’t vote enough, you stupid idiots! /s

              • @pedalmore@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                Considering huge numbers of people don’t vote at all, and many others that do vote against their self interests and for their short term gain over environmental policies, we collectively have a lot of work to do on this front. I agree voting is the bare minimum but it bears repeating since we suck at it.

                If you actually care about my “next advice”, you should be writing your reps, nationally and locally, on a regular basis, you should organize with groups like CCL, and you should get involved in local transportation and housing policy discussions. What’s your job/career? Can you enact any change there, or move to a job that has more opportunity? I could go on and on. Not attacking you personally, but most folks I’ve met with the doom and gloom, not my problem attitude don’t do fuck all.

                You’re asking me what people can do and I’ve given multiple examples. What are your ideas? All I’m hearing is we should have done a general strike and killed capitalism, as if cheap natural gas is only a problem when a capitalist burns it for profit.

              • @pedalmore@lemmy.world
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                01 year ago

                Many things can be the status quo at once. I’m just tired of binary, weak thinking that blames any one party 100% and absolves all others, which is why I started my original post with “yes and no”. It’s not productive, and it’s already crystal clear what we need to do as a society - go read Drawdown for a simple primer on decarbonization and what needs to happen. If people actually did the individual action thing en masse it would have a real effect (not enough in isolation of course) but surprise, lots of people don’t actually give a shit and hide behind their nihilism and the “corporations are the real problem” thing. Folks should focus on enacting policies first, then individual actions where they can. Doing nothing is, well, worth nothing.

          • @abessman@lemmy.world
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            -51 year ago

            Here’s the thing though: The collective carbon footprint of the middle class absolutely dwarfs that of the private jet class.

            The middle class is responsible, the middle class will pay, and honestly I’m here for it.

            • @zeppo@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              The issue is people who consume/pollute 10x as much as others per person. People can try to reduce their footprint but it’s pretty lame when some rich person creates as much pollution in one unnecessary plane trip as my household would all year.

              • @abessman@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                The issue is people who consume/pollute 10x as much as others per person.

                Indeed, but 10x doesn’t cut it. The middle class pollutes about 100x more than the lower class per capita. But they’ll get what’s coming to them.

                • @zeppo@lemmy.world
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                  21 year ago

                  Okay, so my point was wealthy people dramatically exceed that figure, too. Your claim about total pollution isn’t that convincing since yes, obviously 150,000,000 middle class people have more of an impact than 1,000,000 very wealthy people. But per-capita, for sure the people taking private jets blow away the middle class. But is the average American wasteful? Sure. However also our society has been set up so it’s very difficult to live without a car and a ton of semi-disposable manufactured items. People emerging from poverty in countries like India and China have shown plenty of enthusiasm to live in the same wasteful way as the middle class in the west, so… also not sure what your point is. Those people don’t pollute as much because they can’t afford to, not because they’re morally superior.

            • @_wintermute@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              Fret not, clown! The middle class will be dead and your billionaire buddies will be treating each other like loot drops because none of this is being reversed. Fucking pick me peasant lmao get the fuck out of here.

              • @abessman@lemmy.world
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                01 year ago

                Billionaires ain’t no buddies of mine. They will be able to buy their way free of the worst of the climate disaster, and that sucks.

                But the middle class, at least, will have to pay their dues. And that does not suck.

        • @Akulagr@vlemmy.net
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          131 year ago

          I’ve been trying to make changes to my consuming habits for a good number of years in pro of contributing (however small it might be) to the climate change fight. But, just as on wintermule says in the comments. It might be a lost fight for us mere individuals.

          Just look at the data and then you’ll realise that corporatins have been screwing the planet for a long long time now.

          • 🦘min0nim🦘
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            -21 year ago

            It’s not a lost fight at all. The largest single contributors to global warming are :

            1. Driving ICE cars.
            2. Electrical power from fossil

            It’s very easy for people to make some choices to put a huge dent in both of these…if they want to.

            The sad fact is that when confronted by this, most people I speak so make excuses about why they couldn’t possibly make changes to their own lives.

            Yes, these are systemic issues. But don’t pretend you’re powerless - that’s just a fucking cop-out.

      • Shaded Cosmos
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        -71 year ago

        If their consumers aren’t setting a good example then why should they? They don’t care as long as we don’t.

    • @fidodo@lemm.ee
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      241 year ago

      I think the straw thing is much more about trash than it is about combating climate change. Plastic getting into the eco system and building up in landfills is a big problem too, but it’s a different and also important problem.

    • @Skyrmir@lemmy.world
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      101 year ago

      I will never understand how anyone bought into the paper straw bullshit keeping plastic out of the ocean. It’s just so fucking ludicrous. Sure, plastic straws sit in our land fills for 500 years, but they have leach fields and containment ponds and multiple layers of contamination control.

      Meanwhile there are entire fleets of fishing vessels, streaming thousands of miles of plastic fishing net through the ocean, every single day.

      But yeah, it’s the fucking McDonalds drinking straws that are the problem…

      • @Gerula@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        I see it as a first and necessary step. Remember the CFCs in deodorants and the effect of banning them?

      • nadram
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        41 year ago

        Action should be taken on all fronts, and I would argue that big companies should be made to take action before squeezing households into it. The opposite is happening unfortunately. I feel guilt every time I do the dishes, while the clothing industry is overusing and polluting everyone’s water. That won’t stop me from making the effort, but we need to burn down some parliaments if we are ever to see big corps react.

      • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        -11 year ago

        Oh it’s easy. They bought into it because straws are used in public so a paper straw becomes an opportunity to virtue signal.

    • @Strangle@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No no no, you don’t understand. Now you have to stop eating meat and they need your permission to block out the sun

      See below for proof

      • @Vlhacs@reddthat.com
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        241 year ago

        Unironically, yes we really should eat much less meat and use more renewables sources of energy (like blocking out the sun with solar panels)

        • DrummyB
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          1 year ago

          I always find it strange that the most immediate and effective change any individual can make is giving up or greatly reducing their animal product intake. Will it fix the world? No. But would it actually at least somewhat of a difference? Yes. Is it something you can do right now, today, without any real effort whatsoever? Yep.

          But what is pretty much no one willing to do? Give up/reduce animal products in their lives.

          It was the easiest change I ever made. 31 years ago. No meat. No dairy. No eggs.

          Oh, and no car.

          Guess that’s too hard for people and they’d rather die in a war over water.

          People don’t make any sense.

          • @mayo@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            I don’t totally understand this either, though recently maybe more I understand it better. Seems like people cannot live without those things. I know someone who started crying when she realized she couldn’t spend as much money as before (only to use the crying to get more money to buy things). Or my sister, who asks my parents for money all the time so she can maintain her chosen lifestyle. If she can’t do that then life becomes difficult. It boggles my mind that ‘difficult’ is not being able to vacation twice a year but whatever.

            The stress that less-vulnerable people experienced during covid when the main thing they had to do was not expand their social life for a year or two was a good example of how people are. The anger at not being able to go to the bar every weekend was nuts to me.

            Few people can live a monastic life and feel like they are fulfilled, and fewer if any will feel good about that kind of life if they are forced into it. So who and how are they making those choices? We aren’t taught to be frugal, we’re taught to spend, it’s our education towards living a “good life”.

            I think if you got people to stop eating meat and driving 2 blocks to the grocery store they’d grow depressed, frustrated, productivity would drop, birth rates would drop, life expectancy would drop. People need that stuff to feel good about their lives, and if you want to take it away you either need a near perfect competitor or take it away by force.

            • @Nataratata@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              People do these things to fight negative emotions. If you want people to change their ways being arrogant and not showing any empathy won’t help.

              Anybody who is dependent on consumerism got to that point because society sells these things like tasty food, vacation, alcohol, tech gadgets, etc., as an easy fix for pain and other internal struggles. It’s not about teaching them to be frugal. Almost everybody has something they rely on to deal with their negative emotions, but it’s easier to see in others than in ourselves.

              • @mayo@lemmy.world
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                21 year ago

                Oh I guess I wasn’t clear, but I absolutely see this in myself. That’s how I came to this conclusion recently because I’ve been cutting back so much and I realized that I can’t, I just can’t. I need a beer on the weekend, I need to enjoy a meal at a restaurant every once in a while, I love the convenience of using a car to get somewhere.

                But I am for sure judgy of people who seem to make zero effort and take any intrusion on their lifestyle to be ‘too much’. I mean driving 2 blocks to the grocery store? Really. They are able bodied people.

                • @Nataratata@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  Sorry, I didn’t mean this on you specifically. Just that we can not tell people (as a society) to just live more frugal without addressing the overall problems that drive so many into consumerism. It’s a bit like how people treat drug addicts. I see the same in the recent climate debate. Instead of focusing on the root issue, it is reduced to judging other people’s morals or character.

      • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        I wanted them to start that project a decade ago… It’s going to be over the pole to mimic the ice cap effect.

  • 001100 010010
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    471 year ago

    Lets build a giant air conditioner to keep the global warming out

  • @Chadsmo@lemmy.world
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    351 year ago

    Whenever someone mentions the future a few decades from now as a time frame for doing things I usually just say ‘well in 2050 we’ll be killing each other for water and air conditioning so I don’t think it’s ( whatever they’re talking about ) going to matter so much’.

    • @rustyfish@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I feel you. Usually I play the misanthrope card to mask my feelings. But it’s not working anymore. I can’t even joke about this shit.