(Thread IKs:
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The Demilich posted:Any high end reading you recommend regarding both city planning and government? I'm very much into expanding my personal library. lots of good stuff posted since I made that post and promptly forgot I’ll just add The Ghost map. which is a good and cool book about a cholera epidemic in London in the 19th century and what people learned about public health and city planning from it. this is one of the last books I seminar’d on. almost every other prominent book on the subject was posted by other people. fwiw my last semester was spent on an economic feasibility study replacing my schools aging ng steam generator with an extensive heat pump and biomass reactor, and also parks and recreation. I am extensively black pulled re gcc but am still advocating for ablative policy change at the local level
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 11:35 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 07:22 |
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mcbexx posted:Found a ladybug crawling around in my bathtub the other day. Very normal for mid november. It was trying to drown itself
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 13:45 |
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munce posted:Cop26 is doomed, and the hollow promise of ‘net zero’ is to blame worth keeping in mind that the other two reasons are also capitalism
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 13:46 |
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New draft of COP26 agreement includes weakened but unprecedented language on fossil fuels “A new version of the COP26 draft agreement was published early on Friday and includes unprecedented language around fossil fuels” Good news! “The fact that any mention of fossil fuels survived the editing cull is a win for the COP26 presidency,” inspiring! “There is a huge chance fossil fuels may not make the final text at all, or be further weakened” wait what “However, the new version of the paragraph is weaker than the initial draft published on Wednesday, indicating just how tough the fight over its inclusion was. The new text calls for the acceleration of "the phaseout of unabated coal power and of inefficient subsidies for fossil fuels." The added word "unabated" essentially means countries could continue to use coal if they are able to capture large amounts of the carbon dioxide they emit. The concept is controversial as the technology to fully capture greenhouse gases is still in development. And "inefficient" was also added, leaving that part of the agreement fairly open to interpretation.” “The draft agreement "requests" that countries go back to the drawing board and come back with stronger plans by the end of next year.” lol; lmao Pobrecito has issued a correction as of 19:14 on Nov 12, 2021 |
# ? Nov 12, 2021 16:04 |
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Here we loving go!!!quote:Meet the ‘inactivists’, tangling up the climate crisis in culture wars gently caress! Monsters. loving monstrous rotten fascist scum. Oh I wish I read this later in the day. The article does end, admittedly, by taking a middle approach wherein the working class gets something nearly resembling a fair shake. But we know people read headlines and the first two or three paragraphs then move on so that is almost certainly a feint.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 16:06 |
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I think we are 1-2 more COPEs from seeing some interesting messaging. People are frustrated now while the global south complains about the unfairness of the world thrust upon them. We are building bigger boats and airplanes while nodding and reassuring them that in ten years we will reduce our emissions somewhat. We are a few away from an American dictator standing on stage delivering a Cobra Commander speech about surrendering to us. I'd be curious to see an actual accounting of the emissions from the Pre-Cope party in Milan and the Cope26 summit itself. There were apparently hundreds of fossil fuel lobbyists present.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 16:12 |
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Swallowing a gallon of paint on my deathbed and striking a pose, for the alien visitors
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 16:18 |
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Pobrecito posted:lol; quote:If the language makes it into the final text, it will be the first time a Conference of the Parties climate agreement makes any mention of the role of coal, oil and gas, the biggest contributors to the human-made climate crisis.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 16:20 |
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I've got some good news for anyone worried about climate change: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6OrCXP6BIE
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 16:46 |
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People are dying from climate change already and the big conference about climate change might be able to mention fossil fuel this year. We're making progress
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:04 |
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my buddy just sent me this message from his work: Reminder: Large internal meetings (≥ 10 people) should start with a Climate Moment. Visit the Climate Moment iPortal page for the presentation template, climate moment examples, guidance & ideas. Have or seen a great Climate Moment? Share it with your colleagues here.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:11 |
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I hope the climates moments are pictures of wildfires, floods, and draughts.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:18 |
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Norton posted:my buddy just sent me this message from his work: Is this like a land acknowledgement but somehow more useless
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:21 |
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TACD posted:hahahahaa jesus christ gently caress me same lol. lmao.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:25 |
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A "Climate Moment" where you do a "Whos that pokemon?!" slide to guess which extinct animal we finally defeated
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:26 |
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Norton posted:my buddy just sent me this message from his work: solving climate change by watching double rainbow guy
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:32 |
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Norton posted:my buddy just sent me this message from his work:
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:47 |
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Norton posted:my buddy just sent me this message from his work: the right way to do this would be to start each meeting by discussing the best evacuation routes from climate disasters and which mountain ranges to hold up in waiting to starve
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 17:49 |
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WorldsStongestNerd posted:When that happens, do they die when a cold snap hits later, or will they try again during true spring? Some will probably die outright, some will probably fail to establish from stress and then die, some will go dormant and be ok, some will be weakened and more likely to succumb to pests etc in spring, depends on the plant. Warm temperatures + low daylight is not a combination most plants have to deal with for an extended period. Decreasing daylight generally puts plants into dormancy before the cold can damage them, and things planted in autumn to overwinter are planted to help their roots establish before the active growing season, not so they can grow during winter. Low soil temperatures are not too troubling for a winter hardy dormant plant, but it's so warm here that it's raising the soil temperature enough for things to come out of dormancy. However because daylight hours are still decreasing, the night stretch is long enough to drop ground temperatures long enough to stress new growth. During spring cold snaps daylight hours are at least increasing and ground temperature will in general be rising, so they're easier to recover from. Uneven rainfall (huge downpours followed by dry periods like I'm getting) makes this even more stressful on plants because they aren't growing actively enough or getting enough daylight to really need a lot of water but new growth does need sufficient, consistent water. When it rains hard on dry ground it drowns the surface, and the surface soil isn't getting enough daylight hours to really dry out, so new plants spend the night mucked in cold wet ground. Some plants can tolerate this better than others, though most plants can't tolerate "all seasons, all climates, whenever" My garlic should be ok unless it grows too heartily and then gets a bunch of snow dumped on long stalks or a really severe freeze. My onions are toast - between the warm weather and the rain, they'll rot well before spring. Unfortunately a lot of what's popping up is native plants planted for a local 'Bulbs for Bees' project, and I don't have high hopes for them as they aren't established and aren't really able to go into and out of dormancy all winter in the way that something like garlic is. If this were March or even late February, it would probably be ok, but mid November? Uneven rainfall, early summer temps, decreasing daylight? Eh
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 18:14 |
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Denmark has a bulldozer that drives up and down a beach twice a week, picking up all the plastic, then it wades into the ocean and dumps all of the plastic a few metres from the shore. $150,000 a year for this.TACD posted:they probably don't mean "Climate Moment" == "absolutely horrific crack ping factoid" but this is definitely how I would choose to interpret it You know it's a good fact when you mention projections of future agricultural output and someone curls up into a ball and starts sobbing
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 20:14 |
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Thought of the day: I wonder if the rising popularity of simulation theory is the result of non-religious westerners becoming consciously aware that they are destroying life on earth, and subciously seeking a coping mechanism which absolves them of their lifestyles and the existential horror of now being able to witness the collapse of the natural world in real time. In the absence of a God, they've reached for "*The world is a simulation, ergo it is not real, ergo we are not actually destroying anything*". Go YOLO, live a high carbon digital nomad life, who cares, it's all fake and when we die we'll just transcend to heaven, I mean out of the "simulation".
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 20:32 |
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Chamale posted:Denmark has a bulldozer that drives up and down a beach twice a week, picking up all the plastic, then it wades into the ocean and dumps all of the plastic a few metres from the shore Lol there's a video of it in the article. Good stuff
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 20:45 |
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Rime posted:Thought of the day: I wonder if the rising popularity of simulation theory is the result of non-religious westerners becoming consciously aware that they are destroying life on earth, and subciously seeking a coping mechanism which absolves them of their lifestyles and the existential horror of now being able to witness the collapse of the natural world in real time.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 20:45 |
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My kid is starting to talk about achieving zero emissions and the importance of implementing a nuclear+renewable power mix and I don't know how to tell them that we aren't going to be doing any of that. Are there any good resources about describing the reality of climate change to children? My instinct is to do so super gradually but just asking this should demonstrate my instincts aren't to be trusted. On this subject it's incredible how strained pro- normalcy propaganda is becoming. Claiming that if we build out a nuclear fleet and cover the coasts in wind farms and everyone buys a Tesla while somehow sucking gigatons of CO2 from the air and spinning several other plates maybe we can avoid catastrophic +2C warming. In the '80s Captain Planet just asked us to reduce, reuse and recycle. It's 17C today in NYC in the middle of November.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:10 |
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Rime posted:Thought of the day: I wonder if the rising popularity of simulation theory is the result of non-religious westerners becoming consciously aware that they are destroying life on earth, and subciously seeking a coping mechanism which absolves them of their lifestyles and the existential horror of now being able to witness the collapse of the natural world in real time. i think you're reading too much into people joking about "lol the simulation is breaking down" and not just lolling at how stupid everything is. could be wrong, but i'd take a gander that only the extreme alienphile area51 flat-earther BPD-type niche actually believe it
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:16 |
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The internet is very small compared to real life..
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:18 |
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Femur posted:The internet is very small compared to real life.. also this
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:21 |
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Nocturtle posted:My kid is starting to talk about achieving zero emissions and the importance of implementing a nuclear+renewable power mix and I don't know how to tell them that we aren't going to be doing any of that. Are there any good resources about describing the reality of climate change to children? My instinct is to do so super gradually but just asking this should demonstrate my instincts aren't to be trusted. It sounds like your kid has a lot of cracks to ping about authority and capitalism in general and if they're the bookworm type I was my advice would be to introduce them to some history books outside of what's taught in school and see if they're interested. The sort of things that introductory courses to history in college teach to start depropagandizing people. Talk about the lessons that history's taught vs what's happening today. Cognitive dissonence should start the dominos tumbling from there.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:24 |
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Nocturtle posted:My kid is starting to talk about achieving zero emissions and the importance of implementing a nuclear+renewable power mix and I don't know how to tell them that we aren't going to be doing any of that. Are there any good resources about describing the reality of climate change to children? My instinct is to do so super gradually but just asking this should demonstrate my instincts aren't to be trusted. What's the value in telling them that we'll never have stop using fossil fuels for power generation? I honestly don't share your confidence that it will "never" happen, because its among the easiest and most profitable things to do for the climate. Far easier than switching over transportation or stopping land use change, etc etc. Like I'm not confident it will 100% happen either, but I don't know if the proof is laid out that we will never ever change over the grid. But regardless, how else have you dealt with the prescriptive and descriptive distinction? Like you've probably already had that bummer of a discussion about racism, so its a similar thing with climate. The world should be like so, but sadly its more like thus, and getting between thus and so might have too many powerful things aligned against it.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:32 |
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remember water wheels, burning wood, feeding crops to work animals, etc all are renewables so really if you think a collapse is likely then 100% renewables for energy generation is a lock
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:40 |
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NoNotTheMindProbe posted:why does the blurb gradually turn to piss yellow? think you know why
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:53 |
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Jesus christ yall the biggest reason we cannot move away from fossil fuels is NOT because it's impossible (although it is very difficult) to produce energy without it. We can't because 1. Fossil fuels are used in so many consumer products that we have to reinvent whole cloth a lot of goods and their industries and 2. This one is more important, because there's no incentive for the oil banker barons to do so. The incentive would be a gun but we're still stuck with problems (1) and (0).
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 21:57 |
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Xaris posted:i think you're reading too much into people joking about "lol the simulation is breaking down" and not just lolling at how stupid everything is. no belief is a monolith so you have a group of people like us that joke about memory overflows in the simulation leading to Trump or that his presidency was the player hitting all of the SimCity disasters to see what happened. There are big brain smarty pants that are serious about simulation theory trying to write articles and books about how reality could be a simulation for various reasons. Notoriety could be one, boredom another but Rime might be right that some people are motivated by the idea that reality isn't "real" reality so we aren't the biggest monsters in the actual universe or whatever.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:18 |
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Rime posted:Thought of the day: I wonder if the rising popularity of simulation theory is the result of non-religious westerners becoming consciously aware that they are destroying life on earth, and subciously seeking a coping mechanism which absolves them of their lifestyles and the existential horror of now being able to witness the collapse of the natural world in real time. I think it's just because everything is increasingly ridiculous and a farce. Like a simulation actually explains a few things. We could be in a simulation is what I'm saying Also people irl are getting more and more concerned with what's going on, I really don't think it'll be long until we are in a (bigger) mental health crisis
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:36 |
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Xaris posted:i think you're reading too much into people joking about "lol the simulation is breaking down" and not just lolling at how stupid everything is. No I was prompted into this thought by noticing that a lot of "influencer" accounts are suddenly casually yet incongruously dropping it on social media. Like: *Perfectly photoshopped lifestyle sunrise in Joshua Tree* "Sometimes the simulation is so beautiful" And so on and so forth. Coupled with billionaires spouting off about it a lot more, I was idly wondering why.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:38 |
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I think those people want to say god, byt ya know. Uncool.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:44 |
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mid november and still half the trees are green, though at least like 4 or 5 trees actually changed color before dumping all their leaves finally
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:48 |
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LOL. LMAO.
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:50 |
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a lot of people are increasingly hosed up and don't know how to probe the spiky ball of screaming existential terror gradually consuming their subconscious
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:51 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 07:22 |
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loving this one week of 67 degree weather followed by 35 degrees for a week followed by 63 degrees for a week
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# ? Nov 12, 2021 22:52 |