Everyone thinks the end of the world will be this big event like a Hollywood movie but it won't be. It will be a slow painful process of loss and destruction be it environmental, a virus or both.
Pretty much.It's already happening. Modern people don't reproduce themselves.
In South Korea—the country with the world’s lowest TFR, at 0.7—the number of babies born in 2100 is on track to be 93 to 98 percent lower than the number of babies born this year. No disease or invading army has ever managed to destroy a country so thoroughly, and the word that springs to my mind, when contemplating such an event, is “biblical.”
If you are in communication with these gnostic entities, can you put in a good word for a AAAAA Ridge Racer reboot to tide us over?We live in a simulation and as long as the gnostic entities beyond our comprehension deem it fit we will keep going in this cybernetic Samsara where transhumanism binds us tighter to the wheel.
If you are in communication with these gnostic entities, can you put in a good word for a AAAAA Ridge Racer reboot to tide us over?
Yes humanity is going extinct, but not in the way that we normally think. Environmental changes will force us to transform into another species. We will blend with technology.
Remember the Borg from Startrek? That's our future in my opinion. However it will take a long long time. Possibly beyond the next generation.
It's gonna happen because the powers that be have wanted it to happen for thousands of years
No one would mistake me for an optimist, but I'm cynical about doomsday pessimism. I'm old enough to have heard one doomsday scenario after another trotted out and for things to work out okay. The first one I remember was the threat of atomic war, being coached to hide under our desks in elementary school. Then we were going to run out of fossil fuels and the world would be plunged into chaos. Then civilization was going be collapse because of overpopulation. Then Y2K was going to cause everything to go haywire. Now it's climate change or whatever the doomsday scenario de jour is.
It's a distinct pattern. You'll recognize it once you've been around awhile. Fear is an attention-magnet. The media love to fan the flames. Everyone gets in a lather, their attention riveted on the threat. No surprise (because if the threat is real, what could be more important). The thing is, most of the threats turn out to be, if not bogus, at least greatly exaggerated.
The threat of nuclear war was mitigated by our actions, as was Y2K. There was never evidence of a serious threat of fossil fuels running out, or over population collapsing civilisation.
You’re making comparisons that don’t fit to make yourself feel better about the effects of climate change.
nd climate change is not a total doomsday scenario. It’s not that it’s going to kill off humanity completely. It’s that it’s going to make the lives of everyone immeasurably worse. It’s not an apocalypse. It’s the slow and inexorable decline of human comfort, security and safety.
The media? The media have nothing to do with the mountains of scientific data that prove climate change is a real thing. Get off social media and TV, and go look up the facts. They’re not hard to find.
I've "looked up the facts," thanks bud. And your patronizing tone isn't helping your cause - just making you sound like an alarmist.
The media is absolutely complicit. If you think they aren't, you're simply naive. And I didn't even mention all the financial incentives that go well beyond media and into the research itself.
No. You haven't. Because if you had, you would know that your claims that I'm being an 'alarmist' aren't accurate. And the fact you spout the usual 'it's all the media's fault!' and 'the scientists are all paid off!' schtick that climate change deniers always trot out proves to me that you're the naive one. Or at least someone who's prepared to accept the word of the media you like to consume and the politicians you like to listen to, without doing any real due diligence.
I'm not a climate change denier, but keep making patronizing assumptions about me. Resorting to stereotypes and slurs is a sure sign of wisdom.
That being said, there are various people in the climate movement, prominent people, who are in a permanent state of emotional distress about the impending end of the world. And there are others who welcome the end of the world as a return to nature fantasy. And others who believe they should be in charge so that they can impose enormous taxes and restrictions on all of society for the greater good, as long as it reduces energy consumption. People who believe that they should shame everyone else for not doing enough. Those subsets of people are all a bit ridiculous and undermine the credibility of the issue, unfortunately. But the underlying issue is a genuine one.
Let's keep it civil and respectful in here, guys.
That's a problem, isn't it, once you realize the world is run by maniacs, demagogues, ideologues, narcissists, and idiots.As you say, not unsolvable. But requires having adults in the room.
Oh dear…
That's a problem, isn't it, once you realize the world is run by maniacs, demagogues, ideologues, narcissists, and idiots.
The likes of Thunberg haven’t helped at all, that much is for certain. Instead of calmly and rationally taking their time to explain the scientific evidence, they thrash around and scream like children. This is more than enough of an excuse for people who want to deny the whole thing to look away and not properly engage.
As you say, not unsolvable. But requires having adults in the room.
Oh dear…
I was flying through a school zone in my car this morning. No lift requiredThere's no atmosphere in space to provide lift
So, spacecrafts use engines or thrusters that expel gas or other materials to create the necessary force for movement. This allows them to travel through space, even though there's no air
For example: birds wouldn’t be able to fly in space because space is a vacuum. There is no air to generate lift for flight
To be fair if you question why children were coached to pointlessly hide under desks to protect them from a nuclear attack, you might come to the conclusion that the government were attempting to reassure the public that something could be done to protect themselves in the event of an escalation in cold war hostilities.The first one I remember was the threat of atomic war, being coached to hide under our desks in elementary school. Then we were going to run out of fossil fuels and the world would be plunged into chaos. Then civilization was going be collapse because of overpopulation. Then Y2K was going to cause everything to go haywire
Fear is an attention-magnet. The media love to fan the flames
It's already happening. Modern people don't reproduce themselves.
In South Korea—the country with the world’s lowest TFR, at 0.7—the number of babies born in 2100 is on track to be 93 to 98 percent lower than the number of babies born this year. No disease or invading army has ever managed to destroy a country so thoroughly, and the word that springs to my mind, when contemplating such an event, is “biblical.”
I quit worrying about climate change when Pres. Obama left office and paid millions for a waterfront property on Martha's Vineyard. If anybody ought to know the risks, it would be him.
Just what i've read around the internet. here's an example search result: https://www.bing.com/search?q=are+earth's+fresh+water+sources+depleting+?&form=ANNH01&refig=fbb6dec891834355a7e8d7b5d5cdcea3&pc=U531Source for the bolded?
Pres. Obama is certainly rich, but not rich enough that he can piss away tens of millions of dollars on bad real estate deals. He's not just an American politician, he was the President of the United States who had access to all government intelligence and studies about climate change and quickly invested a sizable amount of his net worth on coastal property. If the worst case scenarios were likely, I don't think he would have done that.Except that house is not on the ocean, it's at the edge of a salt water pond, and is a fair bit above sea level. Metres, apparently.
Also Obama is rich as fuck. They won't be the people suffering!
Edit: here are pictures of it. Up a slope.
Also, also... since when did American politicians become the gold standard for understanding, and being a barometer for, science?
Lads lads
Problem solved
As I can't use war, I think that we will likely just go the way of most extinct species and just stop reproducing until our numbers are so low that any significant diseases will clear the rest of us off. Even though I don't personally believe in Christianity, the meak inheriting the Earth is strangely coming to pass because the wealthier parts of the world will die out first.
I'm not sure rising temps will drive oceanic moisture into the air that then won't come down as rain SOMEWHERE, the humidity tolerance of the atmosphere is finite.Just what i've read around the internet. here's an example search result: https://www.bing.com/search?q=are+earth's+fresh+water+sources+depleting+?&form=ANNH01&refig=fbb6dec891834355a7e8d7b5d5cdcea3&pc=U531
I did say it was an extreme possibility, but it is conceivable. here's why (and if my science here is wrong, feel free to correct me):
The water cycle on the planet runs as follows: Sea water evaporates into clouds. Clouds go over land and drop rain or snow. Rain or snow turn into glaciers and rivers, which supply fresh water. Used water runs back into the sea. Now, because of rising atmospheric temperatures, more sea water evaporates, but less of it precipitates into snow and rain. Which means we are still losing the same amount of water to the seas but getting less of it back to replenish our glaciers, rivers and lakes. Overall, this results in a gradual but real decline in fresh water reserves. To some extent this has been documented by the rise in sea levels, depleting glaciers and shrinking polar ice caps.
On a side note, i believe this fresh water scarcity is what causes the apocalypse in the Mad Max universe. That's why everything is shown as a big desert. Water ran out. Oceans dried up.
Increase in global temp does increase the amount of water the atmosphere can hold.Just what i've read around the internet. here's an example search result: https://www.bing.com/search?q=are+earth's+fresh+water+sources+depleting+?&form=ANNH01&refig=fbb6dec891834355a7e8d7b5d5cdcea3&pc=U531
I did say it was an extreme possibility, but it is conceivable. here's why (and if my science here is wrong, feel free to correct me):
The water cycle on the planet runs as follows: Sea water evaporates into clouds. Clouds go over land and drop rain or snow. Rain or snow turn into glaciers and rivers, which supply fresh water. Used water runs back into the sea. Now, because of rising atmospheric temperatures, more sea water evaporates, but less of it precipitates into snow and rain. Which means we are still losing the same amount of water to the seas but getting less of it back to replenish our glaciers, rivers and lakes. Overall, this results in a gradual but real decline in fresh water reserves. To some extent this has been documented by the rise in sea levels, depleting glaciers and shrinking polar ice caps.
On a side note, i believe this fresh water scarcity is what causes the apocalypse in the Mad Max universe. That's why everything is shown as a big desert. Water ran out. Oceans dried up.
For every degree Celsius that Earth’s atmospheric temperature rises, the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere can increase by about 7%, according to the laws of thermodynamics.
Some people mistakenly believe water vapor is the main driver of Earth’s current warming. But increased water vapor doesn’t cause global warming. Instead, it’s a consequence of it. Increased water vapor in the atmosphere amplifies the warming caused by other greenhouse gases.
It works like this: As greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane increase, Earth’s temperature rises in response. This increases evaporation from both water and land areas. Because warmer air holds more moisture, its concentration of water vapor increases.
Specifically, this happens because water vapor does not condense and precipitate out of the atmosphere as easily at higher temperatures. The water vapor then absorbs heat radiated from Earth and prevents it from escaping out to space. This further warms the atmosphere, resulting in even more water vapor in the atmosphere. This is what scientists call a "positive feedback loop." Scientists estimate this effect more than doubles the warming that would happen due to increasing carbon dioxide alone.
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Increases in atmospheric water vapor also amplify the global water cycle. They contribute to making wet regions wetter and dry regions drier. The more water vapor that air contains, the more energy it holds. This energy fuels intense storms, particularly over land. This results in more extreme weather events.
But more evaporation from the land also dries soils out. When water from intense storms falls on hard, dry ground, it runs off into rivers and streams instead of dampening soils.
for the first time in the history of the planet, a species has the technology to prevent its own extinction. - U.S. President, ArmageddonDo we, as a species, deserve to make it anyway? And I don't mean it as casual nihilism, it's just that life itself is a continuing process in which we're only a part of. That process will continue for a very, very long time after we're not here. What makes us different from other species that went extinct?
We're just monkeys floating endlessly in a big rock in the middle of nowhere. So enjoy it by being as much of a mammal as possible, pleasure yourself however you want and don't get too attached to the future. The future is not for us.