70s, 80s and 90s = peak humanity.
No. The motherfuckers that have us all in a stranglehold are, we just get gaslit into taking the blame and responsibility for it.
Does “we’re all fucked” sound like an underestimation to you?
I got a vasectomy so my kids won’t suffer it, and a crock pot to slow cook/tenderize the long pork.
All set.
“we”
If by ‘we’ you mean the billionaires and political leaders in a position to do something, then absolutely.
We are voting for and consuming from those saboteurs. We could do otherwise AND incite something else.
Who is “we”, my friend?
People with active/passive voting rights and above global average purchasing power: People in stable representative democracies with mixed economies.
I think it’s more likely that they understand climate change much better than the average Joe. They just know it won’t affect them as much and as soon as it will the average Joe.
If only CO2’s warming properties had been discovered in 1856. If only good models of global warming had been created in 1896. If only those had happened, maybe society could have taken more substantial actions…
In a word, yes
Uh huh
Yup.
4
Uh, yeah?
i don’t think most people are laboring under the illusion that the world will be okay, just the illusion that they and their local community will be okay
I don’t know anymore… I’m more confused about the severity of climate change as time goes on.
Climate change is not a big deal if the life a person is expecting to live is only a slightly more stressful version of a life without climate change (I think this is where we are currently). It is a big deal if it has the same degree of impact of that a mental health disorder might have - work, relationships, and overall lifestyle are significantly impacted and that person needs to make major adjustments to learn to live with it. I don’t see a middle ground here, but I’m also not thinking that hard about it.
I don’t know where we are going. And yes… I know the world is a big place and some people are going to feel the worst aspects, but to keep things simple (and relevant) I’m only thinking of other “middle” class Canadians living in large urban centers. If this argument takes into account every person on earth then the answer is just going to be a meaningless ‘yes’.
I had a conversation with a friend. A well educated friend, who has devoted his life to the cause
He thought he was fighting for his children or grandchildren. I told him no, we’ve been saying that for two generations - this is our problem. We will feel the hurt. Your water supply is not guaranteed, our food so supply could run dry one year. Our parents were told this was a future generation problem - we’re that generation… This is already happening
In the US, in the EU - some places are already feeling it, but we will all feel it soon
Yup
Probably. We’re clearly avoidant on this topic.