The point was that radiant heat from the sun has the biggest influence over the earth's surface temperatures, and scientists seem to know very little about the sun's capacity to radiate heat. I suppose I'm off topic, and we need a different thread about the sun's influence on the earth's climate. — Metaphysician Undercover
Informative as was your previous post. I thought you were a psychologist? Hopefully Tate you're getting "up to speed" and we can start discussing the climate crisis. — Benkei
Well I put up links to help folks with terminology and timelines, and numbers of years ago are really useful for sorting things. — unenlightened
point that brute fact reveals our finitude as knowers, because it's something that happened to us, which makes no sense — Pie
But scientists appear to have little if any understanding of this magnetic field, or fields. — Metaphysician Undercover
would be better to describe safety net programs as pro-citizen, or pro-worker, rather than pro-union. — Bitter Crank
That isn't the same thing as unions existing because of federal backing. The federal government is a tool which capital and labor both use for their own ends--the former more effectively than the latte — Bitter Crank
People who aren't in that situation should be supportive of unionization. — Moliere
Well, then I'd say I think you're an engineer who has decided to edit the history books to suit your preferred outlook, and that you do not want to know that working people *forced* the government to help them in far-reaching ways. — Moliere
But there are people who are still cleaning, stocking, etc. And they are suffering. — Moliere
Eh, you're a scab.
What do you know of "really powerful unions"? — Moliere
really powerful" ? Naw. — Moliere
And what happened before? Just some stories that people like to tell. — Moliere
The government, in the USA at least, has been mostly anti-labor and pro-capitalist. — Moliere
: I have met people physically disabled by Starbucks. They qualified, even in this regressive government, for disability. Serving coffee. — Moliere
The labor movement far predates Roosevelt — Xtrix
I've been looking into web3 ideas which may be a bit utopian — Pie
No, it’s not close to true. Feel free to pick up literally any book about it. The labor movement far predates any “government backing,” Teddy Roosevelt, or Woodrow Wilson.
Stop talking nonsense. — Xtrix
Hoffa and mob stuff comes to mind, but then I think we just need unions that are harder to corrupt. We need to keep trying to find corruption-resistant social structures. — Pie
One thing you do need to understand about the American labor movement is that it only existed in the first place due to federal backing
— Tate
Not remotely true. — Xtrix
The Myth of the Individual in the USA mitigated against the uptake of unions. A Real Man stands on his own, not needing others to help him negotiate his workplace contract.
Hence the Myth of the Individual helped ceed power to corporations, resulting in the failed democracy that is the modern USA. — Banno
the time scale of climate change will be barely noticeable compared with that of the next ice age. — Joshs
Can I suggest that we take this slowly, and provide sufficient detail to avoid misunderstandings as much as possible. I'm going to start with this — unenlightened
Perhaps you can shed some light on that? — unenlightened
Do you mean looking at ice cores? Looking at rocks would involve much longer timescales. — unenlightened
My takeaway thus far though is to notice that the change in climate we are now undergoing has been man-made in a couple of centuries, and for us to have noticed the effect so very quickly suggests that it dwarfs the effect of the Milankovitch cycles — unenlightened
What do you think causes the shape of earth's orbit to abruptly change? — Metaphysician Undercover
What is this "trigger point" you keep talking about? Is it a solar change, something to do with the sun's magnetic field, causing reduced energy from the sun? The sun's magnetic field is not well understood: — Metaphysician Undercover
So different people are using the term "ice age" in different ways. — Michael
That's a frigging long, long waiting time. — Agent Smith
The amount of anthropogenic greenhouse gases emitted into Earth's oceans and atmosphere is predicted to prevent the next glacial period for the next 500,000 years, which otherwise would begin in around 50,000 years, and likely more glacial cycles after. — Wikipedia