Is it possible that more cleverness, more decision making, and more planning is not the answer? Is it possible that when heading for the cliff, either a change of direction or stopping entirely is more what's needed? Go to the world government website, and there is a quote from Einstein. Einstein has the answers, Einstein for president. This touching faith in the puissance of great men, is - shall we just say, 'a religious impulse'? — unenlightened
Ah, and think about what great time the media would have with it. People would be glued to the televisions, laptops and smartphones...I have a bad cold and feel terrible, so Yellowstone can go ahead and blow up. I'm ready to get it over with. Will it be too much? Dunno. The last time it covered a good share of the great plains with a thick layer of volcanic ejecta. Would stuffing a large H bomb down Old Faithful's throat trigger it?
GO YELLOWSTONE! — Bitter Crank
Is it possible that more cleverness, more decision making, and more planning is not the answer? — unenlightened
What do you think constitutes not continuing to run towards the cliff edge? — bert1
I discovered that Europeans might not have brought the American Bison close to extinction. — frank
I thought that large numbers of buffalo were wantonly shot -- and not slaughtered, maybe just skinned for their hides -- as a way of depriving the plains Indians of food. Is that true? Don't know for sure at this moment. — Bitter Crank
So what might we do or think or discuss in the meantime? — unenlightened
What is still important?
— unenlightened
Is this your question?
— Brett
Yes. That is the question I am asking myself and the paper is asking itself — unenlightened
I thought that large numbers of buffalo were wantonly shot -- and not slaughtered, maybe just skinned for their hides -- as a way of depriving the plains Indians of food. Is that true? Don't know for sure at this moment. — Bitter Crank
Even worse, how accurate has previous doomsday predictions been? — Taneras
Thank you for your kind words, Bitter Crank. :smile:People hate getting upstaged by volcanoes. The nerve! I feel for you. It must have been a crushing experience. — Bitter Crank
Frankly, the argument that it is silly to consider disaster unless it has happened is so fatuous as to look insane. — unenlightened
you aren't owed any justification for that rejection. — Maggy
Alarmist panic isn't helping anything/one. — jorndoe
I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day. And then I want you to act. — Greta Thunberg
I don’t care if what I’m doing – what we’re doing – is hopeful. We need to do it anyway. Even if there’s no hope left and everything is hopeless, we must do what we can.
Being informed isn't helping anything until it informs some action — unenlightened
Let's get to it! — unenlightened
Natalie WolchoverA state-of-the-art supercomputer simulation indicates that a feedback loop between global warming and cloud loss can push Earth’s climate past a disastrous tipping point in as little as a century.
Even worse, how accurate has previous doomsday predictions been? (I'm looking at you Al Gore!). — Taneras
My great realization happened when I discovered that Europeans might not have brought the American Bison close to extinction. Hunting killed many, but climate change may have killed the rest. That made me wonder: on what basis did I assume it had to be just Evil Humans? One of my favorite authors had made exactly the same assumption. — frank
but don't be so naive as to think that evidence we're not is any less psychologically motivated. — Isaac
The Little Ice Age doesn't prove that humans didn't wipe out the massive herds of bison that once spanned much of North America. It only provides an alternative explanation. — frank
My realization was that I'm prone to jumping to certainty without any good foundation. — frank
I'm arguing that it's not so much self-flagellation as just publication bias. Yesterday it was shocking (and so publishable) to hear that humans caused the Bison extinction, today its shocking (and so publishable) to learn we didn't, or not so much. — Isaac
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