A weird response, — Mikie
Language matter, especially in media headlines for the part of the masses who are stupid enough to only read the headlines; but who carry enough democratic power to vote people into power who actively act against mitigation strategies. — Christoffer
Don't take it personal, but I do get a bit fed up with being told my language and/or attitude is the problem. The solution we are going for at the moment is 'most people die', along with a mass extinction.
Don't take it personal, but I do get a bit fed up with being told my language — unenlightened
The next big climate deadline is for meat and dairy
Nearly two decades ago, a United Nations report marked the livestock sector as one of the most polluting industries on the planet. Ever since, there’s been a steady drip of research on the need to scale back meat production in high- and middle-income countries.
[The meat] Industry is fighting back. A well-oiled PR machine composed of shadowy communications groups, industry-funded academics, and pro-meat influencers all push out the message that livestock aren’t so bad for the planet. Their claims have ranged from misleading scientific arguments to hollow corporate greenwashing to outright disinformation. — Vox (Kenny Torrella)
In protest of the suggested ban on gas stoves, I’m staying taped to this stove forever. — Chef Andrew Gruel (@ChefGruel)
Maybe you feel it’s already over. In that case, fine — Mikie
But I have given up hoping that sense and decency will prevail in the near future; rather, starvation, war, and greedy stupidity will do the job instead. — unenlightened
Be not too hard, for life is short,
And nothing is given to man;
Be not too hard when he is sold and bought,
And he must manage as best he can;
Be not too hard when he blindly dies
Fighting for things he does not own;
And be not too hard when he tells lies,
Or his heart is sometimes like a stone;
Be not too hard, for soon he'll die,
Often no wiser than he began;
Be not too hard, for life is short,
And nothing is given to man. — Christopher Logue
But there is room until the very last gasp for kindness and affection, and to make what adaptations one can... — unenlightened
Dude, you are so lucky. Soon you will be living in a tropical paradise. — Agree-to-Disagree
President Biden has done more to address climate change than any of his predecessors. So far, voters don’t seem to care.
Here are some interesting comments about School Strike for Climate. — Agree-to-Disagree
Demanding that governments damage their economies in the name of climate science — Agree-to-Disagree
Right, so it’s hopeless. Cool analysis. Bye. — Mikie
People are not willing to make the sacrifices necessary to transition away from fossil fuels. — RogueAI
We're going to have to either hope for some tech miracle, hope the Earth is self-regulating in some way as to prevent warming from getting too bad, or geo-engineering our way out of it. — RogueAI
No thanks. If you feel nothing can be done, then go on doing nothing. — Mikie
As opposed to being a massive dick to people on some obscure philosophy forum? — RogueAI
The latest from our resident climate denial propagandist: — Mikie
:lol: What a bunch of imbeciles. — Mikie
Right, so it’s hopeless. Cool analysis. Bye. — Mikie
No thanks. If you feel nothing can be done, then go on doing nothing. — Mikie
Yes, because your expert knowledge on this issue is definitely worth paying attention to. :up: — Mikie
The four types of climate denier, and why you should ignore them all — Mikie
For the first time since 1920, the government has raised the rates that companies pay. The fossil fuel industry says it will hurt the economy.
Supporters say the changes announced Friday will better compensate taxpayers for fossil fuel extraction on federal lands, and that they will prevent taxpayers from footing the bill for cleanup of abandoned oil and gas wells. After ending their drilling operations or going out of business, fossil fuel companies have walked away from thousands of wells, leaving the sites leaking greenhouse gases and toxic substances such as arsenic and benzene.
The bipartisan infrastructure law of 2021 provided a record $4.7 billion for states’ efforts to plug these “orphan” wells. But the federal funding may make only a small dent in the problem, with some experts estimating that there could be millions of undiscovered orphan wells across the country.
“There are costs of doing business, and the industry should shoulder the costs of cleanup for their operations,” said Autumn Hanna, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan watchdog group. “They’re extracting oil and gas from public lands for their own profit, and those resources are owned by taxpayers, who should not be left to shoulder the cleanup costs themselves.”
Kate Groetzinger, communications manager at the Center for Western Priorities, a conservation group, said the changes are “only fair” after the country’s largest oil and gas companies reported their biggest annual profits in a decade last year. ExxonMobil reported $36 billion in earnings, while Chevron netted $21.4 billion.
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