http://www.flassbeck...e-planet-apart/
Thoughts?
In late 2007 I did my first significant reading into climate change and came away with the impression that the 1 degree C increase in global temperature by 2100 was survivable given that I personally would have enough time to make enough money to buy land in areas predicted to be least effected by the problem, and that for our civilization in general that 90 years was enough time to deal with the problem while also developing the currently undeveloped nations. A 1 degree C hotter world with less biological diversity and a different coast line is not ideal, but it's livable (as long as you're not a poor person living in Bangladesh) and arguably a reasonable exchange for developing our civilization out of the poverty and ignorance that us and our ancestors have lived with since we started chipping tools out of rocks.
Now that the current prediction is 3.5 degrees C increase by 2035, and that its though that at that point our entire ecosystem will collapse, I have really have no idea what to do since it's clear that not only will I not likely be able to buy my way out of the situation, but as a civilization we are literally killing ourselves at a rate that could mean that many of us here in this forum face potential starvation in just 3 or 4 decades.
As the article points out, the drastic action that is needed to stop the worst predictions from coming true will certainly not be coming from the current government establishments of the world as those that do acknowledge the reality of human driven climate change aren't doing anything about it for various political and short-sited monetary reasons, and additionally that many first world nations that could potentially do something about the issue do not have governments that even acknowledge the problem!
I know from personal experience that there is a suicidal level of insanity in denying the reality of this problem in the US. I am working on a mathematical modelling project with a government researcher in the conservative coastal state that stands to suffer the most from the effects of climate change, and he has said that he has to be careful when mentioning climate change in his work because doing so in the wrong company is a potential career ender!!! In the various models that his agency runs to predict various things, whether or not to include predicted effects of climate change in long range predictions depends entirely on the source of the money being provided! This is absolutely insane. Even if you don't believe in climate change or whatever reason, there is no scientifically sound reason to ban its investigation.
As a civilization we are shooting ourselves with the slowest moving bullet that we either acknowledge and refuse to dodge, or that we are pretending doesn't exist even as it inevitably, visibly moves towards our head.
Since I can't do anything about the problem personally, and since the people who have the power to do so clearly won't do anything out of selfish ignorance, the only thing that comes to mind is that I wonder if in a couple decades we can put together a few probes in permanent orbit around the sun containing a history of our civilization in a very stable medium with a final section on how we knew what was coming but couldn't put aside our idiotic tendencies long enough to do something about it. That way if some time in the distant future alien explorers of whatever sort happen to stop by and see the ruins of our civilization that we ourselves destroyed, they will know that at least we were smart enough to see it coming.
Edited by Reacker, July 24 2016 - 10:08 AM.
Removed profanity