First I would suggest stop being scared of everything you listen to or read on climate change. Are you really so retarted that you think your time here on earth coincides with the point in time earth reaches it’s breaking point? Really? Couple weeks ago I was working on this guys house and we started talking, actually he started talking about politics, I don’t talk politics on the job or with my customers, but he’s a flaming Marxist/progressive that thinks Virginia Beach is going to be underwater in 30 to 40 years. All he does all day is sit in a recliner and watch progressive podcast or this stupid progressive preacher that looks like he hasn’t eaten a piece of meat since his balls dropped. He’s addicted to progressive information. It’s one of the saddest life’s I’ve ever seen. Climate change is a religion!! It’s a doomsday xxxkin cult religion!! And you’ve bit the hook, swallowed the hook and it’s going to kill you from the inside out because that’s what cults do. Congratulations!!Some Schmo wrote: ↑Tue Mar 01, 2022 10:38 pmYeah, it's really my succinct way of saying that I've suspected for a while now that humanity is doomed. We're smart enough to get so far, but not smart enough to save ourselves as a whole. I don't know what will get us first: climate change denial or nuclear war insanity.
I don't know what to do about either, and that makes me one of the idiots.
Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
- Atlanticmike
- God
- Posts: 2721
- Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2021 12:16 pm
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
-
- God
- Posts: 6659
- Joined: Mon Oct 25, 2021 10:44 pm
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
And.... back to the topic once again....
Chap wrote: ↑Mon Feb 28, 2022 9:42 pmJust in case your attention is currently distracted ...
The problems that face us in Europe are serious. But if we let the destruction of the planet's life support system continue and even accelerate as it is doing today, the Ukraine war will soon be something we look back on and say wistfully "Those were the good times. If only we had known what was coming."
But we do know what is coming ...
IPCC issues ‘bleakest warning yet’ on impacts of climate breakdown
Report says human actions are causing dangerous disruption, and window to secure a liveable future is closing
Climate breakdown is accelerating rapidly, many of the impacts will be more severe than predicted and there is only a narrow chance left of avoiding its worst ravages, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has said.
Even at current levels, human actions in heating the climate are causing dangerous and widespread disruption, threatening devastation to swathes of the natural world and rendering many areas unliveable, according to the landmark report published on Monday.
“The scientific evidence is unequivocal: climate change is a threat to human wellbeing and the health of the planet,” said Hans-Otto Pörtner, a co-chair of working group 2 of the IPCC. “Any further delay in concerted global action will miss a brief and rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future.”
Droughts, floods, heatwaves
In what some scientists termed “the bleakest warning yet”, the summary report from the global authority on climate science says droughts, floods, heatwaves and other extreme weather are accelerating and wreaking increasing damage.
Allowing global temperatures to increase by more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, as looks likely on current trends in greenhouse gas emissions, would result in some “irreversible” impacts. These include the melting of ice caps and glaciers, and a cascading effect whereby wildfires, the die-off of trees, the drying of peatlands and the thawing of permafrost release additional carbon emissions, amplifying the warming further.
‘Atlas of human suffering’
António Guterres, the UN secretary general, said: “I have seen many scientific reports in my time, but nothing like this. Today’s IPCC report is an atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership.”
John Kerry, the US special presidential envoy for climate, said the report “paints a dire picture of the impacts already occurring because of a warmer world and the terrible risks to our planet if we continue to ignore science. We have seen the increase in climate-fuelled extreme events, and the damage that is left behind – lives lost and livelihoods ruined. The question at this point is not whether we can altogether avoid the crisis – it is whether we can avoid the worst consequences.”
The report says:
Everywhere is affected, with no inhabited region escaping dire impacts from rising temperatures and increasingly extreme weather.
About half the global population – between 3.3 billion and 3.6 billion people – live in areas “highly vulnerable” to climate change.
Millions of people face food and water shortages owing to climate change, even at current levels of heating.
Mass die-offs of species, from trees to corals, are already under way.
1.5C above pre-industrial levels constitutes a “critical level” beyond which the impacts of the climate crisis accelerate strongly and some become irreversible.
Coastal areas around the globe, and small, low-lying islands, face inundation at temperature rises of more than 1.5C.
Key ecosystems are losing their ability to absorb carbon dioxide, turning them from carbon sinks to carbon sources.
Some countries have agreed to conserve 30% of the Earth’s land, but conserving half may be necessary to restore the ability of natural ecosystems to cope with the damage wreaked on them.
Chance to avoid the worst
This is the second part of the IPCC’s latest assessment report, an updated, comprehensive review of global knowledge of the climate, which has been seven years in the making and draws on the peer-reviewed work of thousands of scientists. The assessment report is the sixth since the IPCC was first convened by the UN in 1988, and may be the last to be published while there is still some chance of avoiding the worst.
A first instalment, by the IPCC’s working group 1, published last August, on the physical science of climate change, said the climate crisis was “unequivocally” caused by human actions, resulting in changes that were “unprecedented”, with some becoming “irreversible”.
This second part, by working group 2, deals with the impacts of climate breakdown, sets out areas where the world is most vulnerable, and details how we can try to adapt and protect against some of the impacts. A third section, due in April, will cover ways to cut greenhouse gas emissions, and the final part, in October, will summarise these lessons for governments meeting in Egypt for the UN Cop27 climate summit.
‘Cataclysmic’ for small islands
Small islands will be among those worst affected. Walton Webson, an ambassador of Antigua and Barbuda and the chair of the Alliance of Small Island States, called the findings “cataclysmic”.
He urged the UN to convene a special session to consider action. “We are continuing to head for a precipice – we say our eyes are open to the risks, but when you look at global emissions, if anything we are accelerating towards the cliff edge. We are not seeing the action from the big emitters that is required to get emissions down in this critical decade – this means halving emissions by 2030 at the latest. It is clear that time is slipping away from us.”
Governments in other parts of the world could help their people to adapt to some of the impacts of the climate crisis, the report says, by building flood defences, helping farmers to grow different crops, or building more resilient infrastructure. But the authors say the capacity of the world to adapt to the impacts will diminish rapidly the further temperatures rise, quickly reaching “hard” limits beyond which adaptation would be impossible.
‘Global dominoes’
The climate crisis also has the power to worsen problems such as hunger, ill-health and poverty, the report makes clear. Dave Reay, the director of Edinburgh Climate Change Institute at the University of Edinburgh, said: “Like taking a wrecking ball to a set of global dominoes, climate change in the 21st century threatens to destroy the foundations of food and water security, smash onwards through the fragile structures of human and ecosystem health, and ultimately shake the very pillars of human civilisation.”
What is the IPCC climate change report – and what does it say?
The report plays down fears of conflicts arising from the climate crisis, finding that “displacement” and “involuntary migration” of people would ensue but that “non-climatic factors are the dominant drivers of existing intrastate violent conflicts”.
But Jeffrey Kargel, a senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in the US, said: “The current warfare activity in eastern Europe, though not attributable to climate change, is a further caution about how human tensions and international relations and geopolitics could become inflamed as climate change impacts hit nations in ways that they are ill-prepared to handle.”
- Atlanticmike
- God
- Posts: 2721
- Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2021 12:16 pm
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
Really?? Are you actually serious? Why don’t lead by example mr. lawyer and give up your cars, stop using electricity, stop eating meat and start growing your own food? If you did all those things my life and my families lives would be a lot better. Please help us by doing all those changes!!Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 12:48 amI’m convinced it’s our brains. They haven’t evolved to assess long-term threats. They try normalize whatever situation they exist in, so they don’t notice relatively slow rates of change. And they really really don’t want to accept the fact that just by living their lives they are contributing to make life a living hell for their fellow humans.
- Res Ipsa
- God
- Posts: 10636
- Joined: Mon Oct 26, 2020 6:44 pm
- Location: Playing Rabbits
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
More clowning. Climate science is not a cult or a religion. It’s science based on overwhelming evidence. You’re in complete denial. Sadly, it is children and your grandchildren who will pay the heavy price for your clowning.Atlanticmike wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 12:49 amFirst I would suggest stop being scared of everything you listen to or read on climate change. Are you really so retarted that you think your time here on earth coincides with the point in time earth reaches it’s breaking point? Really? Couple weeks ago I was working on this guys house and we started talking, actually he started talking about politics, I don’t talk politics on the job or with my customers, but he’s a flaming Marxist/progressive that thinks Virginia Beach is going to be underwater in 30 to 40 years. All he does all day is sit in a recliner and watch progressive podcast or this stupid progressive preacher that looks like he hasn’t eaten a piece of meat since his balls dropped. He’s addicted to progressive information. It’s one of the saddest life’s I’ve ever seen. Climate change is a religion!! It’s a doomsday xxxkin cult religion!! And you’ve bit the hook, swallowed the hook and it’s going to kill you from the inside out because that’s what cults do. Congratulations!!Some Schmo wrote: ↑Tue Mar 01, 2022 10:38 pm
Yeah, it's really my succinct way of saying that I've suspected for a while now that humanity is doomed. We're smart enough to get so far, but not smart enough to save ourselves as a whole. I don't know what will get us first: climate change denial or nuclear war insanity.
I don't know what to do about either, and that makes me one of the idiots.![]()
he/him
we all just have to live through it,
holding each other’s hands.
— Alison Luterman
we all just have to live through it,
holding each other’s hands.
— Alison Luterman
- Res Ipsa
- God
- Posts: 10636
- Joined: Mon Oct 26, 2020 6:44 pm
- Location: Playing Rabbits
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
More clowning. You really are quite the clown.Atlanticmike wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 12:54 amReally?? Are you actually serious? Why don’t lead by example mr. lawyer and give up your cars, stop using electricity, stop eating meat and start growing your own food? If you did all those things my life and my families lives would be a lot better. Please help us by doing all those changes!!Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 12:48 am
I’m convinced it’s our brains. They haven’t evolved to assess long-term threats. They try normalize whatever situation they exist in, so they don’t notice relatively slow rates of change. And they really really don’t want to accept the fact that just by living their lives they are contributing to make life a living hell for their fellow humans.
he/him
we all just have to live through it,
holding each other’s hands.
— Alison Luterman
we all just have to live through it,
holding each other’s hands.
— Alison Luterman
- Atlanticmike
- God
- Posts: 2721
- Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2021 12:16 pm
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
Read what you said!! “” and they really really don’t want to accept the fact that just by living their lives they are contributing to making life a living hell for their fellow humans“”. Do you actually believe that? Is that how you live day to day, thinking your existent is creating a hell for other humans??Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:05 amMore clowning. You really are quite the clown.Atlanticmike wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 12:54 am
Really?? Are you actually serious? Why don’t lead by example mr. lawyer and give up your cars, stop using electricity, stop eating meat and start growing your own food? If you did all those things my life and my families lives would be a lot better. Please help us by doing all those changes!!
-
- God
- Posts: 6659
- Joined: Mon Oct 25, 2021 10:44 pm
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
And another effort to bypass the distractions and stay with the topic...
Chap wrote: ↑Mon Feb 28, 2022 9:42 pmJust in case your attention is currently distracted ...
The problems that face us in Europe are serious. But if we let the destruction of the planet's life support system continue and even accelerate as it is doing today, the Ukraine war will soon be something we look back on and say wistfully "Those were the good times. If only we had known what was coming."
But we do know what is coming ...
IPCC issues ‘bleakest warning yet’ on impacts of climate breakdown
Report says human actions are causing dangerous disruption, and window to secure a liveable future is closing
Climate breakdown is accelerating rapidly, many of the impacts will be more severe than predicted and there is only a narrow chance left of avoiding its worst ravages, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has said.
Even at current levels, human actions in heating the climate are causing dangerous and widespread disruption, threatening devastation to swathes of the natural world and rendering many areas unliveable, according to the landmark report published on Monday.
“The scientific evidence is unequivocal: climate change is a threat to human wellbeing and the health of the planet,” said Hans-Otto Pörtner, a co-chair of working group 2 of the IPCC. “Any further delay in concerted global action will miss a brief and rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future.”
Droughts, floods, heatwaves
In what some scientists termed “the bleakest warning yet”, the summary report from the global authority on climate science says droughts, floods, heatwaves and other extreme weather are accelerating and wreaking increasing damage.
Allowing global temperatures to increase by more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, as looks likely on current trends in greenhouse gas emissions, would result in some “irreversible” impacts. These include the melting of ice caps and glaciers, and a cascading effect whereby wildfires, the die-off of trees, the drying of peatlands and the thawing of permafrost release additional carbon emissions, amplifying the warming further.
‘Atlas of human suffering’
António Guterres, the UN secretary general, said: “I have seen many scientific reports in my time, but nothing like this. Today’s IPCC report is an atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership.”
John Kerry, the US special presidential envoy for climate, said the report “paints a dire picture of the impacts already occurring because of a warmer world and the terrible risks to our planet if we continue to ignore science. We have seen the increase in climate-fuelled extreme events, and the damage that is left behind – lives lost and livelihoods ruined. The question at this point is not whether we can altogether avoid the crisis – it is whether we can avoid the worst consequences.”
The report says:
Everywhere is affected, with no inhabited region escaping dire impacts from rising temperatures and increasingly extreme weather.
About half the global population – between 3.3 billion and 3.6 billion people – live in areas “highly vulnerable” to climate change.
Millions of people face food and water shortages owing to climate change, even at current levels of heating.
Mass die-offs of species, from trees to corals, are already under way.
1.5C above pre-industrial levels constitutes a “critical level” beyond which the impacts of the climate crisis accelerate strongly and some become irreversible.
Coastal areas around the globe, and small, low-lying islands, face inundation at temperature rises of more than 1.5C.
Key ecosystems are losing their ability to absorb carbon dioxide, turning them from carbon sinks to carbon sources.
Some countries have agreed to conserve 30% of the Earth’s land, but conserving half may be necessary to restore the ability of natural ecosystems to cope with the damage wreaked on them.
Chance to avoid the worst
This is the second part of the IPCC’s latest assessment report, an updated, comprehensive review of global knowledge of the climate, which has been seven years in the making and draws on the peer-reviewed work of thousands of scientists. The assessment report is the sixth since the IPCC was first convened by the UN in 1988, and may be the last to be published while there is still some chance of avoiding the worst.
A first instalment, by the IPCC’s working group 1, published last August, on the physical science of climate change, said the climate crisis was “unequivocally” caused by human actions, resulting in changes that were “unprecedented”, with some becoming “irreversible”.
This second part, by working group 2, deals with the impacts of climate breakdown, sets out areas where the world is most vulnerable, and details how we can try to adapt and protect against some of the impacts. A third section, due in April, will cover ways to cut greenhouse gas emissions, and the final part, in October, will summarise these lessons for governments meeting in Egypt for the UN Cop27 climate summit.
‘Cataclysmic’ for small islands
Small islands will be among those worst affected. Walton Webson, an ambassador of Antigua and Barbuda and the chair of the Alliance of Small Island States, called the findings “cataclysmic”.
He urged the UN to convene a special session to consider action. “We are continuing to head for a precipice – we say our eyes are open to the risks, but when you look at global emissions, if anything we are accelerating towards the cliff edge. We are not seeing the action from the big emitters that is required to get emissions down in this critical decade – this means halving emissions by 2030 at the latest. It is clear that time is slipping away from us.”
Governments in other parts of the world could help their people to adapt to some of the impacts of the climate crisis, the report says, by building flood defences, helping farmers to grow different crops, or building more resilient infrastructure. But the authors say the capacity of the world to adapt to the impacts will diminish rapidly the further temperatures rise, quickly reaching “hard” limits beyond which adaptation would be impossible.
‘Global dominoes’
The climate crisis also has the power to worsen problems such as hunger, ill-health and poverty, the report makes clear. Dave Reay, the director of Edinburgh Climate Change Institute at the University of Edinburgh, said: “Like taking a wrecking ball to a set of global dominoes, climate change in the 21st century threatens to destroy the foundations of food and water security, smash onwards through the fragile structures of human and ecosystem health, and ultimately shake the very pillars of human civilisation.”
What is the IPCC climate change report – and what does it say?
The report plays down fears of conflicts arising from the climate crisis, finding that “displacement” and “involuntary migration” of people would ensue but that “non-climatic factors are the dominant drivers of existing intrastate violent conflicts”.
But Jeffrey Kargel, a senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in the US, said: “The current warfare activity in eastern Europe, though not attributable to climate change, is a further caution about how human tensions and international relations and geopolitics could become inflamed as climate change impacts hit nations in ways that they are ill-prepared to handle.”
- Atlanticmike
- God
- Posts: 2721
- Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2021 12:16 pm
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
I don’t know how old you are but here’s what’s going to happen in 50 years. The worlds going to be perfectly fine, infact, it’s going to be cleaner and greener than today. Your doomsday bullsxxt is going to fade away and people are going to realize you guys, the climate super heroes were a bunch of kooks that were scared shitlxxs of their own shadow. That’s exactly what’s going to happen!!! And I’m going to be in my mid nineties in 50 years, surfing in the exact same spot I’ve been surfing for the past 35 years!! The exact same spot!Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:05 amMore clowning. You really are quite the clown.Atlanticmike wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 12:54 am
Really?? Are you actually serious? Why don’t lead by example mr. lawyer and give up your cars, stop using electricity, stop eating meat and start growing your own food? If you did all those things my life and my families lives would be a lot better. Please help us by doing all those changes!!
-
- God
- Posts: 6659
- Joined: Mon Oct 25, 2021 10:44 pm
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
And once again, yet another effort to bypass the distractions and stay with the topic...
Chap wrote: ↑Mon Feb 28, 2022 9:42 pmJust in case your attention is currently distracted ...
The problems that face us in Europe are serious. But if we let the destruction of the planet's life support system continue and even accelerate as it is doing today, the Ukraine war will soon be something we look back on and say wistfully "Those were the good times. If only we had known what was coming."
But we do know what is coming ...
IPCC issues ‘bleakest warning yet’ on impacts of climate breakdown
Report says human actions are causing dangerous disruption, and window to secure a liveable future is closing
Climate breakdown is accelerating rapidly, many of the impacts will be more severe than predicted and there is only a narrow chance left of avoiding its worst ravages, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has said.
Even at current levels, human actions in heating the climate are causing dangerous and widespread disruption, threatening devastation to swathes of the natural world and rendering many areas unliveable, according to the landmark report published on Monday.
“The scientific evidence is unequivocal: climate change is a threat to human wellbeing and the health of the planet,” said Hans-Otto Pörtner, a co-chair of working group 2 of the IPCC. “Any further delay in concerted global action will miss a brief and rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future.”
Droughts, floods, heatwaves
In what some scientists termed “the bleakest warning yet”, the summary report from the global authority on climate science says droughts, floods, heatwaves and other extreme weather are accelerating and wreaking increasing damage.
Allowing global temperatures to increase by more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, as looks likely on current trends in greenhouse gas emissions, would result in some “irreversible” impacts. These include the melting of ice caps and glaciers, and a cascading effect whereby wildfires, the die-off of trees, the drying of peatlands and the thawing of permafrost release additional carbon emissions, amplifying the warming further.
‘Atlas of human suffering’
António Guterres, the UN secretary general, said: “I have seen many scientific reports in my time, but nothing like this. Today’s IPCC report is an atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership.”
John Kerry, the US special presidential envoy for climate, said the report “paints a dire picture of the impacts already occurring because of a warmer world and the terrible risks to our planet if we continue to ignore science. We have seen the increase in climate-fuelled extreme events, and the damage that is left behind – lives lost and livelihoods ruined. The question at this point is not whether we can altogether avoid the crisis – it is whether we can avoid the worst consequences.”
The report says:
Everywhere is affected, with no inhabited region escaping dire impacts from rising temperatures and increasingly extreme weather.
About half the global population – between 3.3 billion and 3.6 billion people – live in areas “highly vulnerable” to climate change.
Millions of people face food and water shortages owing to climate change, even at current levels of heating.
Mass die-offs of species, from trees to corals, are already under way.
1.5C above pre-industrial levels constitutes a “critical level” beyond which the impacts of the climate crisis accelerate strongly and some become irreversible.
Coastal areas around the globe, and small, low-lying islands, face inundation at temperature rises of more than 1.5C.
Key ecosystems are losing their ability to absorb carbon dioxide, turning them from carbon sinks to carbon sources.
Some countries have agreed to conserve 30% of the Earth’s land, but conserving half may be necessary to restore the ability of natural ecosystems to cope with the damage wreaked on them.
Chance to avoid the worst
This is the second part of the IPCC’s latest assessment report, an updated, comprehensive review of global knowledge of the climate, which has been seven years in the making and draws on the peer-reviewed work of thousands of scientists. The assessment report is the sixth since the IPCC was first convened by the UN in 1988, and may be the last to be published while there is still some chance of avoiding the worst.
A first instalment, by the IPCC’s working group 1, published last August, on the physical science of climate change, said the climate crisis was “unequivocally” caused by human actions, resulting in changes that were “unprecedented”, with some becoming “irreversible”.
This second part, by working group 2, deals with the impacts of climate breakdown, sets out areas where the world is most vulnerable, and details how we can try to adapt and protect against some of the impacts. A third section, due in April, will cover ways to cut greenhouse gas emissions, and the final part, in October, will summarise these lessons for governments meeting in Egypt for the UN Cop27 climate summit.
‘Cataclysmic’ for small islands
Small islands will be among those worst affected. Walton Webson, an ambassador of Antigua and Barbuda and the chair of the Alliance of Small Island States, called the findings “cataclysmic”.
He urged the UN to convene a special session to consider action. “We are continuing to head for a precipice – we say our eyes are open to the risks, but when you look at global emissions, if anything we are accelerating towards the cliff edge. We are not seeing the action from the big emitters that is required to get emissions down in this critical decade – this means halving emissions by 2030 at the latest. It is clear that time is slipping away from us.”
Governments in other parts of the world could help their people to adapt to some of the impacts of the climate crisis, the report says, by building flood defences, helping farmers to grow different crops, or building more resilient infrastructure. But the authors say the capacity of the world to adapt to the impacts will diminish rapidly the further temperatures rise, quickly reaching “hard” limits beyond which adaptation would be impossible.
‘Global dominoes’
The climate crisis also has the power to worsen problems such as hunger, ill-health and poverty, the report makes clear. Dave Reay, the director of Edinburgh Climate Change Institute at the University of Edinburgh, said: “Like taking a wrecking ball to a set of global dominoes, climate change in the 21st century threatens to destroy the foundations of food and water security, smash onwards through the fragile structures of human and ecosystem health, and ultimately shake the very pillars of human civilisation.”
What is the IPCC climate change report – and what does it say?
The report plays down fears of conflicts arising from the climate crisis, finding that “displacement” and “involuntary migration” of people would ensue but that “non-climatic factors are the dominant drivers of existing intrastate violent conflicts”.
But Jeffrey Kargel, a senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in the US, said: “The current warfare activity in eastern Europe, though not attributable to climate change, is a further caution about how human tensions and international relations and geopolitics could become inflamed as climate change impacts hit nations in ways that they are ill-prepared to handle.”
- Res Ipsa
- God
- Posts: 10636
- Joined: Mon Oct 26, 2020 6:44 pm
- Location: Playing Rabbits
Re: Meanwhile ... the planet is going down the toilet fast
Atlanticmike wrote: ↑Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:23 amI don’t know how old you are but here’s what’s going to happen in 50 years. The worlds going to be perfectly fine, infact, it’s going to be cleaner and greener than today. Your doomsday bullsxxt is going to fade away and people are going to realize you guys, the climate super heroes were a bunch of kooks that were scared shitlxxs of their own shadow. That’s exactly what’s going to happen!!! And I’m going to be in my mid nineties in 50 years, surfing in the exact same spot I’ve been surfing for the past 35 years!! The exact same spot!
he/him
we all just have to live through it,
holding each other’s hands.
— Alison Luterman
we all just have to live through it,
holding each other’s hands.
— Alison Luterman