US Secretary of State Calls Climate Change 'Weapon of Mass Destruction' 401
Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Arshad Mohammed reports on Reuters from Jakarta that US Secretary of State John Kerry warned Indonesians that man-made climate change could threaten their entire way of life, deriding those who doubted the existence of 'perhaps the world's most fearsome weapon of mass destruction' and describing those who do not accept that human activity causes global warming as 'shoddy scientists' and 'extreme ideologues'. 'Because of climate change, it's no secret that today Indonesia is ... one of the most vulnerable countries on Earth. It's not an exaggeration to say that the entire way of life that you live and love is at risk,' said Kerry. 'In a sense, climate change can now be considered another weapon of mass destruction, perhaps even the world's most fearsome weapon of mass destruction.' In Beijing on Friday, Kerry announced that China and the United States had agreed to intensify information-sharing and policy discussions on their plans to limit greenhouse gas emissions after 2020. At home, Kerry faces a politically tricky decision on whether to allow the Keystone XL pipeline after a State Department report played down the impact the Keystone pipeline would have on climate change. However Kerry showed little patience for skeptics in his speech. 'We just don't have time to let a few loud interest groups hijack the climate conversation,' said Kerry. 'I'm talking about big companies that like it the way it is, that don't want to change, and spend a lot of money to keep you and me and everybody from doing what we know we need to do.'"
Bah, fake posturing. (Score:5, Interesting)
As a michigan resident I discovered this year that the Democrats have no interest in saving the environment. they wont even shut off the chicago river to keep the damn china carp from infesting the great lakes. Obama himself refuses to let the scientists and the Civil engineers shut it off. by the time they stop their stupid posturing it will be too late.
"by 2020" is too late, way too late to begin to start to talk about things. they need to be talking now not at a date set so that none of the current leaders have to bother with it.
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The US has no interest in saving the environment. Neither is (really) any of the other first world nations. Like Europe, the US will not get the worst of climate change, and in any case, there is no place better prepared to deal with the consequences.
It is however a real problem for almost all other countries. I guess Kerry's message is really "Friendly warning guys: you better care about the environment, because we don't give a fuck and you will get the sharp end of the stick."
Re:Bah, fake posturing. (Score:5, Interesting)
And make no mistake, change is coming. The USA, Germany and China are leading the way in creating alternative sources of energy. The Germans and northern Europeans in particular are figuring out the engineering problems of using renewables on the grid. And the price of renewables is decreasing exponentially. Wind is now cheaper than every fossil fuel save gas, and will be cheaper than gas in five or so years. Solar is a little behind, but exponential is exponential.
Sure there are problems left to solve, but don't let anyone fool you into thinking that nobody cares. In fact, some of the smartest engineers and scientists in the world are figuring this out, and there is plenty of government and industry money to do "right" by the next generation.
If there's one major problem, its that the issue is a political football, but in the end, the smart money will move on, and the fluff heads will be left with wild conspiracy theories about how coal/oil was better all along, and a bunch of communists destroyed a perfectly good industry.
Re:Bah, fake posturing. (Score:5)
The Germans and northern Europeans in particular are figuring out the engineering problems of using renewables on the grid.
Use nuclear. Problem solved.
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And I guess you have a clear and viable plan on what to to with the waste?
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Waste isn't the issue, it's the cost. Look at the problems the UK has had with trying to get a new nuclear plant built. Unless you're willing to let the handful of companies with the expertise to build a safe modern nuclear plant rip you the fuck off then you can't have one.
The British government had to agree to let them double the already insanely high energy price per kilowatt in the UK to get a part Chinese bid to agree to build the plant after all the other bidders such as France's EDF dropped out. So f
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You'll have to excuse the great unwashed masses (sometime called "the middle class") for being a bit skeptical after being told by our Dear Leader that with a cap and trade system, electricity prices would "necessarily skyrocket". Every cost for the transition from coal and oil is being dropped on the (former) middle class in every scenario.
Let's try doing the hard thing, putting the greatest minds to work figuring out how to do this without violating the civil rights of the people, instead of coming up wi
Re:Bah, fake posturing. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Just curious, is that cheaper with subsidies, or without subsidies?
Where I live solar is easily worth it after the 80% subsidies by the Federal and State governments. Not so much if you have to pay full price....
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And the price of renewables is decreasing exponentially.
I don't think you know what "exponential" means.
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They're already there. You have no point.
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Re:Your backyard (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Your backyard (Score:4, Informative)
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No one is proposing hamstringing human civilization that I can see. We're talking about moving into the 21st century by shifting to energy production that is based on sources that will last far longer than fossil fuels will last. By reducing the amount of warming and ocean acidification, we're helping ensure future economic prosperity. I suppose change is just scary to some people.
The ongoing holocene extinction event (of which climate change is a part) is one of the few changes that scares the shit out of me. Strangely enough it seems to be the only change that does not scare the crap out of conservatives.
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Here you go:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
See also: sulfur dioxide cap-and-trade - again, successful, with no industries killed.
Re:Your backyard (Score:5, Interesting)
[Carp] should be a more important priority for the US than hamstringing human civilization in the name of global warming
There are sound reasons why AGW is high on the Pentagon's threat list [slashdot.org]
, where as carp are not even listed, despite the political will of a number of anti-carp politicians. Sure there's politics behind the wording and positioning of threats on the pentagons list too, but that doesn't mean AGW not a serious threat to all modern civilization(s) in the form of mass migrations, water wars, global crop failures, collapse of fisheries due to coral beaching, etc, etc
A current example: If you get your news from the mass media (particularly the US branch), you can be forgiven for not noticing that the Syrian civil war was triggered by internal mass migrations. In 2009-2011, 2M people in a country of 20M abandon their farms and headed to the cites putting strain of infrastructure and employment. The cause was not some madman dictator's attempt at social engineering, nor had people suddenly work out said dictator was mad because face book had arrived. It was triggered by the worst drought ever recorded in the "fertile crescent" (historical records span several millennia in Syria since this is the same region humans invented agriculture). A US diplomat stationed in Syria at the time went so far in his warnings as to correctly predict the city where the war would start (source: Snowden cables). It's no coincidence that many of the nations who experienced "the Arab spring" had previously been experiencing high food prices and in some major cities, large food riots. The mass media story was "Facebook done it".
As to hamstrings - Did building the hoover dam "hamstring the US". If not, then why do you think this [youtube.com] will "hamstring the US".
Every coal plant on the planet was built and sometimes re-built within my 54yr lifetime, and they will all need to be re-built in the next 50yrs. Replacing them with modern renewable plants (be they rooftop or centralised) in a similar timeframe is a no-brainer as far as the environment and public health are concerned. If not for the novelty of the "renewables" most people wouldn't really notice the transition (same as I didn't really notice them building all those power plant until the early 90's) . The people with billions invested in coal mines have seen the writing on the wall and are running the same good old fashioned anti-science propaganda techniques that the gas light companies used on Edison and Edison in turn used on Telsa. That very human behaviour is not going away any day soon.
The other side of that human behaviour is that every adult on the planet (including me) is granted to fall for propaganda, education helps, particularly in the philosophies of Science and Epistemology but as we've seen with AGW, a good education and above average intelligence do not add up to a bullshit proof suit
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The Hoover Dam [wikipedia.org] cost $824 million in 2013 dollars to build and averages 4,200,000 mWhs of electricity per year.
The Ivanpah Solar Plant [wikipedia.org] cost $2,200 million and may generate 493,110 mWhs of electricity per year.
So, this plant cost nearly three times as much in constant dollars while generating one tenth as much energy. To get to Hoover Dam scales, we need to build another 29 Ivanpahs at a cost of $63.8 billion dollars. Which gives us one more Hoover Dam worth of energy, which is 1/1000th of total US energy use
Re:Your backyard (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re: Your backyard (Score:5, Informative)
So, Kerry was implying federal intervention in international affairs.
The original poster was saying the Feds wouldn't intervene in a situation involving purely national affairs.
It sounds to me like they have a solution that involves restricting the river technologically, but the Democrats don't like technological solutions, they prefer regulatory solutions and taxes.
The real question is: how do they taste? (Score:2)
If we can depopulate the Georges Bank of Atlantic cod, a fish of questionable deliciousness, we can depopulate a few narrow rivers any fish that is even remotely tasty.
The problem with many environmentalists isn't so much that they are identifying problems that we all wish weren't, but that they often propose outrageous and ineffective remedies, sometimes to the point of opposing real solutions in favor of their half-baked fantasy plans.
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If they were fit to eat they wouldn't be a problem.
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* If we all do just the small things, it adds up to the big things i guess is what I am trying to say
solutions that dont involve everyone living in huts.
Not a Weapon (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not a weapon if it cannot be wielded. If it is just lashing about indiscriminately then it's not a weapon.
Re:Not a Weapon (Score:4, Funny)
USA Liable for AGW Costs? (Score:4, Funny)
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Not at all. Up to the threshold of dangerous climate change, there is no blame. But, now, China is pushing us past that threshold. It is countries with growing emissions that must be forced to pay reparations for climate change induced damage.
And at the same time we can stunt their economic growth and the US and Europe can maintain their dominant economic positions! Win win! Well, except for the fact that the developed world likes the cheap goods from the developing world, and those would get more expensive as well.
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Without binding targets, there's nothing to prosecute, in any case.
Take Copenhagen. The political elite got together in 2009, gave lots of lovely speeches but ultimately sat on their hands and achieved nothing.
My own government, for example, committed to 25% reductions of 1990 levels only if the rest of the world did something - so that was whittled down to a 5% target. A measly 5% ??? - get serious...
WMD is an overused term (Score:2)
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WMC is an underused term (Score:2)
His improvised kitchen device should have been termed a weapon of mass carnage. Note how the official term focuses more on loss of structure than on human life.
Why the present example jumps the shark is that while global warming might be a supreme menace, it has not yet to my knowledge been successfully weaponized.
In this case, we're really dealing with an Apocalyptic Horseman of Mass Resettlement, if th
Is it really a weapon (Score:2)
Indonesia is a country largely populated by members of a certain religion. Some members of that religion want to kill us. Maybe this is strategic...
George W. Bush: "My boys at the oil and coal companies will give you the best kind of start, and you sure as hell won't stop them now. So let's get going, there's no other choice. God willing, we will prevail, in peace and freedom from fear, and in true health, through the purity and essence of our natural... fluids. God bless you all."
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To be fair to GP, it can be kind of hard to tell, some days.
Alright already (Score:2)
So global warming is real, scientists agree.
What to do about it? Please show me the scientific and engineering studies that prove a particular course of action is appropriate. I am tired of the knee-jerk reaction that blithely assumes reducing carbon emissions is the way to go. There are many possible alternatives, including doing nothing at all. A proper cost/benefit analysis is needed, before we decide to forcibly relocate everyone back to caves.
Re:Alright already (Score:5, Insightful)
Alright, so driving at 120 MPH on the highway increases our chance of accidents, scientists agree.
What to do about it? Please show me the scientific and engineering studies that prove that a particular course of action is appropriate. I am tired of the knee-jerk reaction that blithely assumes reducing velocity is the way to go. There are many possible alternatives, including doing nothing at all. A proper cost/benefit analysis is needed, before we decide to make everyone walk everywhere.
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Actually, 30 MPH is dangerous enough. What is your point?
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My problem with this is that only a single option for global warming mitigation is considered - reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
The fact that there might be other alternatives completely escapes those who prefer to argue about who is going to pay for the option which has been reflexively selected.
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But that's just it. If climate change brings about a global rise in sea levels then some people, like those in Indonesia, would just love to have a cave because at least it's drier than the ocean they'll have been relocated back to.
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Re: Alright already (Score:2)
Great. But those energy sources can't meet the demand yet, and the only zero emissions energy source that will work right now is vetoed by the environmentalists every time it's mentioned.
Do they want to really solve this problem or not?
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Reducing carbon dioxide emissions...
Is that the only idea you have? No wonder the sky is falling.
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That's the comedic joke. There are no real options.
The only one I can see really having any effect is a mass deployment of existing nuclear technologies, focusing the entire resources of the western world on solving the fusion problem, and a massive research project to develop super-capacitor or other high density electrical energy storage technology.
People can shout about other alternatives, wind, solar, whatever, but none of the people shouting have training in thermodynamics. I've crunched the numbers fo
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The cost is immaterial if the benefit is making sure coastal cities aren't completely or partially submerged, wouldn't you say? I mean, relocating people in North America away from the coasts runs a monetary cost that is just incredible to contemplate.
Then you've got weird weather effects coming. Places that get too little rain to grow crops, or too much. Or just really unpredictable weather, so setting up agriculture is just extra difficult. That's going to cost money.
Even things like tourism suddenly take
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There is a country called the Netherlands, largely below sea level. They seem to be doing just fine.
Re:Alright already (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, and all the best designers for dams and canals are from there, it's true. What your startlingly naive comment doesn't take into consideration is that it's ALWAYS been there, and the cities that we've built on the coasts in the last 50 years HAVEN'T been underwater. This is a new thing. They weren't designed for it.
But sure, take the coastal cities of the world out of the equation. The costs are still enormous, and still real. Agriculture, storms, unpredictable weather, weather patterns shifting substantially (snow where there wasn't snow previously, no snow where there used to be lots of snow), coral bleaching, ocean acidification, desertification...the list is really long. This is to say nothing of the stuff that we don't even know is coming; I suspect that we've failed to capture the entirety of the problem. The things that we ALREADY know about will cost a shit-tonne of money. The stuff that we DON'T know about are going to be even worse because it'll be impossible to prepare for them in any way.
Cost-benefit analyses really start to fall apart at this point.
The thing is, there are lots of little things that we can do, individually and societally, that don't cost much but slowly make a big difference. They've started adding sails to really big cargo ships. It's free energy. It helps. I walk to work, drive my car very little, and try to be good about my own personal energy usage. I use less energy now than I have ever before in my life. It wasn't a step down in my quality of life in the least. I live close enough to home that I can walk home for lunch now. I have fewer, nicer things.
Collapsing economies and cave-dwelling are a line that we've been sold by interests that have a stake in us not changing. I provide less revenue for oil companies than I used to. Because I pay a little more for better things, I don't dispose of things as often. As a consumer, I'm much less lucrative than I was 10 years ago.
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The solution with the least impact on our standard of living, which is also within our means to achieve is : Electric cars and electric heating sources, while investing in low or no-carbon emission sources of energy such as solar, wind, fission and fusion
Some citations to back this up, please?
Short of massive engineering projects to reflect heat back into space, condense carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and store it underground, or some other ridiculous proposal, the reduction of burning fossil fuels is the most practical and brings other benefits (except for oil producers).
The lack of original ideas is very troubling. Let's see some out-of-box, creative thinking.
Gah... (Score:3, Informative)
Now it's just a matter of time before we start arresting people for starting bonfires or driving to work. Gas guzzler, hybrid, or all electric you'll all be terrorists wielding WMDs!
Use of a WMD (Score:2)
I suspect this means that the US will soon wield a nuclear or biological weapon of mass destruction, and there will be five or six decades of research and 'debate' before it's even acknowledged, must less any responsibility is assigned or measures taken to undo the damage.
IOf they don't work for the people, then they are (Score:2)
.... fired. Read the Declaration of Independence and know we have very little legitimate government left, as teh rest have been fired via Declaration of Independence. But for reasons that can only be thuggary, they are still taking money from the people, and to do what? Preform criminal acts.
They don't work for the people.... they need to be removed and charged with impersonating government and charged also with theft.
Global Warming != Human Caused Global Warming (Score:2)
Everybody can agree the climate is changing, in a warming trend. However, the breakdown in logic is the immediate correlation that it must be human caused. The fact of the matter is the world's climate changes all the time, in massive geological cycles.
We must be good stewards of our planet, this is also undeniable.
The problem I have with "Global Warming" fanatics, is they have flawed logic (human caused) an then go into bizarre, egregious means to deal with it like carbon credits, and whatnot. The fact
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Re:Global Warming != Human Caused Global Warming (Score:5, Insightful)
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Regardless of whether you believe climate change is caused by man's activities, it is undeniable that man has pumped a lot of CO2 into the atmosphere. The direct result of this, also not contested, is that the oceans are acidifying. The result of that is lost of species at the base of the food chain. You do recall the food chain, yes? And that fucking it up at its base would result in fucking it up all the way up the chain, hence the term, food chain.
War on factories - aw yeah (Score:2)
"We have investigated US and allied European factories and found that they constituted weapons of mass desctruction posing a threat the security and safety of the world.
"We have declared war on these rogue factories, drones will be sent to all related company towns, and blackops have been deployed to known CEOs mountain hideaways in the Alps."
...one mused.
So today's mantra (Score:2)
"Give me my $1 billion slush fund"
Full-court press at 11.
child porn too! (Score:2, Funny)
It's not just a WMD, global warming causes child porn too, because... think of the children! We must give trillions to our cronies in industry in order to combat this menace!
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No drugs or terrorism? I'm shocked, your propaganda is lacking, please report to the Minitruth for completion of your information level.
weather control makes for B movies just need a rea (Score:2)
weather control makes for B movies just need a real weather man (not jim cantore) how much will it cost to get tom skilling (can even work his brother into the plot line)
translation (Score:2)
Translation: "We prefer our own interest groups, the ones who got us elected! We need to pay them off with trillions of dollars of tax payer money."
Mr. Kerry, you have no credible plan to stop climate change. The reductions you propose are laughable and utterly inadequate. If you proposed effective reductions, you'd face a rebellion from voters. Your a
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So, an American administration is totally responsible for the American economy. Last we heard, the business cycle mattered. And the vaunted American people fucked themselves with buying houses they couldn't afford, flipping houses, taking equity out of their houses to gamble on the stock markets and whatever else what shiny. The Bush administration was complicit, as was Wall Street, as was the insurance industry, as were the builders, and the realtors, and the local zoning officials.
In the mean time, indust
Re: translation (Score:2)
They volunteered for the damn job by running for office! You're damn right it's their problem to solve.
Five years ago Obama told us that when we elected him, he would solve these problems.
The fact that we're calling him out on the shit job he is doing is not Bush's fault.
Sure the problems are hard to solve, but Obama was sold to is as a messiah. He has proven unable to live up to that billing.
Maybe if the US stopped using fraudulent data (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Maybe if the US stopped using fraudulent data (Score:4, Insightful)
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If the data to support AGW is so overwhelming there would be no need to cook the books.
BTW, we are experiencing the Third Coldest Winter On Record So Far In The US [wordpress.com]
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Yes we ARE experiencing the third coldest winter on record so far in the US. It's almost like global weather patterns are shifting... Weird... Perhaps it's due to the Jet Stream getting all weird, due to a rise in temperature.
It's people like you that necessitated moving from "global warming" to "climate change", because you don't seem to understand that warming causes changes.
I live in the Pacific Northwest. Global Warming doesn't mean I magically get awesome summers. It doesn't mean the end of rain. I
If.... (Score:2)
If climate change is now a weapon of mass destruction and the US and the West are the predominate causes of it, does that mean they are guilty of war crimes (related to the WMDs)?
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No. Why? We've had WMDs for ages and everyone knows it, but it ain't a war crime.
It's only a crime if you want some to defend against being browbeat into submission.
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No. Why? We've had WMDs for ages and everyone knows it, but it ain't a war crime.
It's only a crime if you want some to defend against being browbeat into submission.
I was actually being sarcastic, but the reasoning goes: If climate change is happening and if climate change is a WMD, then whoever released that WMD is responsible. People have been charged with war crimes, or at least terrorism if it isn't a declared war, for releasing WMDs on a much smaller scale than climate change.
For the US leadership to call climate change a WMD is ironic, since most fingers point back the US and its policies as a major cause of climate change.
Umm... (Score:2)
So any research in climate change is now grounds to be bombed back into stone age by the US?
And now it starts. (Score:2)
No longer content with foisting off blame and fear on terror groups, politicians, in the search for more money, begin converting climate science into the next big terror threat.
*Facepalm*
Kerry is not really qualified to have an opinion (Score:2)
Can we please block Hugh Pickens? (Score:2)
WTF, man. Hugh Pickens dot COM is the troll of flamebaiters. Everything subject is highly polarizing while simultaneously being largely irrelevant. Enough already.
It took them long enough.... but... (Score:2)
... I waiting for it to be blamed on Iraq....
Mousetraps and ping-pong balls (Score:3)
And you thought that I was going to say something vulgar and metaphorical about Mr. Kerry....
No, I'm reminded of the atomic-pile simulation that used to be taught to kids. You remember, the one where there is a big floor filled with set mousetraps. And each trap has two ping-pong balls ~gently~ placed on the spring. A single ball is tossed in, and ~zap!~ a trap goes off, more balls are released, more traps go off, a few here and there, and then the big crescendo... balls flying everywhere.
Climate change is like that. We are just seeing the beginning now. It's small enough that stupid people can convince themselves that it's not happening. But as the Siberian tundra melts, and the 100,000,000 year old methane stored there gets released, and the polar ice caps melt, and the changing salinity alters the north-south oceanic current flows, and the mean temperature of the tropic regions rises to 140 degrees F for an average day.... well, balls flying everywhere.
A billion dollars here and there tossed at a global problem of this magnitude of problem is nothing. A billion dollars is about the size of the heavy-metal music industry, a heaping spoonful of the toilet paper industry, and most of the "Hello Kitty" trinket industry.
National Geographic recently published a series of maps of what the Earth would look like in 100 or so years from now when the ice caps have melted. Indonesia was gone. John Kerry is just giving them a 'head's up" warning.
NG also missed out on the fact that most of the earth except for the polar regions will be bright yellow instead of green. Yellow as in areas where nothing will grow and nothing will live. You probable live in one of these regions now. Best to spend the next decade ignoring the bozospeak coming from corporate and governmental entities. Instead find a place on those maps that presently has temperate weather, internet access, indoor plumbing, and civilized people.
Move there; move your family there. And as the decades go by and all the billions of doomed people start to realize that they deserve to be in that place instead of you, well, prepare yourself to have to deal with them like they are all one big surplus giraffe.
Gnome Sane?
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Only if you're polluting more than your fair share, comrade.
Nah, mate... I'm not polluting [stdpioneer.org] even my share.
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Re:Shit... (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess I am if I throw another log in the wood stove today...
Burning a log is just part of the normal carbon cycle. You do know that the CO2 in the log returns to the atmosphere anyway, right? Maybe it would take 10 years instead of 5 minutes; however, the CO2 remains out of the carbon cycle only if you bury the wood underground.
The whole point is that CO2 was sequestered out of the atmosphere over billions of years, and stored underground in oil and coal. Now we're dredging that up and returning it to the atmosphere.
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Re:Shit... (Score:5, Informative)
Then why is it that the EPA is regulating carbon dioxide emissions for wood burning stoves and furnaces [regulations.gov]?
There's nothing about CO2 in there. Those regulations are about dirty and poisonous emissions. Carbon monoxide and particulate emissions; black smoke. Nothing to do with global warming. All about keeping the air breathable in densely populated areas.
An ideal wood burner would emit just water and CO2.
Wood burners can be made very efficient nowadays; by channelling the air flow in clever ways, you can get more complete combustion meaning more heat, cleaner emissions and less ash. These regulations just make sure that the wood burners you'll be able to buy do that.
Re:Given the mass extinctions... (Score:4, Informative)
As an island nation, most Indonesians live within a few miles of a coast. A typhoon's impact ends within a few miles of a coast. Imagine a hurricane Sandy type event striking half the population centers of the country, not just one or two cities.
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It's not comparable. The effects of climate change advance slowly. Sure, every year more people might be exposed to storms but it takes decades for an area to become uninhabitable. It's enormously expensive and whole countries can be whittled away. Or in US terms, large portions of some states.
Re:Given the mass extinctions... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, they're slow, but the effects can locally be violent as change happens. Warming of the ocean's waters could add energy to storms, or increase their frequency. I'm not saying Manila will be underwater next year due to the rising oceans, only that climate change increases the chances that it will be hit hard by a typhoon.
But as someone else pointed out below, if it can't be wielded, it's not a weapon. It could have the same destructive effects as a weapon, but it's not a weapon.
Re:Given the mass extinctions... (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because it can't be wielded doesn't mean it can't be used as a tool of warfare.
More likely, climate change will be the cause of warfare, not a weapon thereof.
Re:Ahh Kerry... (Score:5, Informative)
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The sad thing is that we know it isn't that special. There isn't a rare mentality that goes with that "credulous about attacks on those I disagree with". At worst it's slightly more pronounced on the political right-wing(though it's very very pronounced among those that hit "high-RWA" characteristics).
Re:Ahh Kerry... (Score:4, Insightful)
Sounds like you are falling for an obvious diversionary tactic. [slashdot.org] Kerry is in Indonesia. Indonesians are pissed at the USA for spying on them. Kerry decides to talk about climate change and lobs around hyperbola like "weapon of mass destructions threating your way of life!!11ONE!!!1"
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Mike Hunt?
You missing Amanda Jamitinya badly, aren't ya?
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Manmade global warming is a hoax! (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:We wouldn't have this problem... (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Why were the hippies the only ones that were capable of seeing what a threat there is?
2) Why are people in need of convincing? There's a lot of very convincing science (done by non-hippies) available.
3) How did they hijack it, exactly? Are you the kind of person that accuses others of being 'fake geeks' or 'fake gamers'?
We wouldn't have this problem if people and government were less interested in short-term profit than long-term health. Don't pin it on a small segment of a smaller sub-culture.
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Please don't start a war on global warming. If the various "wars on..." taught us anything, it's that it only sped up its growth when we started fighting it.