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Earth

Era of Global Boiling Has Arrived, UN Chief Says (theguardian.com) 453

The era of global warming has ended and "the era of global boiling has arrived," the UN secretary general, Antonio Guterres, has said after scientists confirmed July was on track to be the world's hottest month on record. From a report: "Climate change is here. It is terrifying. And it is just the beginning," Guterres said. "It is still possible to limit global temperature rise to 1.5C [above pre-industrial levels], and avoid the very worst of climate change. But only with dramatic, immediate climate action." Guterres's comments came after scientists confirmed on Thursday that the past three weeks have been the hottest since records began and July is on track to be the hottest month ever recorded.

Global temperatures this month have shattered records, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the EU's Copernicus Earth observation programme, stoked by the burning of fossil fuels and spurring violent weather. The steady rise in global average temperatures, driven by pollution that traps sunlight and acts like a greenhouse around the Earth, has made weather extremes worse. "Humanity is in the hot seat," Guterres told a press conference on Thursday. "For vast parts of North America, Asia, Africa and Europe, it is a cruel summer. For the entire planet, it is a disaster. And for scientists, it is unequivocal -- humans are to blame. All this is entirely consistent with predictions and repeated warnings. The only surprise is the speed of the change. Climate change is here, it is terrifying, and it is just the beginning. The era of global warming has ended; the era of global boiling has arrived."

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Era of Global Boiling Has Arrived, UN Chief Says

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  • by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:25AM (#63718262)

    Nobody will do anything, as usual. You know who to thank for the oncoming climate catastrophe your parents and grandparents in the "developed world". It was nice while it lasted. See you on the other side.

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:50AM (#63718328) Homepage
      To the contrary, people are doing things. You may question whether it's enough, but yes, there are people working on new energy technologies, and on shifting the energy technology we now use to other technologies that we have that burn less carbon.

      It won't be changed overnight, but people are working on the change.

      • by akw0088 ( 7073305 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:53AM (#63718336)
        Technology saving us is a fantasy
        • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:13AM (#63718392) Homepage Journal

          Technology saving us *alone* is a fantasy. You need the will to develop and use it. If we simply *internalized* the external cost of pollution, market forces would throttle greenhouse gas emissions faster than any regulation anyone would dream of proposing. But somehow sitting passively letting the unintended consequences of our actions transform the world around us is seen as more conservative than recognizing we have a problem and taking steps to moderate our behavior.

          The phrase 'Someone ought to do something' was not, by itself, a helpful one. People who used it never added the rider 'and that someone is me'.”
            Terry Pratchett

          • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @12:04PM (#63718604)

            Carbon credits was just a way to pretend to care about the costs but it was quickly gamed into a way to do nothing about the problem while pretending to be green. When there are profits to be made, morality goes out the window.

            • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @02:36PM (#63719180) Homepage

              Which really sucks because I went out of my way years ago to select a power provider that provided wind power. They got replaced with a company that sells credits, which is not the same thing. There are people who are willing to vote with their dollars, but there's no honest way to do it since the carbon credits system is too much of a sham.

              • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @03:07PM (#63719266)

                Green power providers are also a sham. If you pay more to get wind-only power, it usually means someone else (paying the basic price) will see his share of renewable power reduce from say, 15% to 5%.

                Anyways the solution is to ensure everyone pays for his own pollution. You emit twice as much CO2 as your neighbor? Then you should pay twice as much in carbon tax.

                You then let the market decide whether it's still worth it to drive that pick up truck just because once a year you purchase big furniture from Costco.

                • by ScienceBard ( 4995157 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @07:35PM (#63719974)

                  Carbon taxes (which I favor) are the simplest and fastest way to implement lower carbon behaviors on paper, but the mechanics of them are very unpalatable not just to global warming denying conservatives but also progressives. Which is why they don't go anywhere politically.

                  How can that be? Because fundamentally those externalized co2 costs manifest as cheaper energy prices. A tax on carbon is basically a tax on energy, and that falls disproportionately on poor and urban people. The wealthy can invest in efficiency measures, and since things like food and shelter make up much smaller percentages of their budgets the impact of a carbon tax is much less. The poor spend most of what they make on food, shelter, and transport for work... all of which get a sizable increase in cost from an energy tax. Also the increased cost of energy in grneral means increased cost of production of goods, which stands to cause job losses that hit the working poor hardest.

                  Now there are certainly ways to try and work around this by giving rebates, etc., but all of that undermines the initial goal of simplicity and low overhead that are the major advantages of a carbon tax. Those workarounds also run counter to the very behaviors you're trying to incentivize with the tax. There's a good argument to be made that in the end you're better off just increasing taxes generally and spending the extra tax revenue to explicitly fund lower carbon energy production.

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          It's the only thing that's ever saved us. Pretty good fantasy.

        • by irving47 ( 73147 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:52AM (#63718540) Homepage

          Ever heard of acid rain? Have you heard about it in any doomsday scenario since the late 80's?

          Scrubbers in smokestacks are a "technology" guess what they do.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            Scrubbers in smokestacks are a "technology" guess what they do.

            And how many operators saw the technology and decided to install it at their own expense out of the goodness of their hearts?

            Pollution causing corrosion was known about in the 1600s. Acid rain specifically was known about in the 1850s. The problems were studied heavily in the 1960s. It then took a lot of publicity to drive a legislative effort to force polluters to use scrubbers decades later.

            So, in other words, technology alone won't fix it.

            • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @03:33PM (#63719322)
              No. It was not publicity. It was basically every major industry watching their infrastructure corrode right in front of their very eyes, because of the acid rain. The big players were watching 10s of trillions of dollars of infrastructure crumble, so all they had to do was wink and get out of the way of the politicians, and governments put in place the laws to control acid rain.

              Slashdot isn’t much for old-school mechanical and industrial engineering. We build a lot of things out of steel. LOTS AND LOTS of things. Most buildings, every major industrial facility, every factory, large medium and small, pipelines, signs, towers, the list goes on and on and. And steel is very susceptible to acid attack. Paint helps a lot, but paint isn’t totally impervious and it wears away. Corrosion is a MULTI TRILLION DOLLAR problem every year, and acid rain was making it an order of magnitude worse. I’m not exaggerating when I say that hundreds of trillions of dollars worth of infrastructure was facing rapid dissolution. And when I say “dissolution” I mean that it was literally dissolving.

              We aren’t gonna address climate change until we reach a similar level of urgency. The worlds power players need to look at the physical stuff within their borders and say “wow, if we don’t address this, we’re gonna lose hundreds of trillions of dollars worth of capital and people”. Note that I put capital first and people second. Yes, I’m getting old and cynical.

              We’re clearly not there yet when it comes to climate change. It’s going to get VERY bad before we address it.
        • But technology created the problem. So say that technology can't save us is the same as saying there is no solution and we may as well just speed up our doom without trying to save ourselves.

          Agreed though that magical tech solutions probably aren't going to solve all of it, you need people to understand that there is a crisis and that lifestyles need to change.

    • by smap77 ( 1022907 )

      You could personally stop burning fossil fuels?

      Then your neighbor could. Then their neighbor...

      Think of the possibilities.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Chiasmus_ ( 171285 )

        Whatever device you posted this from, I can assure you that its manufacture was not carbon-neutral. Nor was the process of shipping it to you.

      • by LordofWinterfell ( 90845 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:59AM (#63718564)

        The neighbor driving a 2000-era dodge caravan because thatâ(TM)s all they can afford, working full timeâ¦they donâ(TM)t have the means to âoejust stop burningâ. In Washington, we jumped the carbon taxes to reduce gas usage, except it hurts mostly the people who canâ(TM)t afford the next step, and still need reliable transportation to survive.

        • If they are driving a 23 year old vehicle then they are doing their part in a different way. Getting a new car every 5 years is wasteful and unnecessary. Better to keep a car and repair it. Sure, it's going to be inefficient compared to a new model, but the act of creating the car uses an immense amount of energy that's most certainly not carbon free. Even getting your energy from solar or wind still requires you first make the panels or turbines, which is burning more energy.

          At some point, sure a new car w

    • by Alypius ( 3606369 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:34AM (#63718462)

      Might help if the people who keep saying it's a crisis actually acted like it's a crisis.

      In the meantime, wtf is "global boiling"? I mean, besides some made up term used so that a) a UN bureaucrat can get his 15-seconds of fame and b) everyone can point and laugh at it and say that even these clowns don't take it seriously.

    • The problem has been around for decades, at least in the US. Here's a chart from the US EPA, a well-known Left-leaning agency of the US Federal Government. The same web page includes a link to a worldwide temperatures chart over the same time period, 1900 to NOW

      https://www.epa.gov/climate-in... [epa.gov]

    • Blame the marketing as well, they're the ones who convinced people to engage in consumerism, planned obscolescence, to use more and more energy, etc.

      Mostly it fell apart when this all become political. Way back when, conservatives and Republicans were big on conservation, they loved national parks, they hated littering, but then that got swapped around so that conservation was something only hippies cared about.

    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      Nobody will do anything, as usual. You know who to thank for the oncoming climate catastrophe your parents and grandparents in the "developed world". It was nice while it lasted. See you on the other side.

      I think you and I are in the same boat, if not same row. As soon as I saw that Indian crying on TV over the garbage I've tried to do my part. I still do. But at this point I'm getting older and the real climate catastrophes are not on the schedule to start till after I die. At this point I'm just going to do what I can to live a low foot print life. An if people do get their shit together and fix this, fuck'em.

      • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

        An if people do get their shit together and fix this, fuck'em.

        An if people don't get their shit together and fix this, fuck'em. preview damn it.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:37AM (#63718292)

    Let's face it, it's over. The few people who actually understand are few and far between, the rest gets blitzed by people and organizations that have far too much to lose if we actually started to try to keep the planet inhabitable, science gets discredited to ensure nobody listens, the religious nutjobs only add to this because not only is science pretty much killing their god off but living on the end-times is always a good way to squeeze the desperate for some money so these worthless spongers can have a comfy life on the back of their dupes, and the planet is going to shit.

    OK. I accept defeat. I'm 50. I have no kids. I'm on the way out. I just hope I live long enough to see the idiots that are now being duped into believing those bullshit peddlers suffer from it and see them cry for aid from government and science and all they get is a boot to the face and a "suck it, idiot, you wanted it, now die with it".

    • by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:42AM (#63718312)

      History suggests things will get really shitty and then the masses will demand the people who actually understand what's happening do something about it.

      Right now it's, "Your children will suffer in bad but vague ways unless you drop your standard of living significantly" and almost nobody is on board with that option.

      Once it's, "You're going to suffer tomorrow, in really bad ways, but if we direct the suffering in a particular direction things should start to improve"... that's when people will get on board and demand action.

      Humans are really bad at trans-generational altruism.

      • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:54AM (#63718344) Journal
        We shouldn't have opened with the "have to drop your standard of living" option. Unfortunately a great many people saw climate change as a platform to push societal change in one form or another, and more conservative people naturally balked at that. If instead we started with the energy transition, moving away from fossil fuels any which way we could, we might have gotten people onboard with that, and we'd be in a hell of a lot better shape today. But especially at the start of widespread climate change awareness, many of the more vocal activists actually advocated the opposite: they did not want technical solutions, since that would (possibly) have allowed us to largely retain our way of life, and they didn't want that. The result is that progressives and conservatives have become massively divided over the climate change issue.
        • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @01:01PM (#63718860) Homepage Journal

          We shouldn't have opened with the "have to drop your standard of living" option. Unfortunately a great many people saw climate change as a platform to push societal change in one form or another, and more conservative people naturally balked at that. If instead we started with the energy transition, moving away from fossil fuels any which way we could, we might have gotten people onboard with that, and we'd be in a hell of a lot better shape today. But especially at the start of widespread climate change awareness, many of the more vocal activists actually advocated the opposite: they did not want technical solutions, since that would (possibly) have allowed us to largely retain our way of life, and they didn't want that. The result is that progressives and conservatives have become massively divided over the climate change issue.

          DING*DING*DING.... We have a winner!!

          Yep...telling people that they have to basically give up modern life and conveniences, and make extreme new world order level societal changes is not the way to push a simple message of moving to cleaner energy, new tech that will Improve your live and quality of life...etc.

          • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @03:50PM (#63719372)
            It's just a matter of packaging. Conservatives will gladly go along with environmentalists to the extent that you want to preserve hunting or fishing grounds, etc. The problem has been duplicitous greens trying to shovel Marxism under a different guise that fools precisely no one. Ditch the communism and it's not hard to find common ground with Republican voters, particularly if you can find one to pitch it so they partisans can feel better about having suggested it themselves.
      • Selfishness is an instinct for us.
        Altruism is too, to some degree. We are pack animals after all, and things done that benefit the pack tend to have a reciprocal benefit to the self, so at least that level of altruism is in our make-up.

        But basic selfishness is older and more fundamental, and still provides benefits even in a pack context. We can lament this all day long, but these behavioral inclinations are much older than the strange environment we have created for ourselves, and they aren't going away

        • >Articles like this one attempt to use fear to spur action, but it's not working. That boy has cried "wolf" too long, nobody is listening.

          I don't buy that. Yes, there were some false starts involving selected and since retracted studies in the 1970's, but for the last thirty-five years at least they've been saying that we should use less fossil fuels. The only time that tone changed was when they said really, guys, we need to use less and fewer! with varying increases in intensity. Then they offered t
      • Once it's, "You're going to suffer tomorrow..."

        Sorry, I think you actually meant that to read "You're suffering now and will continue to suffer even worse..."

        Nobody will do anything today about what might happen tomorrow. But that's because they don't understand when someone says something might happen tomorrow, they're speaking from probabilities, and they don't understand that a scientist will never say something will happen tomorrow because probability is never 100%... They can only say might with a 99% percent possibility, and everyone focuses on th

      • by Alypius ( 3606369 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:37AM (#63718488)
        History also suggests that the elites will use it as a pretext to consolidate more power and wealth at the expense of the masses and then they'll get to relive the glory days of early 20th century Russia or mid-20th century China.
    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      No, it's not over.

      Global warming is a long term thing. It has bad effects, and the longer we take to address it the more the effects will be, but no, we're not making the planet uninhabitable any time soon.

      The solution will also be a long term thing. Typically infrastructure changes on a time scale of ~50 years.

      Change is slow.

  • Alarmist (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MBGMorden ( 803437 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:37AM (#63718294)

    "Global boiling" suggests that the temperature is rising to a point where the surface water (eg oceans) are boiling. That isn't the case, nor will it ever be the case due to AGW.

    The reality is most people are not going to care much about until its the more convenient, cheaper option to go green. EG, I love LED lightbulbs vs incandescent. They're truly a better technology. You want to replace internal combustion engines? We need cheaper electric cars. And if you want to get rid of coal plants quit NIMBY'ing nuclear energy.

    People are always going to act in a short sighted selfish manner. That's not even worth trying to change. What you have to do is improve technology so that the short sighted selfish choice IS the environmentally friendly one.

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )
      Yeah, that term "global boiling" is meaningless and stupid. It's just a UN bureaucrat; I don't even know why this is news.
    • "Global boiling" suggests that the temperature is rising to a point where the surface water (eg oceans) are boiling.

      Only to the pedantic literalist. Have you never said, "Good lord, it's boiling out"? There are uses for the word that don't revolve around 212F.

      "Global warming" was neither global, nor universally warming. The phrase is not a scientific term, nor was it intended to be. It's a useful shorthand. "Global boiling" evokes what the speaker intended - that we're entering a different time with escalated danger. I suppose they could have said, "Enhanced global warming"... but that carries no concern.

    • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:04AM (#63718366) Journal

      "Global boiling" suggests that the temperature is rising to a point where the surface water (eg oceans) are boiling.

      Perhaps he was listening to all the reports of 100+ degree temperatures in the US and did not realize that they don't use Centigrade? In Canada, we manage to avoid such confusion when talking to Americans because -40 degrees is the same temperature on both scales.

    • Re:Alarmist (Score:5, Funny)

      by avandesande ( 143899 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:25AM (#63718430) Journal
      In other news, we are now also in an era of "Global Hyperbole"
    • "Global boiling" suggests that the temperature is rising to a point where the surface water (eg oceans) are boiling.

      So when the AC isn't working in the office and someone says "it's boiling in here" do you complain that no, your drink isn't actually boiling on your desk?

      He's obviously not meaning literal boiling, he's just trying (and failing) to say something dramatic.

      The reality is most people are not going to care much about until its the more convenient, cheaper option to go green.

      Oh they care already, especially in the middle of a brutal drought or heat wave. That doesn't translate to significant personal sacrifice, but it can translate into policy pressure

      EG, I love LED lightbulbs vs incandescent. They're truly a better technology. You want to replace internal combustion engines? We need cheaper electric cars. And if you want to get rid of coal plants quit NIMBY'ing nuclear energy.

      People are always going to act in a short sighted selfish manner. That's not even worth trying to change. What you have to do is improve technology so that the short sighted selfish choice IS the environmentally friendly one.

      The part of your narrative that bugs me is it seems to suggest "we can't cha

  • by Chiasmus_ ( 171285 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:41AM (#63718308) Journal

    Never mind that if the country you live in cut its carbon emissions to *zero* - if it literally enforced national Mennonite-style living, whether or not that was going to lead to a massive famine - the planet would continue to warm.

    In America, liberals point their fingers at conservatives and say "It's them doing it." Conservatives point their fingers at China and say "It's them doing it."

    Then both of them drive their cars to restaurants and eat beef and then drive back to their houses that are three times the size of what they need and go on Amazon and order bullshit they don't need and have it shipped across the Pacific Ocean so they can say "look at this neat thing I have acquired; it is neat and it makes me feel happy; I should order more neat things."

    It's not a "those guys are doing it to us" problem. It's a "Humanity radically changed its lifestyle after the World War era and we like it a lot more this way" problem.

  • ... is that all the pointless arguing about fantasy versus fact will become irrelevant. We'll all be busy dealing with whatever the planet/climate does or doesn't do, and if it's as severe as things seem, the collection of non-contributing yammerers on the fringes can be safely ignored. Bigger fish to fry. If you can't grow food because your fields are all burning, what "Pinhead the Political Clown" thinks about AGW isn't really important.

  • Meaningless (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @10:46AM (#63718326) Homepage

    There is no actual content here; this is pretty much meaningless. This is a UN bureaucrat with no actual power telling us things that we already know but phrasing it in scary language.

    Yes, global warming is real. Yes, it will have bad effects. No, it's not true that "the era of global warming has ended and the era of global boiling has arrived." The era of global warming has not gone away, it is most definitely still here, and I don't even know what that term "global boiling" even means (it most certainly isn't a term ever used by scientists.)

    And finally, 1.5 degrees C is simply a nice even number. There's nothing particular that happens at 1.5 degrees C that hasn't already started to happen at 1.4 degrees C, and it is also most definitely not true that if we don't stop warming at 1.5 C we might as well give up because it's over.

    Let's stick to facts.

  • Easy solution. If humans are the problem, get rid of them
  • by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:08AM (#63718374)

    from https://www.fastcompany.com/90... [fastcompany.com]

    "Word choices by the press in this field matter because they are influential on public opinion, says Todd Ehresmann, senior linguist at Babbel. “News outlets have a strict duty to accurately represent the true state of things,” he says. “By using phrases that reflect the urgency of the situation, media outlets are conveying the importance of addressing these issues.” As the climate situation has escalated, those more emphatic and urgent terms like “emergency” and “catastrophe,” as well as “climate crisis” and “climate breakdown,” are necessary."

    "Similarly, Ehresmann says “global warming” is no longer accurate enough. As temperatures have risen by 0.32 degrees Fahrenheit per decade over the past 40 years, a more accurate term is “global heating.” In 2018, a leading climate scientist at the U.K. Met Office declared that was the preferred term, and a German scientist, founder of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, agreed: “‘Global warming’ doesn’t capture the scale of destruction,” Hans Joachim Schellnhuber said. “Speaking of hothouse Earth is legitimate.” Meanwhile, “greenhouse effect,” prevalent in the early 2000s in the years following An Inconvenient Truth, is a clearly defined scientific term, but doesn’t have a sense of urgency or trigger an emotional response."

    That was 2021. Now "the era of global warming has ended; the era of global boiling has arrived". Will everyone get on board with "Global Boiling"? I don't think "Global Heating" or "Hothouse Earth" caught on. Maybe "Global Incineration" or "Eternal Hellfire" or something will evoke a better emotional response

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      Sounds like it's time for humans to return to seasonal migration as a way of life. If the weather is not stable living in one place, then obviously it's up to the humans to migrate with the season.

      The people who are already occupying the places to be migrated to might have objections.

      • Objections get figured out in wars or simply via moving trucks and insurance rates. Most of south florida is mad as spit about their home owners insurance rates on top of taxes brought in by yankees moving from cooler climates with "needs" that florida never supported before. A 200k house next to the beach was insurable for something less than house payment, a 1200k house next to beach has a house payment and a insurance bill that isn't affordable to the conventional florida audience living on fixed in
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I was just thinking the same thing. What's the problem with shifting to a different area that has a more livable climate?

      If the alternative is to stay put and experience the heightened levels of warmness, then great have fun with that. Now would be a good time to invest in some good reliable air conditioning. Before the doomsday scenario arrives you'll probably also want to secure access to some alternative sources of potable water and electric power generation. Although it will probably be easier to ju

  • Back to living in caves. Seriously. Caves have their own problems but over heating is usually not one of them.
  • We will sit here in our pot of water as the temperatures continue to rise, and we will do nothing because of fake science, indeterminate time frames, cost, impact on developing nations, ...

    Meanwhile the water is getting warmer, and (maybe soon) will begin to boil and we'll be dead frogs.

    • The earth is evolving to fit our needs for 10 Billion people. 1C on average is not noticable on the scale of decades. For the latitudes where the important people live, 1C rise is 11 growing days without frost, so making the wheat corn line 35 miles further north is not an economic hardship on anyone. Bringing slightly more rainfall to 30N-45N would be a geoengineering goal if food was in short supply. The tropics lack most of the industrial scale food production that is 35N or higher. For some ver
  • The binary thinking here ("doomed" or "saved") is the worst. It's a spectrum. We are already very much on-track to prevent 4C, which is, as the man said, "incompatible with organized civilization", so three cheers for that. The IRA and responses to it from Europe and Asia will surely hold it below 3C, which would be really bad. We have a great shot, if we work at it, of staying below 2.5C and many are thinking 2.2C. Those levels are considered compatible with continued economic activity that will

    • by rbrander ( 73222 )

      Oh, and I got that from a speaker on David Roberts "Volts" podcast, at volts.wtf.

      David has been instrumental in improving my mental health about the future prospects; he slums into politics, but the real focus is on the engineers and inventors who are in the thick of the R&D fight.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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