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posted by janrinok on Friday December 23 2016, @10:10PM   Printer-friendly
from the pause-for-thought dept.

Bridging the gap between left and right. I came across this clip showing Glenn Beck and Samantha Bee, and thought that this SoylentNews story / comment thread should be stickied till the new year so we have an ongoing conversation. It's a short clip from her show where Glenn Beck is a willing guest; the key point is they are trying to find common ground. Beck points out that Bee is following some of his own patterns of crying "catastrophe" but they really don't provide much insight beyond the significance of their little coming together moment.

The divide is clear and present on this site as most everywhere else, I would like to see a meta discussion where we fact check each other and drill down through the rhetoric until we get some straightforward lists and proposals on how we can move forward together. What are the fundamental blockers? Which ideas do we consider to be too outrageous for credibility? Many here are guilty of attacking each other — can we try and Spock it out for about a week?

I'll start us off with my supposition:

Climate change is real and human activity has an important effect on it. We must agree on this point in order to move forward, and social/economic issues must be handled after needed environmental changes."

If you post as AC — try and behave as if you were logged in — reduce the flames for better quality discussion.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by LVDOVICVS on Friday December 23 2016, @10:22PM

    by LVDOVICVS (6131) on Friday December 23 2016, @10:22PM (#445253)

    I believe there is a consensus that climate change is occurring. But I'll go so far as to say that it might or might not be human-caused. Regardless of whether it is or not, aren't we obliged by our duty to future generations to try and correct the situation? We might fail. But to never try fixing the problem we clearly see coming makes us complicit in the suffering that occurs from our complacency.

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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by The Mighty Buzzard on Friday December 23 2016, @10:30PM

    by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Friday December 23 2016, @10:30PM (#445258) Homepage Journal

    Humans are pretty adaptable. I expect we'll be doing just as well five degrees from now as we are today.

    --
    My rights don't end where your fear begins.
    • (Score: 1, Troll) by chromas on Friday December 23 2016, @10:50PM

      by chromas (34) Subscriber Badge on Friday December 23 2016, @10:50PM (#445267) Journal

      Yeah but don't forget climate change is a racial issue now, whitey.

    • (Score: 2) by Gaaark on Friday December 23 2016, @10:54PM

      by Gaaark (41) on Friday December 23 2016, @10:54PM (#445269) Journal

      I wonder if you have "5 degrees of separation" from the bacon i'll be cooking Christmas morning! :)

      I'd have to adjust what you said to "some humans are pretty adaptable", but that is where Darwin will come in. Those that can't adapt will probably become my bacon, lol.

      I hear, anyways, that if there is continued warming, where i live in Canada will end up pretty damn nice!

      --
      --- Please remind me if I haven't been civil to you: I'm channeling MDC. ---Gaaark 2.0 ---
      • (Score: 2, Interesting) by The Mighty Buzzard on Friday December 23 2016, @11:01PM

        by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Friday December 23 2016, @11:01PM (#445272) Homepage Journal

        Exactly. Five degrees is neither objectively better nor worse for humanity, unless you define humanity as temperate, coastal cities, which is horribly incorrect.

        --
        My rights don't end where your fear begins.
        • (Score: 2) by Scruffy Beard 2 on Friday December 23 2016, @11:28PM

          by Scruffy Beard 2 (6030) on Friday December 23 2016, @11:28PM (#445285)

          Insurance rates are already going up due to Global warming:
          As climate change claims heat up, insurance industry says we need to adapt: Don Pittis [www.cbc.ca]

          • (Score: 4, Insightful) by The Mighty Buzzard on Friday December 23 2016, @11:37PM

            by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Friday December 23 2016, @11:37PM (#445290) Homepage Journal

            Insurance is not a fundamental necessity to human survival. And they should be going up in areas destined to become uninhabitable. It's one dandy way to get people to live somewhere it's not insane to live.

            --
            My rights don't end where your fear begins.
            • (Score: 2) by Scruffy Beard 2 on Friday December 23 2016, @11:42PM

              by Scruffy Beard 2 (6030) on Friday December 23 2016, @11:42PM (#445294)

              Gobal warming adds more energy to the system, making more places insane to live in. Fort McMurry mentioned in the article is about 58 degrees north. Do you expect us all to move north of the Arctic (or south of the Antarctic) circle?

              • (Score: 2) by Scruffy Beard 2 on Friday December 23 2016, @11:53PM

                by Scruffy Beard 2 (6030) on Friday December 23 2016, @11:53PM (#445298)

                Actually, this ties in with Economic migrants already.

                People are leaving the middle-east in droves.

                It is difficult to pin down exactly how much of the political unrest is exacerbated by climate change.

              • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:21AM

                by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:21AM (#445309) Homepage Journal

                What I expect is that a species as adaptable as human beings will find a way to live on a planet that has supported life quite well at much higher levels of greenhouse gasses than are currently present or even predicted.

                --
                My rights don't end where your fear begins.
                • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:07AM

                  by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:07AM (#445334)

                  And of the species that we are dependent on? Are they as adaptable?

                  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:17AM

                    by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:17AM (#445340) Homepage Journal

                    Doesn't matter. We'll adapt.

                    --
                    My rights don't end where your fear begins.
                    • (Score: 3, Informative) by coolgopher on Saturday December 24 2016, @02:21AM

                      by coolgopher (1157) on Saturday December 24 2016, @02:21AM (#445362)

                      I don't doubt that humanity will adapt. However, the likely result is that before that millions if not billions will starve, because the temperature change is too rapid for the ecosystem to adapt and thus for us to maintain our crop levels. If we're really luck we'll manage to engineer around it, but with the amount of denial that we'll even have to do that, and the subsequent lack of focus/investment, I'm not encouraged.

                      A shortage of food will naturally lead to even more conflict, and this is where I have my beef - I don't want another $!^!# world war. Given the current world "leadership" with their trigger happy fingers and refusal to accept responsibility even for their own direct actions, I'm *really* not encouraged. (Also, I like beef, I'd like to be able to keep eating it now and then.)

                      On the energy front I am rather encouraged; while political leadership is largely absent, the market forces are starting to swing in and driving down the cost of renewables. Whether one accepts human carbon emissions as substantially influential when it comes to the climate or not, nobody argues that the resulting emissions are bad for human health. Moving off burning fossils is a good thing, regardless. Unless you're one of the elite luckies with only oil up your reservoir, but meh, you'll adapt too.

                      • (Score: 1) by jrmcferren on Saturday December 24 2016, @10:25PM

                        by jrmcferren (5500) on Saturday December 24 2016, @10:25PM (#445666) Homepage

                        It is rather important that we reduce our use of fossil fuels, but we MUST ensure that while doing so that we don't cause energy to become so expensive that only the elites can afford to light or heat their homes or take public transport (let alone drive their own cars). At the same time, we can't stop progressing on clean energy. This is a very delicate balance of maintaining and/or improving standard of living (by cheap energy) and reducing our use on fossil fuels.

                        The key innovation for the near term is energy storage. In order to continue our solar energy buildout, we need to keep the incentive of net metering. To make net metering viable both economically and technically in the long term, we need to be able to store energy. This can be installed by the electric company at key points on the grid, or installed by the people with solar installations to allow for even better demand and generation management. Large scale storage is also going to be needed to continue wind energy buildout.

                        Renewables and storage alone will likely not be enough to provide the power needed in many countries, especially when heating and transportation is considered. These needs will still need to be handled by fossil fuels (especially for heavy goods long distance transportation) and nuclear (additional power for heating).

                        This brings up nuclear. There is very promising nuclear technology on the horizon if we develop it. If this technology is developed it will render all existing plants obsolete, in addition as a bonus for the US we would be able to use more of our rare earth deposits as the contamination (thorium) will be usable as fuel.

                        That leaves the last major use of fossil fuels and actually it isn't for energy. Modern chemistry is reliant on petroleum, by reducing the demand for petroleum energy we should have sufficient oil for these chemicals including plastics.

                        This is great, and you are now wondering how to get the government to get this moving? This is the answer that will shock everyone here. The government needs to be very selective on what actions are taken. In the immediate term (next 4 years), we need to take efforts to increase production of fossil fuels (sad reality) and to look into changing the nuclear regulations to allow for easier development of new technologies.

                        What do I dream of the future being like energy wise? By the 2050s (when I hope to retire) I dream of not only having access to clean, reliable, and mainly renewable energy from the power grid, but to be able to store enough to ride through power outages. I dream that electricity will be so cheap and plentiful that consumption will actually be promoted again like it was in the 1950s. Every home will be able to generate power, store power, and if needed buy power. Heating, cooling, and even the car will be fully electric. Fossil fuels will be expensive, not because of carbon taxes, or short supplies, but of low demand. Smart homes will have the choice of demand response options if the grid is overload. They can reduce demand by allowing the heating or cooling to be delayed, use power from the home's batteries until more energy is available, or wait for a better incentive. Speaking of how inexpensive the energy will be, heated sidewalks and driveways will be common, no snow or ice would accumulate, possibly have this technology in the roads too.

                        In my dream, energy may actually become too plentiful and the grid will need to be able to dump the excess. Imagine incentives for making your home cooler in the summer or warmer in the winter for a few hours, street lights may come on at noon to help reduce the overage. Snow melt systems may activate on mild days. Remember this is with clean renewable and nuclear energy.

                        TL;DR we need more fossil NOW, but with proper application of government action and more importantly proper application of government inaction will allow for future development of clean energy.

                        • (Score: 2) by coolgopher on Saturday December 24 2016, @11:37PM

                          by coolgopher (1157) on Saturday December 24 2016, @11:37PM (#445678)

                          I don't see anywhere in your argument why we'd need more fossil fuel right now - the world is happily producing the energy we currently need, and installations of renewables are being added faster than coal fired plants (largely because the former now have a better ROI).

                          You're spot on both that developing countries are likely to still need to use a fair bit of fossil fuel, and it would be blatantly unfair for the developed nations to deny outright deny them seeing as the developed nations have already had the advantage of said fossil fuel. That said, the need should be a lot smaller, with newer, cleaner tech being available and, many times, even cheaper. We are truly at the dawn of an energy revolution, I believe. Things will massively change over the next decade or so. As you say, the grid will become far more decentralised, and many times quite likely be needed to dump excess energy, as opposed to being the One True Source of consumer electricity.

                          Nuclear is an interesting idea. I personally like it as a baseload provider in the interim at least, with the longterm hope that we won't need it for terrestial use. The two or maybe three big problems I see are, in order: The NIMBYs, who I have a certain amount of sympathy for, but only because the bureaucracy/beancounter mentality tends to hinder proper engineering/safety. Then there's the financial viability; The last couple of articles I read were claiming that it is not profitable to build new nuclear plants. And finally, there's the thorium tech. It always looks great on paper, but somehow still seems to be 5-10 years away from production.

                          Energy storage is of course a key component, especially long term. I was reading an interesting article just the other day about a new large solar installation in QLD, Australia next to a disused gold mine, where they were going to couple the solar with traditional hydro storage using a pair of differentially elevated dams at the gold mine. Hydro can easily be used for baseload (and has as good response time as e.g. gasfired turbines), and if the hydro installations can be done in areas already messed up environmentally - excellent!

                          • (Score: 1) by jrmcferren on Monday December 26 2016, @08:55PM

                            by jrmcferren (5500) on Monday December 26 2016, @08:55PM (#446145) Homepage

                            I must have forgotten that key point! The reason we need more fossil fuel energy now is to increase supply and reduce prices. If we concentrate this on the electricity grid we can become a more electrified society (more electric cars, more people using electric heat, etc). We need to move more of the utilization of energy to electricity to increase the impact that renewables will have on our energy grid. You however said something that may actually make this rather unnecessary.

                            If Thorium is only 5 to 10 years (let's say 15 years to give a buffer) away, we can probably avoid building new coal plants as long as we don't regulate the larger plants to death until thorium is ready to be deployed. In my part of the Mid Atlantic of the US the majority of the coal plant shut downs have been the smaller 200MW or so coal plants that have been running for many decades already. In the short term we need to keep the larger coal plants such as Homer City online though and build natural gas plants for additional capacity.

                            You mention Hydro, I'd like to see more hydro as well, Hydro is CHEAP power. There are some hydro plants within maybe 50 miles or so, but these are in the 1MW range. Hydro storage will also be a good idea short term until we can get the cost of grid scale batteries down. Like I said though, I eventually dream of a day that on mild winter days I set my heat to 72 and then I get a steep discount to let the utility turn the heat up to 74 (both in *F).

                            The irony of developing nations is that the masses will probably be using more renewables and fossil fuels will become obsolete long before the masses will need to consume them at the level we do in the industrialized world. Another example is that telecommunications in developing countries is mainly wireless. Another older example. Europe has a newer power grid as they had to rebuild after WWII, while the US stayed at 120 volt for many things, Europe skipped to 220 since they had the technology to adopt the higher voltage easier (EG 1940s vs 1900s).

              • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:30AM

                by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:30AM (#445456) Journal

                Gobal warming adds more energy to the system, making more places insane to live in. Fort McMurry mentioned in the article is about 58 degrees north. Do you expect us all to move north of the Arctic (or south of the Antarctic) circle?

                And so what? Extreme weather is not that big a deal for wealthy societies! The fossil fuel processes that allegedly contribute to an increase in extreme weather also contribute to making societies wealthy and far more capable of dealing with the harm of extreme weather.

                • (Score: 2) by tathra on Saturday December 24 2016, @05:53PM

                  by tathra (3367) on Saturday December 24 2016, @05:53PM (#445594)

                  Extreme weather is not that big a deal for wealthy societies!

                  the billions in repair costs, maintenance, hospital bills, portable generators, etc, certainly are a big deal. tax increases will be necessary in order to have the funds to cover all those costs, are you fine with that? and thats not even covering the human costs (lost manhours at work, misery and grieving for those killed, riots and looting, etc) that come along with it, especially if the money to effect repairs and keep society stable in the meantime isnt there.

                  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @11:57PM

                    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @11:57PM (#445685) Journal

                    the billions in repair costs, maintenance, hospital bills, portable generators, etc, certainly are a big deal.

                    That is pocket change to a developed world country. And note that hospital bills are much lower than in a country that is completely unprepared for extreme weather.

                    tax increases will be necessary in order to have the funds to cover all those costs, are you fine with that?

                    Again, keep in mind just how little extreme weather actually costs.

            • (Score: 2) by sjames on Sunday December 25 2016, @08:30PM

              by sjames (2882) on Sunday December 25 2016, @08:30PM (#445862) Journal

              The people living in those once safe places probably won't appreciate watching their property value go poof. Under any reasonable rule of law, they will be within their rights to demand compensation (also known as internalizing externalities). Refusing to take any sort of action is nothing more or less than betting those living in the new danger areas can be screwed over with impunity.

              • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday December 26 2016, @09:35AM

                by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday December 26 2016, @09:35AM (#446017) Journal

                The people living in those once safe places probably won't appreciate watching their property value go poof.

                Who are they going to sue when this happens centuries down the road? And will they pay for the positive externalities that fossil fuels generate, you know, to be fair to the fossil fuel users?

                • (Score: 2) by sjames on Tuesday December 27 2016, @04:12AM

                  by sjames (2882) on Tuesday December 27 2016, @04:12AM (#446239) Journal

                  So you're going with the screw 'em over school of thought. Everything's legal if you don't get caught.

                  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 27 2016, @09:07AM

                    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 27 2016, @09:07AM (#446279) Journal

                    So you're going with the screw 'em over school of thought. Everything's legal if you don't get caught.

                    Well, that is your argument. And I don't think it's a reasonable rule of law to be able to sue people of the distant past who actually made your life better because you can show (using the typical low threshold of proof that goes on in civil court) that some real estate you own has lower value because of it.

                    • (Score: 2) by sjames on Tuesday December 27 2016, @06:55PM

                      by sjames (2882) on Tuesday December 27 2016, @06:55PM (#446411) Journal

                      Well, that is your argument.

                      No, it's the upshot of your position on the matter.

                      Why don't you believe it is reasonable to hold someone responsible when they knowingly take an action that damages others? Are you in general against the existence of civil law? As for benefits to go with those losses, they have already been handsomely rewarded for those through economic activity.

                      • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 27 2016, @09:39PM

                        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 27 2016, @09:39PM (#446472) Journal

                        Why don't you believe it is reasonable to hold someone responsible when they knowingly take an action that damages others?

                        A classic counterexample is manual CPR. Even when done right, it'll dislocate ribs and may break the sternum. And the subject is unconscious (CPR is only given to people who are unconscious and not breathing) and thus, unable to consent to the injuries. So how much responsibility does one hold for giving manual CPR when they know they will cause injury?

                        As for benefits to go with those losses, they have already been handsomely rewarded for those through economic activity.

                        Not for positive externalities by definition.

                        • (Score: 2) by sjames on Wednesday December 28 2016, @02:15AM

                          by sjames (2882) on Wednesday December 28 2016, @02:15AM (#446529) Journal

                          In the case of CPR, without it death is the result (often even with it). It is reasonable to presume that people will prefer to live even if a broken sternum is a natural consequence. For the people whose property becomes worthless, where is the benefit so great that no reasonable person wouldn't happily take the trade-off?

                          As for positive externalities, those have never been an excuse in a court of law. If you run a red and cause someone injuries sufficient to put them out of work, do you honestly believe you owe nothing because someone else was happy to fill the vacancy?

                          • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday December 28 2016, @09:54AM

                            by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday December 28 2016, @09:54AM (#446608) Journal

                            For the people whose property becomes worthless, where is the benefit so great that no reasonable person wouldn't happily take the trade-off?

                            Their societies become a lot more wealthy with a variety of huge benefits such as reduce or negative population growth, good for the environment, better health, better individual freedom, etc. Further, such ocean-side property still has a long life span ahead of it. The value of it in a few centuries is not the important part.

                            As for positive externalities, those have never been an excuse in a court of law.

                            Again, CPR is the obvious counterexample. Having a chance for life is the positive externality. The damaged body parts is the negative externality. Even if we choose not to ban climate change reparation like we do liability for properly done CPR, we still will have a much wealthier society with which to pay such things.

                            • (Score: 2) by sjames on Wednesday December 28 2016, @05:42PM

                              by sjames (2882) on Wednesday December 28 2016, @05:42PM (#446763) Journal

                              Sharpen your thinking!

                              Those benefits happened well before liability would begin since we as a species didn't understand the risks at the time.

                              Liability starts in earnest in the '70s where we have documented evidence of fossil fuel producers who concluded that global warming was real AND they themselves took actions to protect them from at least the more immediate concerns AND took specific actions to deny the problem publicly and retard the development of alternatives that could have mitigated the problems while maintaining all of those beneifis you speak of.

                              As for CPR, none of that is an externality of any kind. They are a series of benefits and risks that are specific to the recipient. If my CPR on someone somehow caused a 3rd person on the other side of the street to suddenly return to natural circulation, THAT would be an externality. If some guy walking by suddenly had his sternum snap because of my actions, that too would be an externality. It is the consensus of the medical profession that broken ribs are an unavoidable risk to CPR. It's not as if I could have saved the victim without a rib break by performing 'solar CPR'. Note that if instead of standard CPR, I choose to kneel on his chest and bounce because it would make a funnier instagram, I COULD be sued for the rib damage.

                              • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday December 28 2016, @06:38PM

                                by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday December 28 2016, @06:38PM (#446782) Journal

                                Liability starts in earnest in the '70s where we have documented evidence of fossil fuel producers who concluded that global warming was real AND they themselves took actions to protect them from at least the more immediate concerns AND took specific actions to deny the problem publicly and retard the development of alternatives that could have mitigated the problems while maintaining all of those beneifis you speak of.

                                We don't. It is remarkable how much deception there has been on this point. Research into climate change is not agreement on the narrative that climate change requires extraordinary intervention.

                                Here, we have some evidence that businesses like Exxon did research, came to the inconclusive opinion that there could be a significant harmful effect, but that there wasn't data to support that, and later on, made modest effort to promote thinking that was friendly to their point of view.

                                As for CPR, none of that is an externality of any kind.

                                CPR is not a trade so it isn't a perfect analogy. One person's actions affect another without their agreement. That is the core of what externality is.

                                • (Score: 2) by sjames on Thursday December 29 2016, @10:55PM

                                  by sjames (2882) on Thursday December 29 2016, @10:55PM (#447220) Journal

                                  Considering that the oil companies spent money to mitigate the problem, it is reasonable to believe that they were satisfied that there was a problem.

                                  As for CPR, it is an altruistic effort. The essence of an externality is that it is a cost of a desired economic activity that is passed off to others to pay.. Generally those others are unwilling and often unknowing as well.

                                  The difficulty you're having with finding an apt analogy is that we don't generally protect people or corporations from having their externalities internalized.

          • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:27AM

            by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:27AM (#445454) Journal

            Insurance rates are already going up due to Global warming

            Insurance rates would go up due to the Greys anally probing people, if insurance companies thought they could get away with it.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:57AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:57AM (#445328)

      But as an example, look at various parts of the world that have gone through desertification in the past thousand or so years.

      Lake Chad for instance, some parts of Africa and the Middle East. Various parts of the Central America, etc.

      While the temperature variation may seem minor now, that may not be true if it ruins the ecology of areas we rely on for agriculture, housing, or industry in ways that might otherwise be preventable.

      • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:18AM

        by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:18AM (#445341) Homepage Journal

        that may not be true if it ruins the ecology of areas we currently rely on for agriculture, housing, or industry

        You left out a very important word.

        --
        My rights don't end where your fear begins.
        • (Score: 1) by Francis on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:57AM

          by Francis (5544) on Saturday December 24 2016, @01:57AM (#445354)

          Not really, we can't afford to give up much land to climate change while still having enough food to feed the planet. Especially if the current wars don't get any better.

          If you look at the areas that are and aren't being used for agriculture, I'm curious what areas in the latter category you're expecting us to be able to miraculously start farming and why you assume that it's going to be close enough to a 1:1 swap that we can make it work.

          • (Score: 2) by chromas on Saturday December 24 2016, @02:09AM

            by chromas (34) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @02:09AM (#445359) Journal

            The areas that are too cold now. Soon, very soon, northern Canada's gonna be a farming powerhouse.

            • (Score: 1) by Francis on Saturday December 24 2016, @03:15AM

              by Francis (5544) on Saturday December 24 2016, @03:15AM (#445378)

              Nope. Canada may warm enough, but they don't get enough light. Plus the growing season will be rather short. That's before we consider the other aspects like rainfall.

              The probably will be able to grow some new things that they couldn't, but they're not going to be a powerhouse anytime soon. And probably never as the light issues are hard to fix.

          • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @07:24AM

            by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @07:24AM (#445468) Journal

            If you look at the areas that are and aren't being used for agriculture, I'm curious what areas in the latter category you're expecting us to be able to miraculously start farming and why you assume that it's going to be close enough to a 1:1 swap that we can make it work.

            You could have made that argument several centuries ago and be just as wrong as you are today. We have a pretty good track record at farming new land and making it productive.

            • (Score: 1) by Francis on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:07PM

              by Francis (5544) on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:07PM (#445601)

              Several centuries ago the population was a 6th of what it is now. If we hadn't managed to figure things out, the population would have already peaked at some lower number. There's no reason to believe that we can continue to innovate our way around this problem when we don't even know what land is going to be available between rising oceans and changing weather plans.

              What's more, most of the areas that aren't being used for farming currently are either places like the farth north and far south where they have very little light compared with the areas we're currently farming or are either in conflict zones or built up.

              Not to mention desert regions which can't be counted on as they haven't got the water to appropriately farm.

              So, while we might find a way of making it work, it's definitely not a sure thing and it's definitely not more economical than just biting the bullet and doing something about climate change now before such extreme measures are necessary.

              • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @11:53PM

                by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @11:53PM (#445683) Journal

                There's no reason to believe that we can continue to innovate our way around this problem when we don't even know what land is going to be available between rising oceans and changing weather plans.

                Except the obvious rebuttal that we've figured it out so far and we're pretty good at the innovation thing (not that we need the innovation! Current agriculture is already up to the task). And not knowing what land is available is at best a minor problem. It doesn't take a great of lead time to turn wilderness into farmland.

                What's more, most of the areas that aren't being used for farming currently are either places like the farth north and far south where they have very little light compared with the areas we're currently farming or are either in conflict zones or built up.

                In other words, not a very big deal.

                Not to mention desert regions which can't be counted on as they haven't got the water to appropriately farm.

                Unless you bring it there. Water is one of the more plentiful materials on the surface of Earth and easy to transport. Irrigation is yet another solved problem.

                it's definitely not a sure thing

                We have it nailed down already. I'm sorry, but this is yet another overblown concern. The real risk here is bad agricultural practices. If best practices don't get applied on a large enough portion of agriculture, then you will have problems no matter what the climate does.

      • (Score: 2, Interesting) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:35AM

        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:35AM (#445458) Journal

        While the temperature variation may seem minor now, that may not be true if it ruins the ecology of areas we rely on for agriculture, housing, or industry in ways that might otherwise be preventable.

        Maybe we ought to fix those problems then? We're pumping huge amounts of water out of slow replacement aquifers? Blame climate change! Using bad agricultural practices? Blame climate change! Corrupt governments creating hordes of starving people who in turn make more starving people? Definitely climate change!

        Maybe instead of pushing our attention obsessively to mild problems like climate change, we try to fix the big problems? I see several posts in this thread which are focused on fixing climate change without regard for all the other problems out there. Sure, yes, we can fix numerous problems at one time. But that requires actually looking at multiple problems at one time rather than focusing on the one thing.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:03PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:03PM (#445598)

          Maybe instead of pushing our attention obsessively to mild problems like climate change, we try to fix the big problems? I see several posts in this thread which are focused on fixing climate change without regard for all the other problems out there. Sure, yes, we can fix numerous problems at one time. But that requires actually looking at multiple problems at one time rather than focusing on the one thing.

          Big problems are often fixed by addressing all the little problems that make them up. Global warming is one of those things.

          • (Score: 1) by khallow on Sunday December 25 2016, @12:04AM

            by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Sunday December 25 2016, @12:04AM (#445687) Journal

            Big problems are often fixed by addressing all the little problems that make them up.

            Nice platitude, but I don't see you delivering on that.

            Global warming is one of those things.

            Unless of course, fixing global warming makes the big problems worse. We should look at the remarkable cost and the lack of usefulness of efforts to fix that.

            And once again, you aren't speaking of fixing any other problem, big or small.

    • (Score: 2, Insightful) by EETech1 on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:04AM

      by EETech1 (957) on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:04AM (#445395)

      How can putting 100,000,000 tons of carbon dioxide a DAY into the atmosphere not cause damage to the environment?

      That's 50 times as much as we all poop, and we found out long ago if we just go in a pile behind the house, it's not too long before bad things happen.

      • (Score: 2, Insightful) by dbv on Saturday December 24 2016, @05:01AM

        by dbv (6022) on Saturday December 24 2016, @05:01AM (#445424)

        Well, what are you doing about it? Do you have an electric car? Do you live in an apartment, hopefully carbon neutral? Or are you just arguing for more taxation of other people?

    • (Score: 1) by alincler on Saturday December 24 2016, @05:36AM

      by alincler (6447) on Saturday December 24 2016, @05:36AM (#445437)

      From a 2011 study (Kevin Anderson, Alice Bows):
      "[...] a 4 degrees C future is incompatible with an organized global community, is likely to be beyond adaptation, is devastating to the majority of ecosystems, and has a high probability of not being stable (tipping points)."

      It is widespread view that 4C must be avoided at ALL costs.

      +5C Is not 5C hotter summers. It's more like +10C over land (varies by location)
      It's 45C heatwaves in New York, with a monthly average of 33.
      40% reduced crop yields.
      Ecosystems collapsing.
      Larger parts of the planet uninhabitable.
      Hundreds of millions displaced leading to more wars.

      At 5c you're not talking about how many will die, but how many will survive (under a billion).

      For scale, the difference between an ice age an now is 5C.

      6C is likely game over for humans.

      • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:41AM

        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:41AM (#445459) Journal

        +5C Is not 5C hotter summers. It's more like +10C over land (varies by location)

        Which land locations. The problem here is that most current warming is in areas that are traditionally cold. The reason is that the snow cover is melting. So you see most such warming at higher latitudes such as above 45 degrees and during the winter when melting snow cover can actually happen and have the warming effect from the radical change in albedo.

        So no, it's not 45 C heat waves in New York.

        • (Score: 1) by alincler on Monday December 26 2016, @02:17AM

          by alincler (6447) on Monday December 26 2016, @02:17AM (#445928)

          This will be buried, but anyways:

          New York already saw 37C heatwaves this century, two in 2011 hit 39C, with a 42.2C all-time record reading at one station.
          The US Northeast region is projected to be 6-8C warmer under higher emission models in RCP8.5.
          The global models don't include Urban Heat Island strengths for individual cities, which for NYC is around 2.5C nowadays (+1-2C summer daytime, +5-6C nighttime).

          Adding it all up, in a disastrous-for-all +5C global average temp increase world NYC could see 44-47C heatwaves.

          Sources: IPCC AR5, Gaffin et al 2008, Fu Gao Drake et al 2012, Rosenzweig and Solecki 2010, Meir Orton Pullen 2013, USGCRP; etc.

          I am NOT a climate scientist though.

          • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday December 26 2016, @09:32AM

            by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday December 26 2016, @09:32AM (#446016) Journal

            Adding it all up, in a disastrous-for-all +5C global average temp increase world NYC could see 44-47C heatwaves.

            Or might not, since that 5C increase would not be universally distributed, but rather heavily weighted towards the poles. Those hotter temperatures would also come with significantly increased radiation to space.

            Further, despite assertions to the contrary those global models may well include a fair bit of urban heat islands. The statistical complexity behind adjustments of these temperature measurements can hide a lot of manipulation.

            • (Score: 1) by alincler on Tuesday December 27 2016, @01:17PM

              by alincler (6447) on Tuesday December 27 2016, @01:17PM (#446329)

              that 5C increase would not be universally distributed

              You are right. That's the reason for the 6-8C figure for NY in the previous post.

              despite assertions to the contrary those global models may well include a fair bit of urban heat islands

              Oh, it's not an assertion. Global climate models do not correct for Urban Heat Islands. Even the latest ones use grid cells that are ~180x180km (110x110 miles) on average. IPCC AR5 chapter 8 deals with additional effects on urban environments.

              There are projections for a few individual cities that include these effects. The climate models used are different and run on for example 1x1km grids.

              can hide a lot of manipulation

              While true, trust issues?

              • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 27 2016, @09:42PM

                by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 27 2016, @09:42PM (#446478) Journal

                Oh, it's not an assertion. Global climate models do not correct for Urban Heat Islands. Even the latest ones use grid cells that are ~180x180km (110x110 miles) on average. IPCC AR5 chapter 8 deals with additional effects on urban environments.

                These models are based on data which does correct for urban heat islands. And cell size is irrelevant.

                can hide a lot of manipulation

                While true, trust issues?

                Yes.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @08:10AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @08:10AM (#445480)

      I expect we'll be doing just as well five degrees from now as we are today.

      We are already on an easy 5C increase from today. Already past 1C since industrial age.

      As for no problems, tell that to the 3,000,000,000 people that will want to move out of the oceans and whole countries like Bangladesh with 300,000,000 people being underwater. If people that a few million Syrian refugees are a problem, then just wait a few decades for the real problems to start.

      • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday December 26 2016, @09:43AM

        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday December 26 2016, @09:43AM (#446019) Journal

        As for no problems, tell that to the 3,000,000,000 people that will want to move out of the oceans and whole countries like Bangladesh with 300,000,000 people being underwater.

        Over the span of centuries or even millennia. Not feeling the concern.

        If people that a few million Syrian refugees are a problem

        The US alone moves at current rates somewhere around four to five billion people per century. And yet the world isn't falling apart.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @10:38PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @10:38PM (#445261)

    I can get on board with this, regardless of whether humans are the primary cause at least we can work on minimizing our impact and planning for the future so we don't get civilization ending problems that we're too late to address.

    • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Friday December 23 2016, @10:49PM

      by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Friday December 23 2016, @10:49PM (#445266) Homepage Journal

      If the ice ages didn't do us in, I don't see the few degrees of predicted warming doing so. There are currently uninhabitable places on the planet. We resolve this problem by not inhabiting them, by in large. We're quite capable of doing that to more places should it become necessary.

      I don't actually have an issue with eliminating our dependence on fossil fuels, only with the ridiculous doom and gloom arguments being put forth to that end and unproven hypotheses being called settled science. Consensus is not part of the scientific method.

      --
      My rights don't end where your fear begins.
      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @11:04PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @11:04PM (#445275)

        I've never heard of climate science being "settled" beyond "its definitely getting warmer". As for doom and gloom, that is directly referencing our current society. Sure humans will undoubtedly survive massive climate change and even nuclear war, but people are worried about more than pure simple species survival. We want to thrive, grow, and explore the stars!

        • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Friday December 23 2016, @11:39PM

          by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Friday December 23 2016, @11:39PM (#445291) Homepage Journal

          Listen to the President sometime. He specifically used the words settled science.

          --
          My rights don't end where your fear begins.
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:17PM

            by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:17PM (#445607)

            And the president is an authority on science, right?

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @11:43PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @11:43PM (#445295)

        Aleppo should be uninhabitable, but droves of people are still dying there. If warming increases natural disasters, millions of people will die because they will have no ability to migrate away from the coastal and desert areas where they currently live. Poor people might as well be early humans who moved very slowly over a long time.

        It will be difficult to measure the exact effects of warming on natural disasters, and impossible to extract reparations for warming. So we can sweep these millions of dead under the rug.

        • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @07:58AM

          by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @07:58AM (#445476) Journal

          It will be difficult to measure the exact effects of warming on natural disasters, and impossible to extract reparations for warming. So we can sweep these millions of dead under the rug.

          Another problem solved by the group mind of the internet. Carry on.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:14AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:14AM (#445305)

        The issue of climate change is not whether it will make the world uninhabitable; most likely it won't. The coastlines where hundreds of millions of people now live, however, may be underwater, for starters. Armies of invasive species with sizes ranging from microorganisms to those much larger than man may be rampant, as more of the world's temperate zones increasingly resemble the Amazon basin. The severity of the worst hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, and floods may increase, although this last part has admittedly not been proven.

        Many of the residents of the developed world are fairly sedentary and spend much our time in climate-controlled environments. We do, however, have the option of getting out into nature, at least on weekends and vacation days, and during mornings and evenings during warmer months. Future generations would have a right to be pretty pissed off at our mismanagement if we don't preserve that option for them.

        • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @08:07AM

          by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @08:07AM (#445479) Journal

          Many of the residents of the developed world are fairly sedentary and spend much our time in climate-controlled environments.

          But you would need to be really, really sedentary not to be able to outrun a climate effect that moves at its theoretical fastest at the rate of meters per decade.

          Future generations would have a right to be pretty pissed off at our mismanagement if we don't preserve that option for them.

          The world wasn't created perfect. They will have to adapt to an imperfect world just like the rest of us no matter how virtuously we mismanage the current situation. But I can't help but notice, once again, a poster treating climate change as if it were the only problem that humanity has (well, that and sedentary people I suppose). It does no good for future humanity to make big problems worse in order to fix a minor problem.

      • (Score: 3, Insightful) by bzipitidoo on Saturday December 24 2016, @03:32AM

        by bzipitidoo (4388) on Saturday December 24 2016, @03:32AM (#445387) Journal

        In so far as possible, we ought to make our choices knowingly, not blindly. Change is risky. Saying the hell with the status quo climate so we can burn fossil fuels a few more years is absolutely nuts when 1) we have alternatives and those alternatives are eminently practical, and 2) we don't know how bad (or good) change will be, and although we could find out, we don't want to know! Not many people would buy a new car that had never been tested. But we're willing to experiment on our very air?

        You shouldn't feel so sure humanity will survive. That's a dangerously cavalier attitude. Civilizations absolutely have collapsed, many times, and many of those were caused by climate in the form of an extended drought. Another killer is bad farming practices. If not done carefully, irrigation causes salt to build up in the soil. That's a big reason why the Fertile Crescent is not as fertile today. Then there's plowing. If plowing is done recklessly, the top soil will erode away faster than it is replenished, and can be lost all at once in the next big flood. Overreliance on one variety of one crop makes our food supply more vulnerable to disease. We really can't let millions go hungry, not when some of them might have nuclear weapons.

        Messing with the chemistry of the atmosphere changed life profoundly in the distant past. As in, mass extinctions. There was the Great Oxygenation Event.

        Life is on a long journey and has never settled into a stable state. Always something new comes along. So far, life has survived every challenge. Life has stumbled blindly along and never yet run into a dead end. But you can't count on that. The next turn could end it all. This time, we and the things we do are the novelty. So far as we know, we're the most intelligent animal yet to evolve, and we've employed our superior intelligence to gain mastery over all other animals. No predators stand a chance against humans with weapons. We now have the knowledge and power to alter the world profoundly. We have the brains to predict some of the larger consequences of our actions. Shouldn't we use that gift, rather than stumble along blindly, just like all the other animals that have ever lived?

    • (Score: 2, Disagree) by ledow on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:04AM

      by ledow (5567) on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:04AM (#445302) Homepage

      What if it's not us?
      What if it's not easily fixable?
      What if it's like trying to un-cook an egg?
      What if any action we take is actually zero-effect and we spend lots of time and money trying to fix something that we can do nothing about? Then all we've done is spent decades making people's lives more expensive and punished third-world nations for polluting?
      What if the solution we implement is actually WORSE than the problems envisaged?
      What if the world fluxes like this anyway, but by being energy efficient, penalising pollution, making people use less, etc. we actually guilt them into more ill health (because they turn off the heating/aircon/etc.)?
      What if we spend all this on trying to find a solution where actually letting the oceans rise by a few meters displaces only a few million people but costs us billions which we could have spent on healthcare?

      The problem I have with the whole issue is that we start from a handful of premises with differing certainties:

      - The world, as we can tell from modern records, seems to be getting slightly warmer. Check. We'll take that as granted.
      - This is then seen as part of a long-term radical trend, that we assume is unprecedented because we see no evidence of it. Okay. Let's call that a freebie.
      - This is then going to cause the oceans to rise and parts of the world to become uninhabitable. Oookaaaay....
      - This is going to mean millions of displaced people currently living an easy life to have to move somewhere else otherwise they'll die. Mmmm...
      - This is then going to be fixed or stopped by us screwing in a new lightbulb, or converting oil into specialised plastics for solar panels. Er...
      - Such actions will inevitably save the lives of millions and we'll never ever need the amount of energy we're using NOW every again, so we don't need to worry about future scaling either. Hold on a moment....
      - And all of the above MASSIVE CHANGES OF HUMANITY will happen globally, co-operatively, freely, in humanity's interest, and cost less in the long run than losing even 5% of the worlds landmass.
      - And this is the ONLY way to handle the situation, that we've known for sure is visible for less than two decades. Rather than waiting until we know more for sure.

      Currently, I hover around the second step, possibly the third.

      We have NO viable idea of what, if anything, we can actually change. If we get every country on the planet to change overnight to never pollute, what if the runaway effect is still just going to happen anyway? How many would die through lack of heat, goods, services, etc. compared to if we just carried on?

      The problem I see is that everyone - from media to scientists - have established certain facts, and made certain assumptions. All good science so far.
      Yet nobody seems to have made a prediction, tested it, demonstrated even the tiniest success, in the EFFECT of all the above.

      In 100 years, or 1000 years even, are we going to be looking back and going "Those idiots, thinking that all that shit we did was making any difference at all and we could uncook the egg, dooming us to low-energy lives that have cost us more than land displacement ever could have!"? That's the bit that I see missing.

      I trust that we see a pattern. We then can say that pattern is unusual and predictable.
      Do we also see that when we reduce usage the pattern undoes itself or not? Like the ozone layer, that DID start to repair after we banned CFC's, are we actually seeing the effects of positive human climate change?
      If so, then can we say with any shred of certainty that that pattern will repeat until we are "back" to normal levels?
      If so, can we total up the cost of doing that, worldwide, adding in appropriate fudge factors for actual, realistic timescales and co-operation from third-world nations, etc.?
      If so, can we total up the cost of NOT doing that, worldwide, similarly?
      And where is the number which says - quite clearly, outside all error boundaries, to scientific significance, that one is better than the other?

      Because I don't see that anywhere.

      Everyone likes to shout about the problem and stab at solutions. Nobody considered whether - as has been demonstrated millions of times over the course of human history - the cure could be worse than the disease.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:28AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:28AM (#445311)

        You're the only one so far that mentioned the runaway effect. That (the runaway effect) is the tipping point where it will be past the point of no return, human intervention will no longer have an effect on reversing global warming. The big question is... Have we reached that point yet? and... How far will it go? The runaway effect could turn Earth into another Venus, or possibly another Pluto... hot as hell or frozen solid.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:50AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:50AM (#445320)

          Venus is hot because the atmosphere is 60 km thick and the pressure at the surface is 90 x that of Earth. I have never been able to get an explanation, where the is all that gas supposed to come from?

          • (Score: 2) by WalksOnDirt on Saturday December 24 2016, @03:20AM

            by WalksOnDirt (5854) on Saturday December 24 2016, @03:20AM (#445382) Journal

            It would come from the decomposition of calcium carbonate (and some other minerals), which is quite plentiful on Earth. It's not going to happen any time soon, though.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:01AM

              by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:01AM (#445394)

              So the runaway greenhouse effect requires ~0.05% of the Earth's crust to vaporize*?

              * assuming mass of atmosphere is ~5e18 kg and mass of the crust is ~2.5e22 kg.

              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:05AM

                by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:05AM (#445396)

                Sorry, should be ~2%.

              • (Score: 2) by WalksOnDirt on Sunday December 25 2016, @11:49AM

                by WalksOnDirt (5854) on Sunday December 25 2016, @11:49AM (#445770) Journal

                No, there are other processes that can cause that. Still, it should take over 100 million years. I did say "not soon".

  • (Score: 2) by mhajicek on Friday December 23 2016, @11:30PM

    by mhajicek (51) on Friday December 23 2016, @11:30PM (#445286)

    I have a coworker who believes that the whole climate change thing is a conspiracy to male him pay more for his energy and vehicles. He believes that much of the data is falsified.

    --
    The spacelike surfaces of time foliations can have a cusp at the surface of discontinuity. - P. Hajicek
    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Ethanol-fueled on Saturday December 24 2016, @02:18AM

      by Ethanol-fueled (2792) on Saturday December 24 2016, @02:18AM (#445361) Homepage

      Californians are pressured socially and financially to conserve water, while water usages rates climb 10% a year. Whole neighborhoods are gutting their lawns and landscaping with rocks and cacti instead.

      Meanwhile, growth is accelerating here unchecked, with mega-monstrosity housing developments popping up everywhere. Just how is the state conserving water by allowing such development, and why isn't the state seeking to put the brakes on development if we have such a water crisis?

      To use a rather "wet" analogy, those who tell you to conserve water while accepting skyrocketing water rates are pissing on your head and telling you it's raining.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:18AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:18AM (#445403)

      I have a coworker who believes that

      Don't we all, and isn't that nice. Idiots are not evidence of anything except idiocy. Take Francis here for example!

  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @11:37PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 23 2016, @11:37PM (#445289)

    > I believe there is a consensus that climate change is occurring. But I'll go so far as to say that it might or might not be human-caused.

    There is as much consensus that it is human-caused as there is that it exists.
    That phrase will mean different things to to different people depending on how strong their grasp on reality is.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:46AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:46AM (#445414)

      There is as much consensus that it is human-caused as there is that it exists.

      Very few people deny climate change occurs and there's no "consensus" required when scientific evidence supports a theory with 5 sigma certainty. Unfortunately, the IPCC AR5 requirements to label something "more likely than not" indicative of anthropogenic climate change were 50%. That was not science, it was a fucking coin toss. I gave up attempting to discuss any of this a decade ago when it became apparent that the best case response from most individuals was cognitive dissonance and vitriolic, incoherent rants about "holocaust denial".

      That phrase will mean different things to to different people depending on how strong their grasp on reality is.

      Yes, and primates shake their fists at the sky during storms.

  • (Score: 1) by alincler on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:35AM

    by alincler (6447) on Saturday December 24 2016, @04:35AM (#445410)

    Whether it's human caused or not hasn't been up for debate for quite some time.

    It's something we know.

    We're 150 years after Tyndall proved the greenhouse effect.
    60 years after Keeling showed the link between CO2 levels and fossil fuel use.
    40 years after Exxon's own internal research confirmed the link between global warming and fossil fuel use, and warned of the dangers. (the scan of the original is on Wikipedia)
    35 years after James Hansen's paper about climate change drivers and sensitivity.

    A quarter of a century after the signing of the first climate treaty at the first UN convention on climate change in Rio.
    One year after the whole world stepped up its game a tiny little bit in Paris by making non-binding pledges to limit CO2 output.

    There is a vast amount of credible info on the net, publicly available. Up-to-date raw data and graphs, whitepapers, articles, hundreds of hours of lectures and presentations on youtube, down to up-goer-five level.

    At this point you have to have an excuse to not know. Only following mainstream media, and/or being misled? Don't care enough to look into it?

    You're already feeling and seeing the effects.
    There are debates... about how much worse it will be for your kids, and how soon.

    • (Score: 2) by martyb on Wednesday December 28 2016, @11:43PM

      by martyb (76) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday December 28 2016, @11:43PM (#446888) Journal

      To further what you wrote, I'd like to call attention to this xkcd infographic [xkcd.com] which is titled:

      A timeline of earth's average temperature since the last ice age glaciation — when people say "The climate has changed before," these are the kinds of changes they're talking about.

      I would encourage all who see this post to load the infographic and scroll all the way to the end.

      --
      Wit is intellect, dancing.
  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:24AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 24 2016, @06:24AM (#445453) Journal

    Regardless of whether it is or not, aren't we obliged by our duty to future generations to try and correct the situation?

    There are many situations we're trying to correct, such as overpopulation, poverty, corrupt governance, etc. Why is that one so important that we must ignore the rest? Because remember, this is always how this question is poised - in a vacuum.

    In the real world, there are many problems and often trade offs in which problems get made worse while we try to fix other problems. Climate change mitigation is particularly notorious for this since fixes such as stopping the use of fossil fuels or forcing people to consume less resources can have significant drawbacks such as making poverty and thus, overpopulation worse (since poor people are much more fertile than wealthy people). This is not figurative. We have real world examples such as Energiewende [wikipedia.org] which has doubled the cost of electricity in Germany (this list [wikipedia.org] shows Germany with a price of $0.32 per MWh, while France comes in at $0.19 per MWh, mainland US has prices between $0.08 and $0.17 per MWh).

    Another example of this is considering only the pollution externality of fossil fuel use while ignoring the resulting positive externality of cheap energy access.

    A final example is the casting of every problem in terms of climate change. For example, blaming the Syrian civil war on climate change even though the epically bad water and resource mismanagement that actually did cause the breakdown in Syrian agriculture would have triggered the civil war anyway even if there was no climate change. Or blaming rising damage from extreme weather to climate change, when most of it is due to people building stuff in risky locations and would have happened anyway in the absence of climate change (notice how so many big problems happen anyway no matter what the climate is doing).

  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Saturday December 24 2016, @09:53PM

    by Thexalon (636) on Saturday December 24 2016, @09:53PM (#445659)

    But I'll go so far as to say that it might or might not be human-caused. Regardless of whether it is or not, aren't we obliged by our duty to future generations to try and correct the situation?

    I'll put it this way:
    1. Part of the consensus about climate change is that the higher concentrations of CO2 are definitely part of the problem. This mechanism has been demonstrated in lab experiments.
    2. That CO2 had to come from somewhere. Since there haven't been major meteor strikes in the last century, it's pretty safe to assume that the somewhere is on Earth.
    3. The mechanisms that quickly produce CO2 on a global scale are: (a) breathing and (b) burning things with carbon in it. Since there has been no massive observed uptick in breathing, that means we must be burning something with carbon in it.
    4. The things we burn the most of with carbon in it are: coal, oil, natural gas, and wood. So, to reverse the trend, we should burn less coal, oil, natural gas, and wood. And that's what those hippies with their windmills and solar panels have been on about for about 25 years.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.