Blog Catalog

Showing posts with label Climate Change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Climate Change. Show all posts

Monday, February 15, 2021

Humanity Needs to All Start Working Together

Nothing shows any better how humanity needs to start and then keep working together for all our benefit than this killing, international pandemic, worst of the last more than 100 years.  Coincidentally, I wrote this on social media, again, a week ago. Also coincidentally, an article in The Atlantic rather makes this same point now.

Travelling to Bhutan to become costlier for IndiansCredit: Getty Images

Bhutan Is the World's Unlikeliest Pandemic Success Story


On january 7, a 34-year-old man who had been admitted to a hospital in Bhutan’s capital, Thimphu, with preexisting liver and kidney problems died of COVID-19. His was the country’s first death from the coronavirus. Not the first death that day, that week, or that month: the very first coronavirus death since the pandemic began.

How is this possible? Since the novel coronavirus was first identified more than a year ago, health systems in rich and poor countries have approached collapse, economies worldwide have been devastated, millions of lives have been lost. How has Bhutan—a tiny, poor nation best known for its guiding policy of Gross National Happiness, which balances economic development with environmental conservation and cultural values—managed such a feat? And what can we in the United States, which has so tragically mismanaged the crisis, learn from its success?

In fact, what can the U.S. and other wealthy countries learn from the array of resource-starved counterparts that have better weathered the coronavirus pandemic, even if those nations haven’t achieved Bhutan’s impressive statistics? Countries such as Vietnam, which has so far logged only 35 deaths, Rwanda, with 226, Senegal, with 700, and plenty of others have negotiated the crisis far more smoothly than have Europe and North America.

These nations offer plenty of lessons, from the importance of attentive leadership, the need to ensure that people have enough provisions and financial means to follow public-health guidance, and the shared understanding that individuals and communities must sacrifice to protect the well-being of all: elements that have been sorely lacking in the U.S.

America has “the world’s best medical-rescue system—we have unbelievable ICUs,” Asaf Bitton, executive director of Ariadne Labs, a Boston-based center for health-systems innovation, told me. But, he said, we have neglected a public-health focus on prevention, which socially cohesive low- and middle-income countries have no choice but to adopt, because a runaway epidemic would quickly overwhelm them.

“People say the COVID disaster in America has been about a denial of science. But what we couldn’t agree on is the social compact we would need to make painful choices together in unity, for the collective good,” Bitton added. “I don’t know whether, right now in the U.S., we can have easy or effective conversations about a common good. But we need to start.”

But then, beyond this killing pandemic? Other things we need to all come together to work on and against.

Climate change. Global warming.  Pollution.


More.

Poverty.   Yes, poverty. Everyone, the world over, needs to recognize that poverty is a human construct.




And we need to start soon.

Now.


Wednesday, February 10, 2021

All of the Many, Wide Ranging and Honestly Huge Benefits of Going to Green, Sustainable Energy

Yes, it needs to be known that going to green, sustainable energy is not just that we all pollute less though that's huge.  It's not just that we'll address climate change and global warming, though it certainly will.  It's more than that, more than even just those two huge benefits. 

"A world based on 100% renewable energy is possible, and we are able to transform the energy system fast enough to avoid the climate catastrophe."

From this article:

With 10-Point Declaration, Global Coalition of Top Energy Experts Says: '100% Renewables Is Possible'

Check out all these benefits.

"The solutions will not only save consumers money, but also
  • create jobs and
  • provide energy and
  • more international security, while
  • substantially reducing air pollution and
  • climate damage from energy."
Incredible. And true.

Let's do this.


Sunday, November 1, 2020

The Movie I Need to Make

The movie, this time science fiction, that I want to make and that needs to be made--

MICHAEL RENNIE, THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL, 1951 Stock Photo


About this planet, ours, Earth, that these these aliens that come at us, finally, at long last. We immediately think they've come to attack, kill and destroy us so naturally, that is for what we all, the world over, prepare for.

But these are advanced beings. These are truly advanced beings. They're peace-loving. And peace-living.  And they have the technology to take and keep it.

After this big, suspenseful build-up, in the movie, of us getting ready, the world over, for interstellar war, they come. They do come here. But instead of attacking us, their weapons shut us down. All of us. The world over.

And then they force us into peace. Peace. Across the planet. And then across the solar system and universe.

And we stop our wars. We stop fighting one another. We stop killing one another.

It becomes all the more relevant to us all, the world over, what with global warming and climate change now. We finally, finally start all working together to end and even reverse climate change and global warming and war and all the rest.

And we all start cooperating. And collaborating. And helping and nurturing one another.

The world over.

The end.


Monday, October 19, 2020

At What Point Do We Do Something About Global Warming?

Let's have a very brief recap of just a few of the events of the last nearly 2 years, shall we?

Weather, global warming, and climate change
--Nearly all of the entire continent of Australia was in drought, record high temperatures and then it burned



--The Arctic and Siberia and elsewhere hit high temperatures of OVER 100 DEGREES for the first time in recorded history

Temperature hits 100 degrees in Arctic Russian town



--California has had a record 4 million acres of it burn this year with, again, drought and record high temperatures and now 

California exceeds 4 million acres burned by wildfires in 2020


--Colorado is in the midst of its largest ever area burning in wildfires


So with all this alone, shall we do something, some things on and about climate change and global warming?

Finally?  At long last?

At what point do we do something? At what point do we learn?

Soon?

What's it going to take? What more proof do we need beyond even just this short list of already-occurred, occurring events?


Monday, October 5, 2020

At What Point Do We Address Climate Change?

Look at just three things, only three, from the last one year. 

--15 million acres of Australia burned last year, in 2019
--It got over 100 degrees in the Arctic this year
--More than 4 million acres of California burned and that's just so far this year


Are we going to do anything yet? At what point are we going to do things? At what point are we going to collectively change?

Links:





Monday, April 20, 2020

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

If We Could All Do Better After This Pandemic


Wouldn't it be incredible if all nations, the world over, took this event, this coronavirus pandemic as well as global warming and climate change, as a moment to give up war and all work together for the betterment of all people, all nations?

A guy can dream.


Be well. Be safe out there.

And stay at home.


Wednesday, July 31, 2019

More People Need to Know What's Happening Presently, Weather-wise, Across the Planet


I don't think most people are aware just now of what, exactly, is going on, worldwide, with weather and the catastrophes that are taking place just now.

Here's one, the first here today--
“Greenland is home to the world's second-largest ice sheet. And when it melts significantly -- as it is expected to do this year -- there are knock-on effects for sea levels and weather across the globe.

Greenland's ice sheet usually melts during the summer. This year, it started melting earlier, in May, and this week's heatwave is expected to accelerate the melt.

… 2019 could come close to the record-setting year of 2012, said Jason Box, professor and ice climatologist at the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland. During that ‘…year’…, Greenland's ice sheet lost 450 million metric tons -- the equivalent of more than 14,000 tons of ice lost per second.”

“…it's already poised to rival the proportions of 2012 -- and we haven't even reached the end of summer. In July alone, Greenland's ice sheet lost 160 billion tons of ice, according to Clare Nullis, spokeswoman for the UN World Meteorological Organization.

‘Normally when you get a temperature record broken, it's by a fraction of a degree,’ said Nullis. ‘What we saw yesterday was records being broken by two, three, four degrees -- it was absolutely incredible.’"

Melt water on the Greenland ice sheet. The Greenland ice sheet (Sermersuaq in Greenlandic) is a vast body of ice covering 1,710,000 square kilometers (660,000 sq mi), roughly 80% of the surface of Greenland. The thickness is generally more than 2 km (1.2 mi) and over 3 km (1.9 mi) at its thickest point. This section of the ice sheet was photographed on the Western part, close to Ilulissat and the glacier Semeq Kujalleq. Positioned in the Arctic, the Greenland ice sheet is especially vulnerable to climate change. (Photo by: Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)


That alone is huge but then, this is taking place in Siberia, Russia.

siberia-wildfire-russia.jpg


This, too, is happening now in Japan.



There is also this from Japan:

Finally, there is this:

Premium: Ongoing Low Water Levels On Rhine River


“A heatwave in Europe is causing low water levels on the…Rhine…”

At what point do climate deniers give it up? At what point do the get on board, so to speak, and accept our current reality, let alone what is projected to happen across the world, if we don't cut carbon dioxide emissions and pollution?


Saturday, June 1, 2019

What's It Going to Take to Get Us to Recognize Manmade Climate Change?


I wonder if very many of us in the nation and world are paying attention to all the weather-related events, disasters and catastrophes included, that have been taking place this year. Herewith are just a few of the latest.

This took place the week before the Memorial Day weekend.

Multiple highways across Missouri shut down due to flooding


Check out how many roads were closed across the entire state of Missouri.


This was just last weekend:

Memorial Day weather: Heat wave scorches southern US


Then this happened.

Vehicles stuck in foot-deep hail in Omaha, Council Bluffs area


This one was four days ago.


Then we all know this took place this last week locally.


This is going on now, to the South of us, of course, and is still going on.

These next two are current also.



This is the past month.


This is just how large an issue this is.



You can go here and see just some of the damage.


As if all that isn't enough, this story broke two days ago.


"Abnormally high temperatures have led to unsafe travel conditions, uncertain ecological futures and even multiple deaths"

So how long, America? How long until we first accept global warming is happening and it's taking place because we humans are pumping so much CO2, carbon dioxide, into the atmosphere? And then, second, how long until we do something about it?


Sunday, May 19, 2019

Quote of the Day: Overpopulation and Climate Change


Image result for climate change and overpopulation

“Unlike plagues of the dark ages or contemporary diseases we do not yet understand, the modern plague of overpopulation is soluble by means we have discovered and with resources we possess, What is lacking is not sufficient knowledge of the solution but universal consciousness of the gravity of the problem and education of the billions who are its victims.”

--Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

How Much Do We Have to Lose Across the Planet Until We Accept Climate Change?


Did you see this?

Did you see how many head of cattle, alone, were lost recently in Australia, with their flooding?

Stranded cows are seen surrounded by floodwater in Queensland, Australia, on Feb. 5, 2019.


500,000 head of cattle--or more, if you read the article--died last week in the flooding in Australia.

And this doesn't include all the other animal life that died in their scorching heat waves in the last month. I posted on this earlier.


Australia's Heat Wave Has Been Devastating For Animals





And that's just Australia, of late. Check out what it's done in California last year.


Then there is around the world.


At what point do the climate change deniers actually look, recognize the losses and damage and agree with us we need to do things to change?

What more does it have to take?


Sunday, February 10, 2019

For Those Who Don't Believe in Global Warming and/or Climate Change


For any out there who may still not believe in or accept that the planet is warming and that human activity is having a large role in all of it, please read on. For starters, this winter, this was the middle of last month, January, while much of our nation was in a deep freeze.

Image result for global warming

Australia heatwave reaches it peak with record temperatures






Naturally, it wasn't simply Australia that was blistering hot, either.

Still Australia, this article posted 6 days ago, as if the heat and their losses from it weren't enough.


Remember last Summer and the record California wildfires?

California Wildfire Insurance Claims Total $11.4 Billion


We're very familiar with the Polar Vortex that effected so much of our nation in the last few weeks.


This is taking place presently.


Seattle normally gets 0.7 inches of snow per year. A few weeks ago, they got nearly 2 inches. Now, today, they got another 10 inches and as the headline shows, they are apparently going to get still more. Seattle wasn't alone, of course.

Yakima gets 10 inches of snow in winter blast


Then there's the overall picture.

2018 was 4th hottest year on record for the globe


This year is no better and we're not even 1/4 of the way into it..


Then that's having predictable effects, of course.



Finally, if that all isn't enough on our planet, there is this. When all else is deniable or ignored, there is the CO2, the carbon dioxide levels in our planet's atmosphere that comes from what we humans are pumping into it.

See the source image

Let's do something before it's too late. 

Some things.

How about it?


Sunday, December 30, 2018

Before Trump, I Had Hope


Image result for president trump

It's true. Before Donald Trump became President, which even now pains me to say, I believed in America. I believed in people. I believed in progress.

Now?

Now that Donald Trump not only became President but has been so for 2 years, all that is gone.

I no longer believe in the arc of progress through history. I no longer believe in the progress of humankind. I no longer see or believe in progress as being inevitable and/or natural. I don't assume it any longer.

It's the same with racism in our nation.



I used to see it as something deeply stupid that used to exist and occur in our society. I used to see it as something we would and were naturally working away from, having learned our collective lessons.

No longer.


Again, with this President---a member and now leader of the Republican Party it needs to be repeatedly pointed out--racism has not just reared its ugly head but come out very publicly, repeatedly and demonstrably.

I thought we'd all learned that lesson. I thought we knew better. I thought we were weaning ourselves of that outrageous ignorance.

Climate change?

This President doesn't believe in it. So naturally, we don't need our government or the governments of the world to do anything about it. Forget the science. Forget the scientific studies. Forget the facts and truth. Full, polluting speed ahead.

Then there's the safety nets we already decided on as a nation that this President is rolling back.

78 Environmental Rules on the Way Out Under Trump



This broke this week.


I was against Ronald Reagan becoming President and his tenure in the office bears me out. I was vindicated by what he did, in more ways than one. This was the biggest one.


Iran-Contra: Reagan's Scandal and the Unchecked Abuse of Power


Then there was Dubya'.

Yes, naturally, I was against George W. Bush becoming President.

I know, shocking, right?

And it was more, far more than just because he was a Republican. He proved me correct, too.

How Clinton Surplus Became A $6T Deficit



But Reagan and Dubya' both became President and we lived through it and I knew we would.

But Trump? Donald J. Trump as President?

In these fast two years with him in the White House, I see so many ways not just our nation but the world has gone and is going backward, already. It has made all kinds of things that were previously considered impossible, possible.

I do see some glimmers of hope. They are only brief and glimmers but there are some promising things out there. Here's one.

More Republicans Now Think Donald Trump Is ‘Unfit to Be President of the United States,’ Watergate Reporter Claims   When even Republicans come out publicly denouncing him in any way, it gives me hope. Of course, there have been Republicans and Right Wingers publicly writing against and yes, denouncing him, for some time--columnist George Will, now-deceased Charles Krauthammer, both, among them.

While I've lost hope, I am still of the opinion we have to fight ignorance and stupidity and short-sightedness and greed. We can't give in completely. We have to work, however and whenever and wherever we can to better things, both for others and ourselves. Always.

We have to persevere.

Links:

Confronting the Cost of Trump's Corruption