Tags
6th Mass Extinction, Abrupt Climate Change, Antarctic Ice Melt, Desertification, Extreme Weather Events, Geoengineering, Monoculture Farming, Nick Humphrey, Nuclear Energy, Overpopulation
NOAA image of the “bomb cyclone” that struck the Midwest earlier this month, triggering flooding in three states and taking the lives of humans and livestock. The National Weather Service described it as “incredible” and a “Great Plains cyclone of historic proportions.”
I first discovered the writings of meteorologist/geoscientist Nick Humphrey with his brutally honest essay The Conversation No One Knows How To Have and since then have followed his posts and comments. He has been featured or quoted in a number of publications such as Mother Jones, New York Times, Washington Post, and Science Alert. Few scientists will publicly tell you how dire things are, but Nick Humphrey is not one to shy away from the truth. What follows is a Q&A interview I held with him on a variety of questions concerning humanity’s future.
ML: Can you give us a brief summary of your background and why you became interested in studying the detrimental effects of climate change?
NH: My background is in meteorology, geosciences and interdisciplinary studies. I have a Bachelor of Science in Interdisciplinary Studies from South Dakota State University. I completed a Master of Science in Geosciences with a concentration in Applied Meteorology from Mississippi State University in 2016. My education and research studies have been in the societal impacts of weather/climate, natural hazards, and advanced forecasting techniques. I also have a background in global climatology. I did undergraduate research into human decision-making in response to tornado warnings and graduate research in tropical cyclone impacts.
I have been following news and research into climate change for about the past decade. However, I became more intensive in my personal research as a result of an apparent acceleration in climate impacts in the past 4-5 yrs. My study took me to look into the research of scientists such as Dr. Natalia Shakhova, Dr. James White, Dr. Peter Wadhams, Dr. James Lovelock, and Paul Beckwith. I also looked into the interdisciplinary connections between ecological and environmental variables by Dr. Guy McPherson.
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ML: What is the most disturbing aspect of anthropogenic global warming that you are seeing today and what are its implications for the future?
NH: To me, the most disturbing aspect is the destruction of ice on the planet. It is commonly discussed among climate scientists that the planet has a high “inertia”. This means in natural climate change, there is typically a significant lag between what is happening in the atmosphere (rise in greenhouse emissions) and climate response (warming of the planet), forcing a more gradual temperature rise.
There are two very important components of Earth’s inertia.
1) Water (which can gain/lose a huge amount of heat with a gradual temperature change) and 2) Ice.
Ice, in my view, is the biggest climate regulator because it can do two things:
1) In the process of melting and freezing, heat is latent or “hidden”. Meaning it does not contribute to temperature, but to melting (heat gain) or freezing (heat loss) of ice.
2) Ice is white, so as a result, it is a high reflector of visible light, preventing absorption of heat at the surface. So it has a double impact. As the planet loses ice because of warming temperatures, there is less total ice to melt and more heat goes into warming the oceans, land and atmosphere. It takes nearly 80 times more heat to melt ice than to warm the same amount of liquid water by 1 degree C/1.8 degrees F. The less ice there is, the lower the planetary albedo, resulting in more heat entering the climate system, creating a feedback loop to destroy ice faster and accelerating planetary heating. The loss of sea ice in the Arctic is a planetary catastrophe.

Trends in sea ice thickness are another important indicator of Arctic climate change. While sea ice thickness observations are sparse, here we utilize the ocean and sea ice model, PIOMAS (Zhang and Rothrock, 2003), to visualize mean sea ice thickness from 1979 to 2019. Updated through February 2019. https://sites.uci.edu/zlabe/arctic-sea-ice-volumethickness/
ML: With the environmental damage that has already been put into the pipeline, modern organized human society may not survive this century and we are already seeing signs of this with the destruction caused by recent extreme weather events. The city of Beira in Mozambique, recently hit by Cyclone Idai, is said to be “the first city to be completely devastated by climate change.” Do you think it’s possible to transition to a net-zero carbon emission civilization within a brief period? Would this not require a radical reconfiguration of every sector of our economy and the way in which we treat each other and the environment?
NH: In short, no, I do not think it is possible to transition to a net-zero carbon emission civilization within a decade. The idea itself is simply absurd because it would require basically returning to a pre-industrial society with none of the benefits which came from building the society provided by fossil fuels. There are some economists and environmentalists who believe you can have “green growth” but such growth leads to further environmental destruction as population and energy demands continue to grow exponentially. In order to go to a net-zero carbon civilization, you must first, ironically, increase carbon usage. More building of solar panels around the world, more building of wind farms, more building of electric cars, more concrete, more metal manufacturing, more highly polluting mining, not only of the land, but more rare Earth metals will be needed from the seas, harming ecosystems and polluting the oceans. Meanwhile, none of this stops climate change because, as you mention, there is already much damage in the pipeline.
At 500 parts per million of equivalent carbon dioxide concentration, enough greenhouse gases are currently in the atmosphere to ultimately warm the planet 4-5 degrees C/7-9 F above 1700s temperatures, raise the sea level by 220 feet/67 meters (assuming 1 ppm CO2 equivalent = 1 ft sea level rise, based on past longer-term paleoclimate change response), remove significant amounts of soil moisture, leading to the destruction of agriculture. And this is without any other carbon releases or feedbacks. Building more in an attempt to maintain civilized society with high energy consumption makes this all worse.
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ML: There are around 454 nuclear reactors around the world with several dozen more currently under construction. At least 100 U.S., European and Asian nuclear power stations are built just a few meters above sea level. With accelerated sea level rise and stronger storms on the horizon, we should be planning right now to decommission and close down these future nuclear disasters. What is your stance on nuclear energy?
NH: Nuclear reactions themselves are an effective way to produce energy. The problem is that, like any form of energy, it requires energy to produce it and leaves waste products. Fossil fuels are needed to build the nuclear reactors (especially all the concrete), water is needed to keep the reactors fuel rods cool, and nuclear waste results from the use of the reactors which must be stored safely for thousands of years. It requires civilization to function for thousands of more years to keep it functional and safe or alternatively decades to properly decommission them. Given sea level rise is accelerating with a doubling of approximately 7-10 years (possibly causing a meter of sea level rise as early as the 2040s-2050s, faster in some regions like the US East Coast), I do not believe we should be building more nuclear reactors and should decommission all others as quickly as possible to save what remains of the natural world from devastating impacts of nuclear failures if civilization collapses and humans are unable to care for those sites.
I make note, it is not only nuclear power stations on coastal areas which are of concern. Stations located along rivers are at risk as well…from increasingly larger floods, drying rivers which are used for cooling, and warming rivers which do not bring in cool enough water to keep the reactors cool. These events are already happening.
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ML: What do you think about geoengineering schemes by scientists to dim the sun in order to reduce global warming and buy humanity more time to “fix” the problem? Proposed technology that could pull CO2 out of the atmosphere at the scale required is generally considered a pipe dream. At what point do you think our civilization will lose faith in technology to solve all our problems?
NH: Geoengineering schemes, to me, are equivalent to using a small band-aid for a large stab wound. It is and will be completely overwhelmed by what is happening. Spraying aerosols over the Arctic to try to cool the Arctic with increased summer cloud formation doesn’t solve the fact that there is 500 ppm of equivalent carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere which cannot be removed with the speed and scale required. You are not dealing with regions where the geoengineering is being done in closed systems. You cool one area, other areas will respond by warming further. You cool one region, atmospheric and ocean circulations will develop and intensify to transport heat to the cooling area to try to equalize the temperature imbalance. Direct ocean heating from below the ice will make it difficult to grow thick ice and not allow ice to reform in the polar night. These heat balances have always existed of course, but it was still cool enough to allow significant ice to exist in the Arctic. The atmosphere is now too altered to allow widespread sea ice to exist in the near future and geoengineering doesn’t prevent this or even delay it in a meaningful way.
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ML: In the recent extreme flooding in the U.S. Midwest, farmers suffered devastating losses with similar food shocks on the rise around the world. How do you see the world feeding itself in such an uncertain future, especially when industrial monoculture is actually increasing worldwide?
NH: In short, I do not see a way for humans to feed themselves in an organized manner. Using the worse-case estimate for warming since pre-industrial times, the planet’s land air and sea surface has averaged around +1.2 C relative to pre-industrial the past 5 years with a peak of +1.4 C in 2016. The Northern Hemisphere land masses (where most of the food on the planet is grown) are quickly approaching +2 C. And we are already seeing the impacts of both extreme heat and extreme precipitation events on crops which depend on stability at mild temperatures and an expected range of moisture. This will only worsen and in between +1.5-2 C, we will conservatively see a reduction of US crop yields by between 30-46% of recent levels. By +4 C, that falls to 63-82% as aridification —droughts which are never-ending— dominate the Great Plains/Midwest and California Central Valley with very extreme summer heat and occasional intense rainfall as well as destructive flood events, exacerbating soil erosion.
We are entering a range of weather conditions not supportive of agriculture. And not simply monoculture. All agriculture. Even other ways of doing Ag require stable weather conditions, seasonality, soils and ability to conduct economic activity between peoples. None of this will be possible in these conditions. And that assumes the ecosystems which support agriculture also remain stable and available and that is not likely given the ongoing global extinction of insects.

NASA before/after imagery of flooding near Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska.
ML: Many mainstream scientists feel that to “work within” the system, they have to use language that politicians and economists can understand in order to maintain credibility, i.e. the “value of ecosystem services”. Attempting to place a monetary value on every aspect of nature while externalizing the environmental cost of pollution is a major flaw of our economic system. Inaction by governments and corporations on climate change may have already condemned a large percentage of the global population to a premature death. Do you think ecocide should be an international crime?
NH: If ecocide were an international crime, we would all be guilty in some way. Obviously, I do not believe all humans are *equal* in terms of blame. A person living in the US is a far far larger consumer of energy with a bigger carbon footprint than a person in say, Kenya or Indonesia. And of course, the developing world receives cheap products (coal, plastics, etc) from the developed world. However, while greenhouse gas pollution is significant from countries such as the US and China, plastic pollution is significant *everywhere*. Mining pollution is significant everywhere. Deforestation either is or has been in the past significant from Canada to Europe, increasing in the Amazon, the continent of Africa, etc. Water is nearing depletion on the Great Plains, parts of Europe, Australia and falling quickly in the Amazon. We’ve required more energy on this planet for all the technologies which many would consider have enhanced human life and existence on this planet…improved infrastructure, medicines, monoculture farming which did allow for much higher and resilient production of crops, etc. But all of those “improvements” to the human condition come at a cost and that cost is the destruction of the natural world, and ultimately ourselves.
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ML: I understand wealthy countries have much larger carbon footprints per capita than the rest of the world due to our unsustainable consumption patterns, but the other much overlooked factor is overpopulation. We are adding roughly 90 million more people onto the planet per year, many of whom are striving to attain a similar western standard of living. Is there any ethical way to control population growth or will nature be the final arbiter? What do you think is the maximum carrying capacity for the Earth’s human population?
NH: Overpopulation is a major problem and factor in the mass extinction ongoing on the planet. However, given the scales required to fix the problem, I do not see a way to fix it which would fix the damage already done to the planet within the timeframes necessary. The only *ethical* means to control overpopulation is to educate a free population (in particular, women must have reproductive freedom) on the benefits to humans by improving the natural world. Laws will fail because it is ultimately an issue of personal physical sovereignty and humans will always fight for personal sovereignty over their bodies as it relates to sex and reproduction vs. govt interference. China’s one-child policy had a lot of unintended consequences. There are other ways to try to “control” but ultimately, what would really be needed is population decline. Given humans are a relatively large land mammal, in order for Earth to have kept ecosystem stability, the human population would have to have stayed in the millions, spread thinly across hospitable regions of the planet as hunter-gatherers. The population of hunter-gatherer/early agricultural humans in the Early Holocene (10-12,000 years ago) is estimated at 1-10 million.
Ultimately, nature appears to be “loading the gun” to make it difficult for the human population to grow much longer; and really, it will crash. The 6th mass extinction is underway and humans will be a part of this given we are at the top of the food web.
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ML: Who, living today, serves as a role model and inspiration for you and in what way? Do you follow any particular philosophy in your life?
NH: I’d say one role model of mine is my father. He died in January 2017 after a battle with cancer. He spurred my interest in science as a child and was one who always strongly emphasized the importance of finding the truth, no matter how difficult it was or the barriers that happened to be in the way. Another is Dr. Albert Einstein, who had many personal flaws, but wanted to use science to improve society and found its uses for killing and destruction of life abhorrent. He spoke the truth even when it marginalized him. Also Dr. Neil DeGrasse Tyson, who works hard to communicate complex topics in a way that can be understood and appreciated by the average person.
My only philosophy in life is to live my life to the fullest, given the incredible changes underway, and bring truthful information to people who can see what’s happening and want to know “why?”. I’m an interdisciplinarian and work to bring a more comprehensive understanding of the predicament we face to anyone willing to listen.
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ML: What do you think of the Dark Mountain Project whose members have “stopped believing in the stories our civilization tells itself”? What new stories should we be telling ourselves in this age of ecological catastrophe and extreme economic inequality?
NH: I’m not familiar with the Dark Mountain Project; however to answer the questions, I think we should stop telling stories about how grand our civilization is and celebrating its attempts to dominate Nature and impose fake human superiority. Civilization, which served the purpose of insulating humans from the dangers Nature posed, has destroyed Nature at the expense of its own growth. This was true long before the development of the modern fossil-fueled world. In order to be sedentary and not be dependent upon the local forces of Nature, we needed to build towns and cities. This requires destroying forests, damming rivers, taking over land with agriculture we would control the growth and development of. This means other species, who could not stop us, lost territory. Each improvement in protecting ourselves from Nature meant more population growth, more resource needs, more energy, which in turn meant more destruction and more attempts at control. Humanity, as a hunter-gatherer species, meant our growth was dependent upon what we could find for food and water within the bounds of the climate. Our ability to enclose and mass manipulate our environment and resources meant we could grow beyond our resources and, in the process, mass pollute the world. Civilization has been an 8,000 year attempt to win a war against Nature. A war we are losing because Nature —following the laws which have governed the Universe for 14 billion years— always wins.
Nature is in control, not humans. Even our current catastrophes which were sparked by humanity’s activities were ultimately governed by the laws of Nature (physics, thermodynamics, chemistry, etc). We never were separate from it all, but a part of it. We should be telling ourselves to do what we feel is right to respect Nature and its unbreakable laws, accepting our place in the Universe as just one of many species which have a finite existence on this planet.
Nick Humphrey’s blog can be found here: https://www.patreon.com/MeteorologistNickHumphrey

Pingback: Concerning Humanity’s Future: Interview with Nick Humphrey, Climatologist and Geoscientist – Enjeux énergies et environnement
Reposted this on: https://www.minds.com/Redwashere
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Welcome back Mike, you have been missed. Your blog has been by far the best on the internet, chronicling and analyzing the ongoing collapse of modern civilization.
The reluctance of humans to accept the truth of their devastating impact on our world remains the basis of their totally inadequate response to the global crisis we are facing. Your blog has been a breath of truth and reality in a world wrapped in selfish delusions. Please continue your excellent work here as a voice for the truth, in a world steeped in lies.
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Spring Equinox – 2019: Climate Chaos and More
“I honestly did not expect to be a witness to the end of civilization when I started blogging those many years ago.”
https://questioneverything.typepad.com/question_everything/2019/03/spring-equinox-2019-climate-chaos-and-more.html
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Presentation by Prof. Tad Patzek – March 28, 2019
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The Advent of Extreme Weather Events and Climate Tipping Points
By Dr. Andrew Glikson
“Linear to curved temperature trends portrayed by the IPCC to the year 2300 are rare in the paleo-climate record, where abrupt warming and cooling are common during both glacial and interglacial periods. At +4 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial temperature, projected by the IPCC for the end of the 21st century, life on Earth could be depleted to levels such as existed in the wake of previous mass extinctions of species (see this).
There would be no smooth transition toward +4 degrees Celsius but irregular heating including a series of extreme weather events and transient temperature reversals induced by the flow of cold ice melt water from the melting glacial sheetsinto the oceans. Hansen et al. (2016) (see this) used paleoclimate data and modern observations to estimate the effects of ice melt water from Greenland and Antarctica, with cold low-density meltwater capping warmer subsurface ocean water. Ice mass loss would raise sea level by several and later tens of meters in an exponential rather than a linear response.”
https://www.globalresearch.ca/extreme-weather-events-climate-tipping-points/5671803
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Hey Apneaman, I quoted your excellent comment from the Tobis blog here: https://witsendnj.blogspot.com/2019/07/in-praise-of-themis.html
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An excellent study by Dr. Jem Bendell on near term collapse:
Click to access deepadaptation.pdf
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Don’t know how the + sign got added to my name – but is just plain me really.
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Where have all the doomers gone? Dead? Burned out? Gave up on the world?
Has the mass silence about the most pressing issue to ever face humankind finally squelched the would be Cassandras among us? Lack of interest in the dark treasure this site offers is a sign of the deadly indifference that will guarantee our extinction.
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Link to an interesting site exploring the psychology of denial of climate disaster:
https://climatepsychologyalliance.org/handbook/326-un-care
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Thanks for another great post xraymike79.
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Nick is one of my teachers… I learn from Nick, and love having him live on Environmental Coffeehouse. Thanks for this great interview! ~ Sandy~
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Ocean acidification continues to increase,even with geoengineering.
The northern section of the Great Barrier Reef is dead due to ocean heating.
Now the southernmost reef is affected. About ten years ago,it was thought that this would not occur until around 2100. The rapidity of the changes is incredible.
https://theconversation.com/bleaching-has-struck-the-southernmost-coral-reef-in-the-world-114433
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Rupert Read, Jem Bendell and Paul Ehrlich give industrial civilisation 10 yrs or less, Guy McPherson and I give it less than 5 years. Due to the loss of the aerosol masking effect and the melt down of the worlds 450+ nuclear plants and 1300 attendant spent fuel pool fires Guy and I believe that habitat on this planet will have been lost when I.D.Civ collapses.
As always I hope I’m wrong but it looks pretty clear to myself and GMP.
https://kevinhester.live/2018/12/28/this-civilisation-is-finished-ruppert-reid-paul-ehrlich-and-jem-bendell/
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I think 7.7 billion Clever Apes have done an excellent job of fubaring
their habitat.
In 1964 I watched a short report on the global population. At that point I realized
we might need to control the growth. I decided I would not add to the numbers.
I was expecting some critical thinking as the pop. grew.
Freedom allows one to be as dumb as possible.
What can we do? die!
This keeps my feet flat on the ground,along with George Carlin’s – The American Dream.
I’ve got to get back to the voices in my head.
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Mike K, we doomers are here but fatigued from dealing with the Trumptards and the corporate Demos. My few brilliant friends won’t discuss ecological doom while their children and grandchildren are still viable. I’ve been a nonbreeding tree hugger since 1970 thanks to Erlich. My stepdaughter is now a heroin addict and her children are inaccessible to me. I’ve chosen a harder life than most which was an excellent education for becoming a survivor. I just don’t see much reason for surviving much longer. I live in the beeless reptileless boonies. There is no escape from the coming nightmare while still breathing. Being of sound mind I just purchased a .45 and I hear Ruppert calling to me. The timing of my individual death is mine alone. It’s the warriors way.
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I hear you Sissyfuss, and I am not a stranger to thoughts of self deliverance myself. However my version of being a (peaceful) warrior includes the intention to take arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing them to give myself a reason to continue living. Given that our small power may seem insignificant against the mighty forces at work in the world, we can still make our last stand, even if it is in a losing cause. It is not whether one wins or loses, but how one fights the battle that makes the true warrior. We can choose to do the right thing to the end, no matter what forces inner or outer oppose our intention. In this way we make real our love of truth and everything beautiful on this planet
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Like Sissyfuss above, I’m fatigued and burned out. None of my doomer activities will make half as much difference to the future as my photography and compassion. So having rung the bell that can’t be un-rung, I watch from the sidelines as the rabbit kicks out its last survival instincts in the jaws of the fox. I am amazed at having been a part of the adventure.
Also like Sissyfuss, I have no offspring attaching me to this world. While I have not bought an exit gun (being Canada this is harder for me) I have lost my fear of death. Sitting with my wife as she died with medical assistance has scrubbed the last traces of Ernest Becker’s dread from my mind. I’m actually curious about what form my ending will take. Until then I watch, think and feel – and occasionally speak up if I feel moved, as I did here.
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Good to hear from you Paul. I remember your excellent ideas from years ago. I am 88 now, so I am getting too used to seeing friends drop out of earthly manifestation. You and I and many other “doomers” have realized that we have no way to stop the terrible karma humankind has created from unfolding as it will. I admire your stance of taking an observer position to what is happening. It’s no use being too closely identified with this unfolding disaster that we are powerless to stop. The preservation of our sanity and being of some value to those close to us demands that we step back from those things we cannot change, as well as mustering the courage to change those things we still can in our own small but valuable way. Cheers, and good traveling into that darkness that awaits us all. Your attitude reminds me of Socrates taking a keen interest in the process of his dying.
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Carriers of the Dark Knowledge
They were not found in the crowds
Celebrating this or that spectacle
nor in the workshops of the industrious
or the impoverished
They were hidden, but not hiding
Hard to find because no one was looking for them
You could brush against them in the street
but never know who they were, or what they were holding
in dark places deep within themselves
And yet these ultimate outsiders held a secret knowledge which if known by the masses would shatter their dreams
and reveal to them an unknown world that they were walking in every day – but as if asleep.
They patiently or painfully nurse their hidden knowing
wondering if it will ever be born into the light of everyday living.
But blessed or cursed to carry the secret knowledge of mankind’s destiny with no way of knowing if their gift would save or destroy everyone if it were known by all.
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Going to get worse before it gets nasty?
Wonder how long it would take the Clever Ape to trash their next planet?
Who said actions/lack of actions have consequences?
“And what we’ve been doing for the last 150 years is digging it all up and putting it back into the atmosphere,” said Siegert.
“It’s like a crazy experiment: ‘Let’s take that CO2 that took 100 million years to be sequestrated and put it back—instantly, on a geological timescale—in the atmosphere and see what happens'”.
https://m.phys.org/news/2019-04-dire-future-etched-co2-million.html
I’m an action kind of guy, how may I help speed up the collapse?
One can be sad or happy. I choose roflmao. 😉
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Some food for thought…
“If we don’t organize an emergency industrial shutdown and retrenchment of unnecessary production, superfluous manufacturing, superfluous electricity usage, wasteful over-consumption, nature is going to do it for us in a most unpleasant manner.”
Click to access whole87.pdf
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To the dedicated pessimists who are commenting: I hear you, and I bet I can paint a darker picture of our situation and our chances than you can. But I still have hope. Why is that?
1. There is no certainty about anything, there are only probabilities. There is no certainty that our darkest predictions will turn out as we fear.
2. Hope is a fruitful strategy that has a better chance of yielding positive outcomes than pessimism. Plus, hope let’s me navigate my life more happily, and may also help others feel better too.
3. Feeling there is no hope kills my motivation to do anything, even continue living. Why would I want to do that, since the alternative of entertaining hope is free, and no one can take it away from me?
4. Very few people give a shit what I think about anything, so it is unlikely that my (consciously engaged) hopium will spread and become an epidemic of false hope adding to the certainty of our mass extinction.
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A couple interesting things in the news:
1.) This is a sweeping article (actually excerpt from upcoming book) indicating how humans could go extinct. It all comes down to food and how climate change will disrupt our ability to grow, distribute, and sell it. Science can only help so much, but there are limits and we’re hitting them. The costs of maintaining this far-flung and intensive food production system will be eaten up by global warming and climate change. Modern man lives a few short meals from anarchy…
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/bill-mckibben-falter-climate-change-817310/
2.) New EU report brings up the possibility of human extinction if we exceed just 1.5°C…”An increase of 1.5 degrees is the maximum the planet can tolerate; should temperatures increase further beyond 2030, we will face even more droughts, floods, extreme heat and poverty for hundreds of millions of people; the likely demise of the most vulnerable populations – and at worst, the extinction of humankind altogether.”
Click to access ESPAS_Report2019.pdf
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I find it kind of amusing that the bible thumpers claim(ed) that the end of the world would come as an unexpected surprise. We could see it comming from a long long way(s?) away. No the exact details were beyond our grasp. But not the general trends.
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One of the things that is destroying our hopes for a happier, sustainable world is lying. The noosphere (the dimension of memes and thoughtforms) that surrounds us all on Earth is becoming so polluted with lies and delusions that people everywhere are losing their bearings and have no reliable compass to assess reality. These falsehoods which people in large numbers are imbibing are like viruses that take over the mental apparatus of individuals, and then use their hosts to further spread their mischief. This toxic atmosphere of misinformation and lies is undermining the mental health of the human population and propelling us towards destroying each other on the basis of false information we have imbibed and are acting on, unaware of the madness we are perpetrating.
Unless enough of us awaken to the danger this situation is generating, we will end up destroying each other on the basis of a pack of lies. There is a desperate need for those awake to waken others who are under the influence of our inauthentic culture before our darkened minds trigger a final cataclysm.
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Another way to put it is that humankind is devolving into insanity, and losing it’s grip on reality. We need truth therapy in the worst way! The images on the walls of our caves are turning to nightmare…..
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Our ancient motives as animals in nature were to eat, defend ourselves, and reproduce. In order to eat we learned to hunt and attack and consume other life forms, plant and animal in nature. We also learned to band together and attack other humans as a way to gain territory.
In modern times we still operate from fear, greed, and aggression. Our complex societies use these primitive tendencies to mold our lives and control us. Higher mental functions that open choices and possibilities beyond our selfish and greedy selves have not yet proven well developed enough to elevate our lives together to a higher level. In fact, those who have come to rule over us exploit our primitive tendencies in order to control and exploit us through manipulative education, advertising, and propaganda. Our fears, greed, and aggressive tendencies are stoked to our detriment. We have become victims of our lower tendencies, and are encouraged to be so by all the means of modern social conditioning.
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Dear Mike,
First of all, as a longtime follower of yours, may I say thank you for all your posts. I miss them when there is a long pause. I do not wish to take up too much of your time, so I will be as brief as possible. I have been a follower of many key commentators on our world’s gathering plight for around 13 years now. In recent months, I have been swayed by Jem Bendell’s conclusions, the Green New Deal, Greta Thunberg’s remarkable rise and the building momentum of the Extinction Rebellion. However, on discovering the what appears-to-be well-informed and incisive website, wrongkindofgreen.org, I am now deeply perplexed by these recent social movements and find myself wondering whether they are not in fact being orchestrated by those in power, as explained in depth in any number of its posts over the recent past: “With “capitalism in danger of falling apart” and years of stagnant global economic growth now in a free fall, the Greta campaign must be understood for what it is. An elaborate distraction that has nothing to do with protecting the natural world, and everything to do with the manufacturing of consent. The required consent of the citizenry that will unlock the treasuries and public monies under the guise of climate protection.” I would very much appreciate hearing what you have to say on this subject: are we all being manipulated and duped by a ruling elite who have been awaiting this moment all along?
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That the Deep State, Empire, Powers That Be – would try to own and profit from any “green” movements is of course inevitable. The restructuring and rethinking of human’s role on Earth needs to go deep into the roots of our problems, because half measures will be ineffective, and only prolong our agonies before extinction. Capitalism – a fancy word for selfish greed – is one of those fundamental errors guaranteed to produce escalating failure. The “success” of China and Russia in outflanking the Empire, should not lead us to ignore their embrace of endless growth as a goal for their societies. Their victories are actually stepping stones to our extinction. They also are touting ineffective gestures at green development to justify their primary focus on unlimited growth and power.
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BTW I too am a recluse, holed up in the woods.
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To answer your question, I refer you to this essay:
https://williambowles.info/2019/04/29/trees-dont-grow-on-money-or-why-you-dont-get-to-rebel-against-extinction-by-tim-hayward/#more-104081
I would say capitalism’s need to commodify nature is the problem, and it will never be able to properly address the sustainability problem for that reason.
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Why does Humphrey claim CO2 is 500ppm when it is only 414ppm? Destroys credibility, which is a shame.
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No, you are wrong:
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the most common GHG emitted by human activities, in terms of the quantity released and the total impact on global warming. As a result the term “CO2” is sometimes used as a shorthand expression for all greenhouse gases, however, this can cause confusion, and a more accurate way of referring to a number of GHGs collectively is to use the term “carbon dioxide equivalent” or “CO2e”. Because CO2 is considered the most important greenhouse gas some GHG assessments or reports only include CO2, and don’t consider the other greenhouse gases, and this can lead to an understatement of total global warming impact. Greenhouse gas inventories are more complete if they include all GHGs and not just CO2. Carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) “Carbon dioxide equivalent” or “CO2e” is a term for describing different greenhouse gases in a common unit. For any quantity and type of greenhouse gas, CO2e signifies the amount of CO2 which would have the equivalent global warming impact. – link
The current CO2e is indeed around 500ppm and growing. Note this article back in 2009:
Calculations catalogued by the 2007 IPCC report tell us that if global temperature rise is to be kept between 2.0 and 2.4°C, then the ‘CO2 equivalent’ concentration, which is used as a combined measure of all Kyoto greenhouse gases, must not be allowed to exceed the range between 445 and 490 parts per million (ppm). Current CO2 equivalent emissions are 455 ppm and rising.
The 2007 Stern Review warned about the consequences of reaching a concentration of 550ppm CO2(e): “The annual flow of emissions is accelerating, as fast-growing economies invest in high carbon infrastructure and as demand for energy and transport increases around the world. The level of 550ppm CO2e could be reached as early as 2035.”
The Stern Review indicated that it will be very difficult to stabilize CO2 in the atmosphere at a level below 450ppm: “Anything lower would certainly impose very high adjustment costs in the near term for small gains and might not even be feasible, not least because of past delays in taking strong action”.
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http:/www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/sternreview_index.htm
https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/michael-mccarthy-analysis-inaction-spells-a-world-of-floods-drought-and-economic-disaster-5331141.html
Robert Scribbler wrote an article in 2016 discussing CO2e:
These atmospheric concentrations are now roughly equivalent to the lower range CO2 levels of the Middle Miocene climate epoch of 14-16 million years ago. Meanwhile, atmospheric CO2 equivalent concentrations, which include other greenhouse gasses like methane, averaged 485 parts per million in 2015 and likely were around 490 parts per million during 2016. These CO2e values approach the upper Middle Miocene range.
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Thanks for the clarification. You are correct. I misread the article (read too quickly). This level of CO2e implies that we are “dead men walking”. It’s now only a matter of time….
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Paul and Anne Ehrlich:
https://independentaustralia.net/environment/environment-display/the-world-is-doomed-according-to-paul-ehrlich,12617
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It’s true, most people alive today don’t have a clue what’s going on in the world. They live in their little bubble of unexamined beliefs. Plato was right about that.
It is a truly daunting challenge to throw one’s puny strength against the huge fire breathing dragon of an Evil Empire.
And to be true to the truth one seeks to serve, one must acknowledge that terrible times are upon us, and worse are certain to be coming. To lie to ourselves or others about that would be a disservice to the truth we wish to prevail, and hamper us in dealing with what is surely to come. False promises will work against us, causing us to create a form of the denial which is such a powerful part of all that is insuring our doom.
How to persist in the face of what is probably a lost cause is our problem. To do what is right and honor our ideals in spite of the near certainty of failure is the high destiny we are called to. I will not pretend the situation is other than what it is.
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LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE IS A DYNAMIC AND CHALLENGING PROCESS. In the human domain, the challenge to life is to create a cooperative culture among intelligent beings. If this goal is not realized, then the human species will fail and destroy itself. A world order based on selfishness is unsustainable.
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Children are the victims of the domination/submission games that adults impose on them “for their own good.” Adults pretend to be not only more knowledgeable than their children, but also wiser than them, often posing as being infallible. To question or disobey the ideas and instructions of an adult is considered to be a fault in the child; obedience is valued above all else. To unquestioningly obey is to be considered a “good child”. Conformity to the adult’s understanding of cultural norms and values is expected.
The problem with parents passing on the wisdom of our culture, is that the culture is not wise, but terribly off base, and has actually become evil and dysfunctional for transmitting real benign human values. We are pressured to submit to a broken culture. The pressure to make the meaning of our lives the accumulation of money and things is an example of the flawed teaching of our culture.
The world that is presented to us by our parents is a constructed fantasy that is deeply flawed and toxic. The truth we were taught is actually a lie.
While we are analyzing and basing projections of probable futures on the basis of the understandable political and economic forces that have determined things for thousands of years, nature is unleashing the physical forces that we have thoughtlessly provoked guaranteeing an end to our foolishness by causing our extinction. We will be mercilessly blindsided while immersed in ideas that are no longer relevant to our survival.
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It’s been a long time since I’ve listened to Radio Ecoshock, but I doubt there has been a guest who has laid out the harsh reality like Nick Humphrey did, illustrating so well how abrupt climate change is happening as we speak right under our noses:
https://www.ecoshock.org/2019/05/harsh-news-from-the-weatherman.html
That analogy that Alex used about someone coming into a classroom each day and shooting a random student while the surviving kids are being told not to talk about it is the perfect analogy for our climate breakdown that no government is realistically dealing with. Ironically in America, that analogy is true both literally and figuratively as we have the highest rate of mass shootings of all “developed countries” COMBINED… https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/21/us/school-shooting-us-versus-world-trnd/index.html
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While we are analyzing and basing projections of probable futures on the basis of the understandable political and economic forces that have determined things for thousands of years, nature is unleashing the physical forces that we have thoughtlessly provoked, guaranteeing an end to our foolishness by causing our extinction. We will be mercilessly blindsided while immersed in ideas that are no longer relevant to our survival.
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Pingback: Briefly Noted (1 May 2019) | The Wild Will Project
Jay Hanson Dies in Diving Accident, April 9, 2019
“Last week Nate Hagens informed me of some sad news and offered a brief reflection:
Friends, I was informed by Jay Hanson’s wife today that he died unexpectedly on a diving trip in Indonesia.
Many of us were greatly influenced by Jay’s thinking and writing over the years and the many listservs and websites he curated, starting with ‘brainfood’ in the 1990s. Jay had a world class mind and was the first person I came across to integrate the ‘big picture’ – environment and economic issues but particularly human behavior and ‘net energy’.”
“Jay kept the basic story of the human predicament (as he understood it) archived at dieoff.org—a website whose name reflected his view of humanity’s future. However, he did not write a book on the subject, and therefore didn’t develop a wide reputation outside the circles of readers who somehow found their way to his fairly obscure sites. Nevertheless, his influence spread far and wide. I owe him a debt of gratitude.”
https://www.resilience.org/stories/2019-04-09/jay-hanson-dies-in-diving-accident/
“readers who somehow found their way to his fairly obscure sites.” – ya searchers looking for answers few if any scientists were talking about and/or connecting all those troubling dots.
Apparently, Jay died the day after diving. R.I.P. brother. You were ahead of most.
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Sorry to hear that.
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We will all individually be leaving soon enough, perhaps before the shit really hits the fan. But we are drawn to sites like this one because of our concern for our species. Sometimes I feel like saying to hell with the human species, we deserve to be extincted. But then I hear from other voices within me that say “don’t give up yet, there may be a way out of our self-created problems – keep searching….”
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Deep trust is based on the expectation of Love. When one has consistently been met with Love, then one trusts that this will continue to be the case, and one will be safe in the arms of Love whatever happens. The goal of human society should be to create this Loving, Trusting environment for all within its embrace. In a society dedicated to Truth, Love, Beauty, and Happiness – everyone will feel safe and cared for, and trust others to always do the right and Loving thing. In a world based on selfishness and distrust, fear and aggression will be the atmosphere, eventually leading to mutual annihilation.
The above statement is about our goal to aim for and achieve sometime in the future. Getting there will be a long path and a gradual development. Whether we commit to that path will determine whether our species survives much longer on Earth. Human history has been a long story about bringing this supreme purpose to live on the basis of Unconditional Love to the surface of our individual and collective consciousness, and realizing it’s blessing in the reality of our lives together.
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49% ? More like 99%.
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2019/05/jared-diamond-on-his-new-book-upheaval.html?fbclid=IwAR0fCY9Dw1QQGyjl0S-HLsq4S6mHabIIweWC-MBUjMIwb4HwNGjb9TM3ztI
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100% certain since we are essentially doing nothing to stop it, have grossly underestimated the speed of deterioration, and have put faith in magical technologies which have no realistic way to deal with the scale of the problem. 99.9% of the population remains ignorant of these realities and indeed optimism bias prevents it.
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‘This underlines the urgency of ending all anthropogenic carbon emissions before 2030,if we are to have a chance of stabilising the climate below the methane threshold’
I wish Julian well ,but it is delusional to think that there is any chance of zero emissions by 2030.
https://mahb.stanford.edu/blog/surviving-21st-century-mahb-dialogue-science-journalist-author-julian-cribb/
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Ted Patzek: There will not be a 20th doubling either. Climatic disruptions to food-producing areas are becoming more obvious even now.
http://patzek-lifeitself.blogspot.com/2019/06/green-new-deal-part-ii.html
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Climate emergency? It’s going to look,smell and taste fantastic. All is well.
https://www.resilience.org/stories/2019-06-03/why-the-next-12-years-could-be-the-making-of-us/
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More hopium, like this one:
https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/447311-markets-can-handle-climate-change
It’s especially costly when there are no people to buy your products. Consigning humanity to a whole new and ever-worsening climate regime is a crime against humanity.
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Hopium and deflection. It never ends. CO2 is ‘plant food’,so climate disruption is not of concern. As inane as the ‘ Humans exhale x thousands ppm CO2 ,so how can 400 or 500 be a problem ?’ drivel.
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https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/447311-markets-can-handle-climate-change
William Shughart (author of this op-ed) was a long-time flack for the tobacco industry. He was a central figure in the Cash for Comments Economists Network. Professor of “Public Choice” – right… The Public Choice Society was founded by a bunch of extreme libertarian economists. In 1985, Shughart filed a protest when the General Services Administration (which manages U.S. govt. facilities) proposed a rule to make all U.S. federal buildings smoke-free — the costs would be too high due to lost work time if government employees weren’t allowed to smoke at their desks.
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https://theconversation.com/why-theres-more-greenhouse-gas-in-the-atmosphere-than-you-may-have-realised-118336
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