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  3. ‘It’s too late’: David Suzuki says the fight against climate change is lost - iPolitics

‘It’s too late’: David Suzuki says the fight against climate change is lost - iPolitics

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  • V voroxpete@sh.itjust.works

    Even if we do pass some kind of “tipping point” (and you need to understand that every tipping point is just an arbitrary line that climate scientists draw to try to draw people’s attention to the problem), we can still mitigate the damage. There is never a point where fighting climate change becomes worthless. The less we do now, the greater the damage will be in the future. That’s all there is to it. Tipping points are just a way of illustrating that.

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    humanspiral@lemmy.ca
    wrote last edited by
    #100

    every tipping point is just an arbitrary line that climate scientists draw to try to draw people’s attention to the problem

    The +1.5C threshold is a somewhat arbitrary line designed around tipping points. The tipping points themselves are not imaginary/arbitrary. Forest fire spread increase. Methane defrosting. Polar melting path certainty. All of these increase GHGs and warming. Hurricane intensity+drought+intense rainfall events destroying property values is somewhat of an economic tipping point starting to affect some right now.

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    • J jafffacakelemmy@mander.xyz

      In your car crash analogy, we are now past the point where hitting the brakes will help. The car will be irrepairably destroyed and all passengers will be killed.

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      humanspiral@lemmy.ca
      wrote last edited by
      #101

      I think we’re past the point of the car hitting the wall even if we brake, and the damage ruining your day. We’re not past the point that braking will save lives or even make the car unrepairable.

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      • A asg101@lemmy.ca

        How to say Marx was right without saying “Marx was right”.

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        sektor@lemmy.world
        wrote last edited by
        #102

        Futurama, Crimes of the hot episode was a prophecy

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        • A asg101@lemmy.ca

          How to say Marx was right without saying “Marx was right”.

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          electric_nan@lemmy.ml
          wrote last edited by
          #103

          All that’s left is to make the rich suffer.

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          • M mad_lentil@lemmy.ca

            There’s also the biosphere to think about. Even in we go, it doesn’t mean that all life has to go with us

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            snowies@lemmy.zip
            wrote last edited by snowies@lemmy.zip
            #104

            We kill 80 billion land animals per year for factory farming and we’ve caused almost 2 species of animal per year, every year, to go completely extinct over the last 500 years.

            We are going to destroy almost all life on this planet.

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            • M mad_lentil@lemmy.ca

              There’s also the biosphere to think about. Even in we go, it doesn’t mean that all life has to go with us

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              saigot@lemmy.ca
              wrote last edited by
              #105

              Even if we intentionally released as much co2 as we could all life on earth is not at risk. Remember that there’s a fair amount of life that is virtually unchanged since the paleozoic period when all that co2 was in the air. Beyond that there’s stuff that hangs out in volcanic vents, rapidly evolving life that can adapt even to rapid change, bacteria, molds, mosses and algae. And who knows maybe there’s even a small adaptable mammal or 2 that gets out and evolves enough for a second attempt at sapience.

              Don’t get me wrong the climate disaster is truly a unique and devastating extinction event, but humans are not so powerful as to leave the earth a completely lifeless rock.

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              • M mtk@lemmy.world

                Human civilization is bound to die at some point. If we give up now it will just happen faster and with more suffering. If we fight we will still improve things, maybe not everything will be okay, but when has it ever been?

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                hasturinyellow@lemmy.world
                wrote last edited by
                #106

                I suppose it wasn’t clear in my comment but I’m not advocating for doing nothing. Just to have realistic expectations about what is possible. If you sell everyone on reversing everything, and then fail, it will breed discontent further than being honest. That’s all.

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                • A asg101@lemmy.ca

                  How to say Marx was right without saying “Marx was right”.

                  I Cast FistI This user is from outside of this forum
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                  I Cast Fist
                  wrote last edited by
                  #107

                  Thanks to big corporations effectively owning governments and big politicians the world over, things aren’t bound to get better anytime soon, because “the economy”. Fuck that shit

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                  • S saigot@lemmy.ca

                    Even if we intentionally released as much co2 as we could all life on earth is not at risk. Remember that there’s a fair amount of life that is virtually unchanged since the paleozoic period when all that co2 was in the air. Beyond that there’s stuff that hangs out in volcanic vents, rapidly evolving life that can adapt even to rapid change, bacteria, molds, mosses and algae. And who knows maybe there’s even a small adaptable mammal or 2 that gets out and evolves enough for a second attempt at sapience.

                    Don’t get me wrong the climate disaster is truly a unique and devastating extinction event, but humans are not so powerful as to leave the earth a completely lifeless rock.

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                    mad_lentil@lemmy.ca
                    wrote last edited by
                    #108

                    So this is the meagre hope I cling to now. I guess it’ll have to do.

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                    • J jafffacakelemmy@mander.xyz

                      In your car crash analogy, we are now past the point where hitting the brakes will help. The car will be irrepairably destroyed and all passengers will be killed.

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                      anomnom@sh.itjust.works
                      wrote last edited by
                      #109

                      We haven’t taken our foot off the gas and legislators are stopping us from even touching the brake pedal.

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                      • J joonazan@discuss.tchncs.de

                        I think it helps to look at other problems caused by fossil fuel use. Higher CO2 concentrations make breathing air worse. Ocean acidification kills fish etc.

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                        jason2357@lemmy.ca
                        wrote last edited by
                        #110

                        I think the bigger impact is thinking about changing weather patterns long term leading to new and larger deserts in the centres of continents and regular, massive storms on the coasts. That’s a changing climate beyond “everybody is a few degrees hotter” that is implied by global warming. CO2 isn’t going to effect breathing, but does cause acidification.

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                        • B breadoven@lemmy.world

                          Good point. I try my best, but even if like 90 % of the population tried harder, it would barely offset the billionaire companies killing our planet.

                          They’re the problem, always has been that way.

                          I think it’s time to stop them.

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                          jason2357@lemmy.ca
                          wrote last edited by
                          #111

                          This simply isn’t correct. While the billionaires yacht fleet and jet setting make them have insane carbon footprints individually, it is their business practices that actually register in terms of contributing significant chunks of the carbon budget for humanity. Bezo’s jets and yachts pale in comparison to Amazons delivery fleet and manufacturing all that junk. It’s counterproductive to focus on their personal emissions, when it’s the interaction of their businesses, government, and consumers that are burning the earth. We have 2 levers on that problem.

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                          • H humanspiral@lemmy.ca

                            The actual problem is democratic oligarchism/zionism/neocon warmongering/US colonialism. Protecting establishment is easily supported when higher priorities than human sustainability can be manufactured. The more miserable you are made, the less you care about “higher level Maslow hierarchy needs” at political level.

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                            jargonwagon@lemmy.world
                            wrote last edited by
                            #112

                            The best way to reduce all the excess manufacturing for livestock is by not buying it their products. If it’s all about ROI for them, give them a reason to reduce their manufacturing with your purchasing power.

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                            • B but_my_mom_says_im_cool@lemmy.world

                              The best we can do for the planet is toss a few billionaires into a volcano as a sacrifice to earth

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                              breadoven@lemmy.world
                              wrote last edited by
                              #113

                              I’m down.

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                              • J jason2357@lemmy.ca

                                This simply isn’t correct. While the billionaires yacht fleet and jet setting make them have insane carbon footprints individually, it is their business practices that actually register in terms of contributing significant chunks of the carbon budget for humanity. Bezo’s jets and yachts pale in comparison to Amazons delivery fleet and manufacturing all that junk. It’s counterproductive to focus on their personal emissions, when it’s the interaction of their businesses, government, and consumers that are burning the earth. We have 2 levers on that problem.

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                                breadoven@lemmy.world
                                wrote last edited by
                                #114

                                You’re right. I was thinking more about the individuals responsible capture and refining of fossil fuels.

                                But the pretty ubiquitous use of Amazon delivery does greatly contribute a lot. Didn’t really think about it in that aspect. Thanks for pointing that out.

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                                • E electric_nan@lemmy.ml

                                  All that’s left is to make the rich suffer.

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                                  asg101@lemmy.ca
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #115

                                  “The Earth is not dying, it is being killed, and those who are killing it have names and addresses.”

                                  ~Utah Phillips

                                  Inb4 some pedant quibbles that “the planet itself is not dying.” Yeah, but we and our fellow creatures are. It should be understood that is what Mr. Phillips meant.

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                                  • I Cast FistI I Cast Fist

                                    Thanks to big corporations effectively owning governments and big politicians the world over, things aren’t bound to get better anytime soon, because “the economy”. Fuck that shit

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                                    tankovayadiviziya@lemmy.world
                                    wrote last edited by tankovayadiviziya@lemmy.world
                                    #116

                                    And thank the Saudis too. Guess where the previous conference on phasing out fossil fuel, but agreed to slow down the process, was held.

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                                    • N needmorelimes@lemmy.ca

                                      I think he’s right, but he’s also a real asshole and lives in a mansion in Vancouver and likely creates more environmental damage than the average human

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                                      fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #117

                                      Most everyone who’s even slightly well off in north America creates significantly more environmental damage than the average human

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                                      • A asg101@lemmy.ca

                                        How to say Marx was right without saying “Marx was right”.

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                                        snowclone@lemmy.world
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #118

                                        1950’s oil execs funded studies that show how they will kill the planet if they don’t stop, transition to something else, hell they had enough fore warning they could have R&D’d solar and monopolize the tech, but NO! They needed to make faster money faster and stopping yourself from killing the human race isn’t THAT important, and they knew they’d be dead by now.

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                                        • B but_my_mom_says_im_cool@lemmy.world

                                          I’m sick of this WE, im not a billionaire pumping more Co2 per day with my yacht fleet than a town of people do in their life. I’m sick of being blamed for this shit, when all my conservation is undone in a minute by a corporation. I refuse to take equal blame any longer

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                                          korhaka@sopuli.xyz
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #119

                                          A lot of people in western countries are living unsustainable lifestyles. Yes we need to target the billionaires too, but that alone won’t solve it. Also stop buying their shit. Actually, just stop buying shit in the first place as that is a large part of the problem.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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