2018-04-26 Climate Change ========================= Climate change, again, and other things: 'We're doomed': Mayer Hillman on the climate reality no one else will dare mention. On traffic and how we have handed over public space to cars: > In 1971, 80% of British seven- and eight-year-old children went to > school on their own; today it’s virtually unthinkable that a > seven-year-old would walk to school without an adult. As Hillman has > pointed out, we’ve removed children from danger rather than removing > danger from children – and filled roads with polluting cars on > school runs. He calculated that escorting children took 900m adult > hours in 1990, costing the economy £20bn each year. It will be even > more expensive today. Remember The Modern Moloch on 99% Invisible? Sacrifices to the Modern Moloch (1923) On the futility of individual action, and the futility of national action. Only the collapse will bring about the change in behaviour required. > Although Hillman has not flown for more than 20 years as part of a > personal commitment to reducing carbon emissions, he is now scornful > of individual action which he describes as “as good as futile”. By > the same logic, says Hillman, national action is also irrelevant > “because Britain’s contribution is minute. Even if the government > were to go to zero carbon it would make almost no difference.” > > Instead, says Hillman, the world’s population must globally move to > zero emissions across agriculture, air travel, shipping, heating > homes – every aspect of our economy – and reduce our human > population too. Can it be done without a collapse of civilisation? > “I don’t think so,” says Hillman. “Can you see everyone in a > democracy volunteering to give up flying? Can you see the majority > of the population becoming vegan? Can you see the majority agreeing > to restrict the size of their families?” And he connects it with migration, of course. So many strings, being tied together. > “And who is ‘we’?” asks Hillman with a typically impish smile. > “Wealthy people will be better able to adapt but the world’s > population will head to regions of the planet such as northern > Europe which will be temporarily spared the extreme effects of > climate change. How are these regions going to respond? We see it > now. Migrants will be prevented from arriving. We will let them > drown.” It’s articles like these that confirm my intention to donate a bit to The Guardian every year. Also good: Is this how you feel? The Scientists. Interesting! ​#Climate 2018-05-14. I liked Solderpunk’s comment on the futility of individual action, via gopher. 2018-09-10. Interestingly, The Guardian is tooting the same horn: Neoliberalism has conned us into fighting climate change as individuals. 100 companies are responsible for 71% of the carbon emissions. We need collective action to stop them. 2018-10-02. Sometimes I feel like maybe this will be called the last long and beautiful hot summer we’ve had because we still remember rainy and cloudy summers from before the climate apocalypse. 2024-03-14. @Sandra@idiomdrottning.org recently posted about this on fedi. > However, here was the problem: The study did not assess all sources > of global emissions worldwide (which includes agriculture, > transportation, buildings’ heating and cooling systems) but rather > only analyzed the output of fossil-fuel producers, specifically. – > Snopes She's very critical of Mayor Hillman and wrote more on her blog post, Fake good news about our real bad habits.