#1
If you live in the US, or anywhere else in the world you can't have missed all the floods.

As we pass our billionth "once in a thousand years" flood, this sort of probability description is starting to look a bit wrong to everyone, these aren’t once in a thousand years or w/evs, they're now very common. Prepare for floods.


Recently Louisiana has been under water

You may not know that other places have also been underwater this year, the following countries have also had fatal floods: Brazil, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Nepal, Niger, South Africa, China, Turkey, Australia, Germany, France, UK

Why so much water falling from the sky? well welcome to 2016 (now), the hottest month ever recorded by a human ever (july) has just gone by, marking 10 consecutive months of "hottest ever months" - more heat = more evaporation and greater volume of water that the air can hold before dumping it all at once.


Floods are gross, they wash soil, as well as all the sewage (people's shit) across and into everything, including into people houses, as well as spreading rubbish and dead things everywhere, that means disease. They contaminate water, disrupt services, make getting food difficult, damage critical infrastructure, destroy property, cause landslides, ruin agriculture and kill people. Prepare for more floods.



What a flood looks like:





Other things that are going on in the world:

permafrost melting in siberia defrosted a reindeer with anthrax, and people got anthrax, the first outbreak in russia for 85ish years

The biggest arctic storm since the 2012 arctic mega cyclone currently going on right now. fun fact: 2012 also holds the record for the lowest arctic ice extent ever recorded, coincidence? (no)

Really bad fires in the US, Canada, Russia, Spain, Portugal, France etc, despite this year being the year of floods

Atmospheric CO2 still going up, we are way above 400ppm atm, and over 490ppm of CO2 + equivalents

20+% of the coral on the great barrier reef died this year in one big go

An impressive forest fire season is predicted for the Amazon this year.

& much more + more 2 come!


Bonus video (breaking news) (fires) (wow)

#2
Even in the right wing estimation we should all be starting to panic, were it not just a bullshit excuse. "The sun is just getting a lot hotter" uhhh that is some Krypton shit, personally I'd prefer if it was just the garbage we dump into the atmosphere as we have some means whatsoever to stop that
#3
the most racist wildfire yet

#4
Fucking fires. What I can't get over is how many are started by arsonists.



This one is from the other day in Galicia, (west coast of Spain). One point after the other burst into flame; equal distances apart, right on the ridge of the hill to catch the wind and an hour before darkness, ensuring the firefighting planes can't operate.
#5
from Texas today

#6
My parents house got 5 ft of water in it last June lol
#7
dunno if any of you saw it but there were some media articles covering a report on the optimal use of land vs different american diets, anyway they butchered the report even more than usual

http://imgur.com/a/DJx3j



#8
that Smiling White Woman Eating Salad looks even more ghoulish than usual, good choice by the editors
#9
really wont be able to judge until you post your ghoulist salad pics
#10
whats the carying capacity of the USA based on a diet scenario where its settler population is dispersed throughout the world and is living on 1 bowl of rice/day?
#11
hi its me your pal cassandra, here to say i fucking told you this was going to happen months ago



#12
Is that bad? My deli seems to still be producing sandwiches reliably.
#13
yeah mate its fucking terrible, but the additional forcast arctic storm(s) are going to make it way worse

on the "great arctic cyclone" of 2016: https://robertscribbler.com/2016/08/18/warm-arctic-storm-tearing-sea-ice-to-shreds-amidst-big-2016-heat-spike/
#14
Lol holy shit I haven't looked at a map like that since last summer. We are legit all gonna die lmao.
#15
well, greenland is finally greenland at least
#16
Eh I have been watching this thread but not contributing to it cause I am depresed as fuck and currently drunk as fuck. When I am feeling better I will give you more shit to be depressed with
#17
Holy shit how do we fix this? Leftism seems to be gaining ground too slowly at the moment to be able to stop the entire world's destruction, and capitalism will obviously not work to fix this. Is this really the end of humanity?
#18

colddays posted:

Holy shit how do we fix this? Leftism seems to be gaining ground too slowly at the moment to be able to stop the entire world's destruction, and capitalism will obviously not work to fix this. Is this really the end of humanity?


Hopefully

#19
holy FUCK straight up coming out of the blue to Flappo the shit out of these rookies. Legendary stuff bro.
#20
There's very few people I interact with that actually deny climate change. But they believe capitalism will be able to solve the problems presented by climate change. It goes anywhere from the apathetic saying "we'll find a way" to fucking dumbass NERDS saying "once we invent and implement *FUCKING NERD SHIT*, we'll be fine".
Everyone is hoping that climate change can be prevented in our existing framework. They're wrong. And once they realize how wrong they are, it'll be too late.
#21
well your friends aren't wrong. capitalism will find a way to solve the problems of accumulating capital during a time of climate change. capitalism will "find a way" and will almost certainly invent a bunch of fucking nerd shit.

you're still gonna be starving and melt to death though because you won't be able to afford it, but maybe you'll just be destroyed by a super powered storm instead
#22
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#23
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#24
Capitalism will find a way to solve climate charge, for some values of "solve." The market will respond to demand for mild summer retreats with rustic-themed 5 star villas in Antarctica
#25
i googled louisiana underwater (i forget if i saw stuff about that here or elsewhere) and interestingly all the hits are from the national review and sites called like AngryPatriotMovement and they're all mad at obama for it because hes on vacation.

but what i was trying to find was this:


louisiana isnt even remotely the shape we think it is
https://medium.com/matter/louisiana-loses-its-boot-b55b3bd52d1e#.qo5wsrkho
#26

glomper_stomper posted:

MarxUltor posted:

well your friends aren't wrong. capitalism will find a way to solve the problems of accumulating capital during a time of climate change. capitalism will "find a way" and will almost certainly invent a bunch of fucking nerd shit.

you're still gonna be starving and melt to death though because you won't be able to afford it, but maybe you'll just be destroyed by a super powered storm instead

i don't know dude. i think you're underestimating the militancy of labor in the most affected areas of our lifetime. i'm talking about the US south, the coastal regions, the middle east, latin america, and all that shit; if you're living in the midwest or the north, you're pretty much going to be fine until you're dead and everyone you know is dead.

also millions of people might die in the process of environmental dislocation, plague, imperialist war, class struggle, and diminishing means of production but this would be a return to the norm in terms of historical conditions.

the big man upstairs once said that nuclear weapons were paper tigers and, even if half of china was absolutely obliterated, the other half would carry on the struggle and help rebuild society. you could apply the same logic to all of humanity in this case, insofar as the planet isn't going to turn into giedi prime for another half a million years or something.


The changes are going to be gradual, incremental, and dispersed. You're not going to lose Pensacola overnight, no matter how much everyone might want to. You'll lose a portion of a neighborhood over a few years as the water creeps up their back yards and they disperse one by one.

Farms are going to fail on the frontiers of advancing desert and failing wells. Yields will decrease. Food prices will gradually increase.

Exxon will lose a refinery, they'll rebuild it inland. They'll get tax breaks and federal reconstruction money. They'll still pass the cost along to the consumers, the poor will pay more for gas, and everything else.

Persons displaced from the coasts will have had their property rendered worthless. Capital will build apartments though, so they can be rent-paying tenants for life instead of secure property owners.

Millions of people are going to die but it's not going to make the news. It'll be a poor family with malnutrition dying of disease in Mississippi. A few more people dying of heat stroke. A few people taken out by bacteria in the water. Snakebites as animals are pushed from inundating wetlands into human contact. Lots of disease though. Pharma's gonna have us all covered there, as long as you can pay. Probably lots of crime, as displaced people who have lost all their property and historical livelihoods tend to end up with few options otherwise.

Life will just get incrementally worse for the working class and incrementally more profitable for capitalism as each new facet of the climate change impact is uncovered.

#27
America spends billions on sustainable fuel production research. It's done by the Navy so we can keep murdering people with biodiesel if petroleum becomes a problem. Paint the earth red with the blood of the poor, greenly.
#28

MarxUltor posted:

glomper_stomper posted:

MarxUltor posted:

well your friends aren't wrong. capitalism will find a way to solve the problems of accumulating capital during a time of climate change. capitalism will "find a way" and will almost certainly invent a bunch of fucking nerd shit.

you're still gonna be starving and melt to death though because you won't be able to afford it, but maybe you'll just be destroyed by a super powered storm instead

i don't know dude. i think you're underestimating the militancy of labor in the most affected areas of our lifetime. i'm talking about the US south, the coastal regions, the middle east, latin america, and all that shit; if you're living in the midwest or the north, you're pretty much going to be fine until you're dead and everyone you know is dead.

also millions of people might die in the process of environmental dislocation, plague, imperialist war, class struggle, and diminishing means of production but this would be a return to the norm in terms of historical conditions.

the big man upstairs once said that nuclear weapons were paper tigers and, even if half of china was absolutely obliterated, the other half would carry on the struggle and help rebuild society. you could apply the same logic to all of humanity in this case, insofar as the planet isn't going to turn into giedi prime for another half a million years or something.

The changes are going to be gradual, incremental, and dispersed. You're not going to lose Pensacola overnight, no matter how much everyone might want to. You'll lose a portion of a neighborhood over a few years as the water creeps up their back yards and they disperse one by one.

Farms are going to fail on the frontiers of advancing desert and failing wells. Yields will decrease. Food prices will gradually increase.

Exxon will lose a refinery, they'll rebuild it inland. They'll get tax breaks and federal reconstruction money. They'll still pass the cost along to the consumers, the poor will pay more for gas, and everything else.

Persons displaced from the coasts will have had their property rendered worthless. Capital will build apartments though, so they can be rent-paying tenants for life instead of secure property owners.

Millions of people are going to die but it's not going to make the news. It'll be a poor family with malnutrition dying of disease in Mississippi. A few more people dying of heat stroke. A few people taken out by bacteria in the water. Snakebites as animals are pushed from inundating wetlands into human contact. Lots of disease though. Pharma's gonna have us all covered there, as long as you can pay. Probably lots of crime, as displaced people who have lost all their property and historical livelihoods tend to end up with few options otherwise.

Life will just get incrementally worse for the working class and incrementally more profitable for capitalism as each new facet of the climate change impact is uncovered.



This is all more or less true In My Opinion and its our Job to think about things in this context & what we can do, instead of all pretending we're panicking over nondescript graphs and satellite maps with red (the heat color) on them

#29
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#30
Personally, while I like scary graphs which quantify the effect of the capitalist system on the planet, optimism is the mindset of the communist

mao said the following and it is perfectly aplicable to climate change (which probably well be the trigger of the third world war if something doesnt happen sooner):

People all over the world are now discussing whether a third world war will break out. On this question, too, we must be mentally prepared and do some analysis. We stand firmly for peace and against war. However, if the imperialists insist on unleashing another war, we should not be afraid of it. Our attitude on this question is the same as our attitude towards any disturbance: first, we are against it; second, we are not afraid of it. The First World War was followed by the birth of the Soviet Union with a population of 200 million. The Second World War was followed by the emergence of the socialist camp with a combined population of 900 million. If the imperialists insist on launching a third world war, it is certain that several hundred million more will turn to socialism, and then there will not be much room left on earth for the imperialists; it is also likely that the whole structure of imperialism will utterly collapse.



i.e. it will be terrible, we are against it, but we shouldnt be afraid of it. - the imperialists insist on this, climate change is and will happen under a capitalist system - but I firmly believe that capitalisms destruction of nature, of which climate change is part, is and will be one of the main drivers of revolution (which will be victorious).

Don't be scared.

#31
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#32
information gleened from the chinese experience, imo, refers to waiting until theres the political will to build more nuclear power in the united states instead of pissing millions into the endless hole of research for solar.
#33
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#34
The rich are gonna make a lot of robots and they're gonna kill all the poor people and there won't be any need for surplus labor anymore it'll all be robots and communism is bunk because Marx didn't even think of robots because he's a retard
#35
no
#36
You better get this whole communism thing up and running before mass killbots are a reality.

I'd say you have ten years at most.
#37
absolutely wrong, it's the thrillbots we need to worry about
#38
#39
the pop culture representation of the robot is it violently lashing out against us, killing us as a son does his father in greek myth. but this is romantic and therefore false. it's just fantasy. the son does not kill the father. the son renders him irrelevant and the father ages and withers away, with perhaps a nice sentiment to carry him to oblivion
#40
I remain impressed by the long-enduring goonitude crusted to your tinfoil hats like mats of space barnacle. Bending environmental collapse chat to robot singularity chat is rad as hell. But robotics can't do it without a massive base of human labor. Humans will always be a necessary component of the system because they will always be the most efficient option for some set of tasks, and beside that are the end justification of the system as consumers. Therefore human complicity needs to be purchased. Labor shortages are extremely undesirable, one reason is same reason that copper shortages are undesirable, the other reason is that labor shortages give enormous power to the workers.

Also, massive unchecked resource extraction on a global scale is required to sustain a heavily automated environment just on the major-city scale. This resource extraction is actually better performed by billions of hungry little monkeys who can't coordinate on a systemwide level to say like, "Okay, if we keep mining, we're going to put so much mercury in the water that it will be hard to keep people alive in 15 years, so let's slow down the mining for a bit and plan what we're going to do."

What is happening is a massive release of stored energy, "oil as an apocalyptic force" that was bound to find a way to the surface someday, and we happened to be the hole-digging monkeys to have reached it. The coal and oil we're igniting to make this happen will not be replenished in the earth's lifetime, and not only due to the non-reproducible circumstances of their creation. After 600-800 million years, the sun will be too bright for photosynthesis to happen on earth. So yeah I guess my point is that the singularity is stacking chairs and the lights are about to come on