So one epic-sized hurricane drowned much of east Texas, and another one is at this moment bearing down on Florida, with a third right behind it that may miss Florida but has already socked the small Caribbean islands that the previous one already got.
Closer to home, there's been huge wildfires around both LA and Portland.
What we had locally was merely an epic heat wave over Labor Day weekend, 109 F according to the high-school sign down the street. Occasionally over the summers it's gotten too hot to stay up on the upper floor of our townhouse over the days, but never before quite this extreme or this extended.
Then, after that was over, we had a power outage, which explains my general absence from online for a few days.
This isn't the "new normal." We're long past the tipping point (by over 20 years now, I'd guess), and have reached the stage where climate will probably continue to get measurably worse nearly every year. This article seems as accurate as anything I've read on what to expect.
I'm going to go on as I have been, because it's too late to do anything else. I keep thinking of editor Malcolm Edwards' only work of fiction, a short story called "After-Images." That was about nuclear war, but it illustrates the principle of what people do in a situation like this.
Closer to home, there's been huge wildfires around both LA and Portland.
What we had locally was merely an epic heat wave over Labor Day weekend, 109 F according to the high-school sign down the street. Occasionally over the summers it's gotten too hot to stay up on the upper floor of our townhouse over the days, but never before quite this extreme or this extended.
Then, after that was over, we had a power outage, which explains my general absence from online for a few days.
This isn't the "new normal." We're long past the tipping point (by over 20 years now, I'd guess), and have reached the stage where climate will probably continue to get measurably worse nearly every year. This article seems as accurate as anything I've read on what to expect.
I'm going to go on as I have been, because it's too late to do anything else. I keep thinking of editor Malcolm Edwards' only work of fiction, a short story called "After-Images." That was about nuclear war, but it illustrates the principle of what people do in a situation like this.
no subject
Date: 2017-09-11 09:46 pm (UTC)The question in my mind is more how we address these issues than whether we do. I don't know the Malcolm Edwards story.
no subject
Date: 2017-09-12 02:45 am (UTC)Further, there is no political will to do anything that could have mitigated, back when actual mitigation was possible, at a sufficiently large scale that it could have achieved mitigation. This has been demonstrated frequently. The failure of the last Copenhagen meeting was the final collapse of any hope I had.