I remember thinking that driving out the calder in the early 90s. As we drove past the turn off to New Gisborne.
Diggers Rest was quoted as new affordable Housing on TV last week
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I remember thinking that driving out the calder in the early 90s. As we drove past the turn off to New Gisborne.
Our kids and grand kids will hate us. With good reason.
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If we keep going the way we are there won't be any kids or grandkids because there won't be a habitable planet for them to exist upon. It sounds harsh, I know, but I see people having kids nowadays and I wonder how they can make the decision to bring them into a world so precarious when it comes to the future of survivable life on earth. Not to mention that there's already way too many of us here anyway, but I wonder do people just not think about it, or do they truly believe that somehow we're all magically going to be okay 20, 30, 40 years from now? I'd be freaking out if I had a kid right now.
That being said, I also place tremendous faith and weight in the ability of our future generation (the kids of right now) to turn the ship around. They're our only hope, because the current generation of corporate power that profits so tremendously from the fossil fuel industry remaining status quo certainly show no sign of giving that control and wealth up.
Those Mobs in Canada are good value. An Australian aboriginal friend of mine was in Oka 29 years or so ago. He said it was amazing how organised and committed they were..
I'll be 50 this year and my kids will be 2, 3 and 8. It was a choice. I had to have kids, just to be part of the ongoing story of life here. Just to have some skin in the game. I'm facing real issues about teaching them how to live and what to do in the future at the moment. I suspect i'll be raising my kids to be what lots of people will consider terrorists. They'll be learning about Henry Okah soon enough. Its not something I like the idea of but its coming to a point where there will be lines drawn on the ground and we'll have to pick a side.
Its not gonna be as quick as 40 years, at least where I'll be living but by the time my kids are adults things will be ******. They'll see the reef die, iconic mega fauna disappear across the planet, the oceans full of jellyfish but not fish anymore and maybe live long enough to die of catastrophic failure of the biosphere.
Humanity will adapt as it has always done in response to major climate change. Most problems are food related rather than focusing on fossil fuels.
For (an anecdotal) example: https://www.theatlantic.com/science...imate-change-suggests-major-new-study/562289/
https://www.drawdown.org/solutions-summary-by-rank
Spose that’s what you get when the majority of voters are teenagers.
The economy itself creates global warming. All economies are proportional representations of the energy available to them and all energy use creates waste heat. The bigger the worlds economy, the more work (in physics terms) being done. And the more waste heat created. The earth does dump heat into space relatively linearly but the system breaks down at a bit under double the current average surface temp.
There are physicists who've done the maths on this, at a very simple level obviously, and i think without anthropogenic global warming due to greenhouse gases, if the world's economy grows at current rates for about 300 years that tipping point will be reached and the planets surface will boil (ie reach 100 deg C) within a very short period of time. Days maybe. Obviously that 300 yr figure is flawed, the person who did those calculations said as much.
Its a crazy idea. But the principle is sound. Its just the actual size of the economy needed to generate that tipping point that is difficult to calculate.
The Classical Mayan civilisation was destroyed by its failure to adapt to climate change and its own anthropogenic climate destruction. Mayan people are still around today. They adapted by abandoning their massive cities and way of life at the time.
This.
JJJ's Hottest 100 has never been, and most likely never will be, a barometer of the state and relative health of current music.
I would respectfully suggest that anyone thinking that contemporary music is crap needs to broaden their knowledge base a little. Perhaps start by checking back in with the current rosters of some of the established labels that have been churning out quality music for a long time now. (Merge, Matador, 4AD, Rough Trade, Play It Again Sam, Bella Union or our own fantastic homegrown label, Spunk....to name but a few. Some of the relatively newer local labels like Two Bright Lakes, I Oh You, Rice Is Nice, etc, go alright, too.)
New release slots on RRR and PBS are still consistently entertaining and informative.
Plenty of good music around. But not a whole lot of it ends up on JJJ.
Correct. While there needs to be a focus we will adapt and overcome. People also need to be mindful of those pushing agendas for money and notoriety. People may laugh but I 'Kangatech organic' is flying off the shelves. Instead of running off of fossil fuels it's powered by solar panels. I slapped a 'recycle' bumper sticker on the side of it and I was given a 30 million dollar grant by Green Peace. Turns out those bastards have more money than they know what to do with.Humanity will adapt as it has always done in response to major climate change. Most problems are food related rather than focusing on fossil fuels.
For (an anecdotal) example: https://www.theatlantic.com/science...imate-change-suggests-major-new-study/562289/
https://www.drawdown.org/solutions-summary-by-rank
Thank you TOD!
Marley, by his own admission, has transformed into a whole new person and changed for the better due in good part to his time at North. How quickly some on here are to cast judgement on one of our own is disappointing, and a bit shocking really. To cast doubt on his integrity as a person shows a lack of faith in what our club has accomplished with respect to giving players a solid grounding to build from, both on field and off. Marley's still a good soul. An even better one, in my opinion, for standing up for a friend.
It's tourist season after all