You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: The Fires are Burning - Puzzle - Freewrite

in #freewrite6 years ago

We do have climate change. It's just not coming from the direction people are being told. Since you really like to dig down into things, I'm recommending Suspicious Observers. Why? Because Earth isn't the only thing changing. And "global warming" isn't settled science. https://www.suspicious0bservers.org/

There's a lot to this puzzle that we are being purposefully distracted away from.

Sort:  

Well, however you want to look at what is happening, deforestation is a fact - and you are doing some gardening and know that trees play a huge role in the fertility of the land and they play a huge role in rain production, and protecting from soil erosion.
I also know for a fact how agriculture how we are practicing with huge mono cropping is causing all kinds of problems, from soil loss to tons of fertilizers and pesticide/herbicides ending up in the groundwater and rivers. Dead river zones are a fact. All of those things also contribute to worse air conditions, less protective ozone layer and so much more.
Plastic everywhere - like in huge plastic islands in the ocean. fact.
Plastic breaking down into micro particles and ending up in our bodies - causing estrogen driven cancer. Fact.
Overconsumption and destruction of natural environments: fact
fracking being extremely bad for the earth: fact
And there are so many more examples of that.
There is maybe 3% of scientist who do not agree that we are causing climate change.
But even if climate change is not caused by all the things I mentioned above - and so many more other human actions - they still are bad for us and we should change them.
So, rather than debating if climate change is real or not - let's plant more trees for example. LA is the proof in the pudding that you can change air quality and the quality of life for people with strict emission controlls and planting more trees. The air over LA used to be a smog cloud and my ex-husband who grew up there was telling me that there were days were kids were not even allowed to go outside and others, where they would run around and play and their lungs were hurting. All that has changed for the better by doing those action I think we need to do.
And I don't care if we do them because we believe in climate change or not.
Let's just take care of our earth and each other and we all will be good.

Oh I agree, humans aren't off the hook for proper tending of the garden they live in (starting with the horrifying fact that most people are oblivious to the fact that we all live in a garden). But we can't adjust our tending if we don't have a big picture of what is affecting the garden. That's why I really appreciate the Suspicious Observers.

And the number is a lot bigger than 3% of the scientists that don't agree with the official cause of weather change. About 6 years ago, one quiet morning of a camping trip, quite by accident I did some eavesdropping in the scientific journals. (I had just downloaded a delicious app that actually drudged up stories out of the sciences. It got swallowed up of course and now it's all popular frufru crap) ...anyway ... the horror that came to my eyes and ruined my morning is that this business of slapping down opposing conversations, that could widen the circle of discussion, was extremely vicious in that community -- to the point of losing everything. So as I've continued to brush into mentions here and there about how scientists don't dare to disagree, it's been no surprise to me.

Your long list of things that should be known just brings me to a persistent thought that floats through my head: It's really not fair that every realization of what is being twisted just exposes more layers of deception. But, it does widen what one can see through the lenses.

And you're putting your fingers all over something I wrote about hmm 12 years ago? I don't understand why scientist have to stand around arguing about what may or may not be outside our control. If I wasn't afraid of dropping into a rabbit hole, I'd go find what I wrote then. At that time, I felt like all this chatter about global warming was just distracting people from concentrating on the obvious. It's obvious the air needs to be cleaned up because we can't breathe it in without becoming ill. It felt like too much time energy and money was being spent on trying to figure out which theory was true instead of focusing time energy and money on actually Doing.

words.

I felt like the people around me were no longer discussing their own air quality, or their own streams that were being polluted by their careless upstream neighbor. Instead they were arguing about the esoteric. The problem went from being in their own hands, in their own neighborhood to being out there somewhere caused by "them".

I lived most of my life in Dallas. We also had red-alert days. There were things being done way before this chatter of global warming started. To me, it feels the global warming politicians are trying to take credit for starting changes that started long before they arrived on the scene. But MORE it feels like they actually slowed down progress by diverting attention. But, again, I don't have stats and facts except for the changing conversations around me.

Also, I see you giving validation to a "rumor" I heard: California is becoming so dry because of the systematic elimination and redirection of natural water distribution -- starting way back.

It was a passing statement that I overheard. If I had to pick a starting point, I'd start with Hoover Dam. But if they already thought that was a good idea ... it probably goes back long before that. There's bound to be some really interesting history there.

And to this mono-crop business. Yeah. I'd like more history on that please. According to my aged landlord who was explaining the finer points of the horse-drawn tiller/planter that lives out in the barn, both the main crop and the cover crop were planted at the same time. And then government subsidies and stupidity ensued. The farmers around here say the government is what keeps profit and good reasoning out of small farming.

I mean if we pick at this too much we're liable to find out that "global warming" is a conspiracy to cover over all the climate change that the government is doing to gain control over the land and the water and mineral resources so they can sell them off to the highest bidder to line their own pockets. It goes in as an extra layer on top of kickbacks from .... ... oh wait. I didn't say that out loud.

Never mind. I wasn't here.

Oh wait wait ... you remember how we are frustrated that people aren't recycling ... well and I'm frustrated because recycling where I live is a major pain ... well I bumped into something hugely interesting that is hugely relevant to where you live. Plastic Straws Aren't the Problem I think it's something you'll really enjoy promoting somewhere somehow. I know it doesn't go straight into your podcast top-topic but ...

I am with you and have lived on ecological awareness all my life. Germany was way ahead of the US - still is - in many ways. Even though when I went back - I was disappointed to see how much one use containers and plastic wrapping they are using now.
And I agree that a lot of the discussing is just a smoke screen.
And, most, if not all politicians, especially here where it takes so much money to be elected, are in the pocket of the few who own just about anything and are pulling the strings to make the puppets dance.

Gunther Grass - a German writer and journalist wrote about all of that over 40 years ago when I was a very political teenager.

The older I get, the more I feel that we can influence little and a lot at the same time. We can by how we spend our money and how we live our lives.

When I found Permaculture, I was in love. for one, it is founded on ethics - earth care and people care (which really, people care is part of earth care) are the main principals. And if we practice that, we are okay. then, we are not throwing food away while half of the world is starving - we are not seeling weapons to governments that then go ahead and use them to commit warcrimes - Saudis right now in Yemen and who put Sadam in charge and gave him gas he promptly used on the Kurds? And then, we got mad when he didn't want to give up the oil anymore.
Anyway, it makes me sick to think about that and there is nothing I can do. But I can plant trees, share healthy food, talk about stuff like that on the podcast and maybe inspire someone to stop using round up...

And why do we need straws to begin with? I don't 🤪

Some do need straws. Read the article not the headline though.

Total agreement on the rest!

I will read it - in a little bit. Get to the prompts first. but I opened it :)

Oh, I one hundred percent agree that people tend to take one "sexy" subject and put all their energy there and forget about the bigger issues.
part of it is, I think, that the bigger issues are just so big and we feel helpless to do something about it. But a straw - I can do something about. I can carry my own - as with spoon and fork - and not need to use one more piece of disposable.
Agreed that they are small steps - but they do make a person feel in power - and with that feeling might come the confidence to tackle the bigger issues.
The ghost nets have been a huge issue for a long time. But I disagree with the article saying that it is most of the pollution.
I go to the beach here and we have lots of awareness campaigns and regular cleanups - still, I find bags full of plastic. Bags, bottles, caps - you name it. By putting it all on the fishing industry - that is too easy.
Every plastic bag I don't use multiplied by millions doing the same thing is a big impact.
In the end, I can only control what I am doing - and that barely LOL

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.30
TRX 0.12
JST 0.032
BTC 63313.23
ETH 3079.99
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.89