Covid-19 is nature's wake-up call to complacent civilisation

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I've been ready to start stanning this writer, he has an entire lifetime of walking the walk to back him up. Really on point here.



Covid-19 is nature's wake-up call to complacent civilisation | George Monbiot

"We have been living in a bubble, a bubble of false comfort and denial. In the rich nations, we have begun to believe we have transcended the material world. The wealth we’ve accumulated – often at the expense of others – has shielded us from reality. Living behind screens, passing between capsules – our houses, cars, offices and shopping malls – we persuaded ourselves that contingency had retreated, that we had reached the point all civilisations seek: insulation from natural hazards.

Now the membrane has ruptured, and we find ourselves naked and outraged, as the biology we appeared to have banished storms through our lives. The temptation, when this pandemic has passed, will be to find another bubble. We cannot afford to succumb to it. From now on, we should expose our minds to the painful realities we have denied for too long.

The planet has multiple morbidities, some of which will make this coronavirus look, by comparison, easy to treat. One above all others has come to obsess me in recent years: how will we feed ourselves? Fights over toilet paper are ugly enough: I hope we never have to witness fights over food. But it’s becoming difficult to see how we will avoid them.

A large body of evidence is beginning to accumulate showing how climate breakdown is likely to affect our food supply. Already farming in some parts of the world is being hammered by drought, floods, fire and locusts (whose resurgence in the past few weeks appears to be the result of anomalous tropical cyclones). When we call such hazards “biblical”, we mean that they are the kind of things that happened long ago, to people whose lives we can scarcely imagine. Now, with increasing frequency, they are happening to us.

In his forthcoming book, Our Final Warning, Mark Lynas explains what is likely to happen to our food supply with every extra degree of global heating. He finds that extreme danger kicks in somewhere between 3C and 4C above pre-industrial levels. At this point, a series of interlocking impacts threatens to send food production into a death spiral. Outdoor temperatures become too high for humans to tolerate, making subsistence farming impossible across Africa and South Asia. Livestock die from heat stress. Temperatures start to exceed the lethal thresholds for crop plants across much of the world, and major food producing regions turn into dust bowls. Simultaneous global harvest failure – something that has never happened in the modern world – becomes highly likely.

In combination with a rising human population, and the loss of irrigation water, soil and pollinators, this could push the world into structural famine. Even today, when the world has a total food surplus, hundreds of millions are malnourished as a result of the unequal distribution of wealth and power. A food deficit could result in billions starving. Hoarding will happen, as it always has, at the global level, as powerful people snatch food from the mouths of the poor. Yet, even if every nation keeps its promises under the Paris agreement, which currently seems unlikely, global heating will amount to between 3C and 4C.

Thanks to our illusion of security, we are doing almost nothing to anticipate this catastrophe, let alone prevent it. This existential issue scarcely seems to impinge on our consciousness. Every food-producing sector claims that its own current practices are sustainable and don’t need to change. When I challenge them, I’m met with a barrage of anger and abuse, and threats of the kind I haven’t experienced since I opposed the Iraq war. Sacred cows and holy lambs are everywhere, and the thinking required to develop the new food systems that we need, like lab-grown food, is scarcely anywhere.

But this is just one of our impending crises. Antibiotic resistance is, potentially, as deadly as any new disease. One of the causes is the astonishingly profligate way in which these precious medicines are used on many livestock farms. Where vast numbers of farm animals are packed together, antibiotics are deployed prophylactically to prevent otherwise inevitable outbreaks of disease. In some parts of the world, they are used not only to prevent disease, but also as growth promoters. Low doses are routinely added to feed: a strategy that could scarcely be better designed to deliver bacterial resistance.

In the US, where 27 million people have no medical cover, some people are now treating themselves with veterinary antibiotics, including those sold, without prescription, to medicate pet fish. Pharmaceutical companies are failing to invest sufficiently in the search for new drugs. If antibiotics cease to be effective, surgery becomes almost impossible. Childbirth becomes a mortal hazard once more. Chemotherapy can no longer be safely practised. Infectious diseases we have comfortably forgotten become deadly threats. We should discuss this issue as often as we talk about football. But again, it scarcely registers.

Our multiple crises, of which these are just two, have a common root. The problem is exemplified by the response of the organisers of the Bath Half Marathon, a massive event that took place on 15 March, to the many people begging them to cancel. “It is now too late for us to cancel or postpone the event. The venue is built, the infrastructure is in place, the site and our contractors are ready.” In other words, the sunk costs of the event were judged to outweigh any future impacts – the potential transmission of disease, and possible deaths – it might cause.

The amount of time it took the International Olympic Committee to postpone the Games could reflect similar judgments – but at least they got there in the end. Sunk costs within the fossil fuel industry, farming, banking, private healthcare and other sectors prevent the rapid transformations we need. Money becomes more important than life.

There are two ways this could go. We could, as some people have done, double down on denial. Some of those who have dismissed other threats, such as climate breakdown, also seek to downplay the threat of Covid-19. Witness the Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, who claims that the coronavirus is nothing more than “a little flu”. The media and opposition politicians who have called for lockdown are, apparently, part of a conspiracy against him.

Or this could be the moment when we begin to see ourselves, once more, as governed by biology and physics, and dependent on a habitable planet. Never again should we listen to the liars and the deniers. Never again should we allow a comforting falsehood to trounce a painful truth. No longer can we afford to be dominated by those who put money ahead of life. This coronavirus reminds us that we belong to the material world."

• George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist
 

IVS

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That's a garbage as article from some "sustainability" doomsday climate change wackjob hackjob.

We dont need labgrown food, and we would be okay if these scientific and military researchers weren't collaborating to manufacture lab grown viruses, in the name of claiming to fight them.

The european basis his entire economic system around SCARE-city. They take over and hoard resources to make them scarce then they put a value on them.

There is no shortage of food, and the world is not over populated. They have only been measuring temperature for maybe 300 years of so, on a planet that millions of years old, but want to convince you something is wrong with the weather so they can spray calcium carbonate in the sky to block out the sun.

We as black folks should know that the euros will propagandize science to fit their aims, and manufacture data and propaganda to support their claims.
 
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I'm also deathly afraid of a huge volcano explosion, or that big ass earth quake they say will eventually show up in Cali
With how this year going, could be soon

Why be afraid of shyt you can't do shyt about?

What he's talking about is shyt that we CAN do something about, shyt that hurts people around the globe every day even when we don't see it from our bubble, and yet we're failing to act.
 

Uitomy

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Why be afraid of shyt you can't do shyt about?

What he's talking about is shyt that we CAN do something about, shyt that hurts people around the globe every day even when we don't see it from our bubble, and yet we're failing to act.
So you think we can really contain this?
Not trying to argue just trying to get your whole opinion
 

Professor Emeritus

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So you think we can really contain this?
Not trying to argue just trying to get your whole opinion
I think we can reduce the damage, but that's not what he's arguing. He's arguing that we should stop fukking up the environment and continuously treating it as our own personal plaything, because our actions are degrading the quality of life for people around the globe already and will fukk up life for all of us in the end if we don't change our ways. He's pointing out that this crisis is only the West experiencing the kind of shyt that poor folk in most other countries already experience on the regular, but we think we live in a little invulnerable bubble so we don't see it.
 

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That's a garbage as article from some "sustainability" doomsday climate change wackjob hackjob.

We dont need labgrown food, and we would be okay if these scientific and military researchers weren't collaborating to manufacture lab grown viruses, in the name of claiming to fight them.

The european basis his entire economic system around SCARE-city. They take over and hoard resources to make them scarce then they put a value on them.

There is no shortage of food, and the world is not over populated. They have only been measuring temperature for maybe 300 years of so, on a planet that millions of years old, but want to convince you something is wrong with the weather so they can spray calcium carbonate in the sky to block out the sun.

We as black folks should know that the euros will propagandize science to fit their aims, and manufacture data and propaganda to support their claims.
I'm not going to debate your conspiracy theory mindset, but you have the author pegged pretty wrong. First off, these are the kinds of things he's written on "overpopulation", pretty sure y'all have the same enemies there:

Stop blaming the poor. It's the wally yachters who are burning the planet | George Monbiot


Second, the books he's authored give you an idea of how much he agrees with the Euros and their economic system:
Monbiot's first book was Poisoned Arrows (1989), which is about what he called the "devastating effects" of the partially World Bank-funded transmigration program on the peoples and tribes of West Papua, a nation annexed by Indonesia. It was followed by Amazon Watershed (1991), which documented expulsions of Brazilian peasant farmers from their land and followed them thousands of miles across the forest to the territory of the Yanomami Indians, and showed how timber sold in Britain was being stolen from indigenous and biological reserves in Brazil. His third book, No Man's Land: An Investigative Journey Through Kenya and Tanzania (1994), documented the seizure of land and cattle from nomadic people in Kenya and the Tanzania, by—among other forces—game parks and safari tourism.

In 2000, he published Captive State: The Corporate Takeover of Britain. The book examines the role of corporate power in the United Kingdom, on both local and national levels, and argues that corporate involvement in politics is a serious threat to democracy. Subjects discussed in the book include the building of the Skye Bridge, corporate involvement in the National Health Service, the role of business in university research, and the conditions which influence the granting of planning permission.

His fifth book, The Age of Consent: A Manifesto for a New World Order, was published in 2003. The book is an attempt to set out a positive manifesto for change for the global justice movement. Monbiot criticises anarchism and Marxism, arguing that any possible solution to the world's inequalities must be rooted in a democratic parliamentary system.[44]

Monbiot's next book, Heat: How to Stop the Planet Burning, published in 2006, focused on the issue of climate change.


And in case you think he's just some "wack-job" author, he's actually backed up his shyt on the ground.
Working as an investigative journalist, he travelled in Indonesia, Brazil, and East Africa. His activities led to his being made persona non grata in seven countries[16] and being sentenced to life imprisonment in absentia in Indonesia.[17] In these places, he was also shot at,[18] beaten up by military police,[18] shipwrecked[18] and stung into a poisoned coma by hornets.[19] He came back to work in Britain after being pronounced clinically dead in Lodwar General Hospital in north-western Kenya, having contracted cerebral malaria.[20] He joined the British roads protest movement and was attacked by security guards, who allegedly drove a metal spike through his foot, smashing the middle metatarsal bone. His injuries left him in hospital.[22]

He spent a good six years working in Papau New Guinea/Brazil/Kenya/Tanzania before he returned to Britain, and all of it was pro-people and against the Western governments/World Bank and the local power players who carry out their aims. If you read through his shyt he's been one of the top journalists in the West for exposing the bullshyt that international orgs run by wealthy people carry out at the expense of the poor in the rest of the world.
 

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Article is correct and depressing.

But theres this

Ozone layer repairing, redirecting wind flows, new study says
Yeah, the global reaction to ozone depletion is one of our big success stories. We saw a problem, reacted as a global community, and it worked. On a national level the Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act are pretty big successes too.

The greatest difficulty now is that the current issues aren't ones than can be changed by simple regulation, by companies shifting to a different chemical or using different waste processes. We're going to have to actually change the way we live and the way we run our economies, and that's much more difficult.
 

jerniebert

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Fresno and the Central Valley have the worst air in the nation. Ever since this coronavirus shyt started our air quality has been great. I haven’t seen the air quality this good since I was a kid.
 

G-Zeus

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It's like Ff7 when the planet released its energy...
Trying to heal itself..

I still find it funny those posters acting like it was meant for Africa when in fact black people living in a a weather not meant for us are the most at risk..


Completely missing the mark...
 

newarkhiphop

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the example in the article is my worst case scenario but with a slight twist, some type of disease that either kills all crops or makes most of our current meat source inedible
 
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