Not quite sure why 1998 specifically is a significant date, but there's been a consensus since 2001:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scient...climate_change
07-15-2023 12:52 PM
#31126
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Not quite sure why 1998 specifically is a significant date, but there's been a consensus since 2001: | |
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07-15-2023 02:35 PM
#31127
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It was the date of the article I quickly scanned that claimed 50 of 60 climatologists in USA were sceptical, I didn't link it because it's 1998 and not particularly relevant regarding climate change today, other than to show that hasn't always been consensus, assuming that article was truthful. | |
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07-15-2023 02:55 PM
#31128
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Well it's the same as voting really. Of course any single individual can't decide what happens by their actions, but 2/3 of all carbon emissions come from household consumption, if everyone does something it'll have a big effect. Surely energy production, logistics etc are the big and "easy" ones to fix first, but those alone probably aren't enough at this point. | |
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07-15-2023 05:00 PM
#31129
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"2/3 of carbon emissions..." | |
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07-15-2023 05:10 PM
#31130
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Yeah what I just basically meant there. One person changing their behavior a bit means duck all, 7 billion changing them a bit means a lot. It's not scare-mongering, it's trying to get people to change their behavior. When enough of the population demand it, the nations are gonna also change their energy sources. | |
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07-15-2023 09:43 PM
#31131
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https://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...-b2375109.html | |
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07-15-2023 11:05 PM
#31132
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I'm trusting the authority of information, yes. I have researched their methods for determining these figures and frankly, it's fascinating and amazing... but not my forte' so I don't remember much of it. Not that you'd believe me anyway appealing to my own authority. Which is great. | |
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07-15-2023 11:10 PM
#31133
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Excuse me? No. That sounds absurd. Closer to 2/3 of a %. | |
Last edited by MadMojoMonkey; 07-15-2023 at 11:22 PM.
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07-16-2023 03:41 AM
#31134
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07-16-2023 03:51 AM
#31135
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07-16-2023 03:52 AM
#31136
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Honestly, if they were telling us to stop buying new phones, and telling Apple to stop making them, I'd be more inclined to believe that they're actually worried about the impact humans are having on the planet. | |
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07-16-2023 04:59 AM
#31137
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Who's "they"? There is no single they, there's advocates, lobbyists, scientists, politicians, journalists etc all with their own agendas, messages and methods. No matter what "they" say, half the population starts screaming it's alarmist or fake news, the other half that it's not enough. Your conclusion that we're fucked is accurate, unless some miracle happens. | |
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07-16-2023 11:47 AM
#31138
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It's an estimate made by people who know how to make such estimates with statistical rigour. | |
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07-16-2023 12:14 PM
#31139
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Thankfully, we have developed this method for telling the shit from the show... it's called the scientific method. | |
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07-16-2023 02:53 PM
#31140
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Just to be clear, I haven't argued that the rise is 0, I'm arguing that I find it plausible that climate change is being exaggerated and exploited by the powers of the world, that the data is manipulated and in turn that manipulates scientists. And I'm only arguing that's plausible, not what I truly actually believe. I guess I find it really hard to believe that you can look at 2000 year old rocks and tell what the average global temperature was at a given time with an accuracy in the range of a single degree. Maybe I'm not giving enough credit to geology, and other branches of science that help to make these estimates, but it just seems like while the information is there, it's ludicrously difficult to decode it. | |
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07-16-2023 03:00 PM
#31141
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btw I know I'm probably using "fluid dynamics" loosely, but climatology is basically fluid dynamics plus thermodynamics on fucking steroids. | |
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07-17-2023 12:36 AM
#31142
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Scientists gather their own data (as a collective of scientists). I mean, it's super common for a research project to collect enormous amounts of data, and the manpower needed to process that data can span multiple groups. Like when you get satellite time, you get someone to point a very sophisticated telescope at a certain portion of the sky for a certain period of time. Then the telescope scientists do that to the best of their ability and send you the data you requested. The scientists working on the data are often different scientists than those that collect the data. All of the data is from within the scientific community, though. | |
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07-18-2023 06:01 AM
#31143
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Had my first and hopefully last medical emergency today at work. Some dude collapsed in the reception. Was on the phone to 999 for over an hour waiting for the ambulance, basically continuously telling them he was breathing. Very very stressful, but I guess not nearly as stressful as it was for him. | |
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07-18-2023 09:42 AM
#31144
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Aw hell, man. That sucks. You good? | |
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07-18-2023 11:00 AM
#31145
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That's a brutal experience, especially at 5.30 in the am. | |
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07-18-2023 12:32 PM
#31146
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I think he's ok, apparently it's a chest infection but there might be an underlying issue, no idea. | |
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07-18-2023 08:07 PM
#31147
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I thought of you recently, Ong, as my uncle had a cardiac arrest in an Ibis when visiting his family and died. My cousin knew something was up and the staff opened the door to the room and were brilliant from that point on. | |
07-19-2023 11:17 AM
#31148
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07-19-2023 12:34 PM
#31149
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In other news... my budget increased for the first time in 6 years, so that's nice. | |
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07-19-2023 12:40 PM
#31150
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Fainting isn't that uncommon, it happens to a lot of people. It's usually just a temporary loss of blood pressure. If you pass out then come out of it again in a few seconds you're probably fine. | |
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07-20-2023 03:51 AM
#31151
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I don't want to give you any worries about staying at chain hotels in the UK but I haven't had any specific training relating to medical emergencies. I have been fire trained, so I know the procedure for when there's a fire alarm, but not a medical emergency. I basically did wing it. Obviously I did what anyone does... call 999 and listen carefully to what they tell me and give them all the information they ask for. I pretty much constantly watched his breathing, certainly when he was unconscious (he was drifting in and out), made sure he was on his side, and basically prayed that he didn't stop breathing or be sick. | |
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07-20-2023 04:11 AM
#31152
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We're pretty well trained when it comes to safeguarding. I guess we have more men trying to sneak underage girls into our hotels than we have medical emergencies. | |
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07-20-2023 08:49 AM
#31153
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07-20-2023 10:03 AM
#31154
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I wonder how the police got that info. Did they just tell the CC company that they were looking for a pedo and that pedo might be using their credit card, and could the CC company please let them know of any activity on said card? | |
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07-20-2023 10:31 AM
#31155
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07-20-2023 07:22 PM
#31156
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I can't believe you don't have some procedures for certain medical issues, Ong. I suppose if somebody dies in their room, you call the manager in and the daytime cleaner would most likely be the first to find them. If they have a problem, call an ambulance. | |
07-21-2023 03:51 AM
#31157
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It's not that simple. How can she prove her age? Oh I'll just take my passport out of my dressing gown pocket. The guy paying cash has to show ID, but the girl he's with does not, assuming he's claiming responsibility for her. He's paying, so it's him that has to show us ID. We have no reason to expect her to be carrying proof of age, and by asking for it we immediately create a situation where we're implying that without it they can't check in. As a blanket policy, this is problematic. | |
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07-21-2023 04:00 AM
#31158
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Obviously I don't know, but my assumption is that the police have access to systems that will automatically tell them when a person-of-interest uses their card. No need to contact the CC company, probably just needs authorising internally by a big cheese cop. | |
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07-21-2023 04:14 AM
#31159
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Men with prostitutes is definitely something we have to deal with as a chain, though I'm not sure it's something we have at my hotel because it's way more common in cities. It's also very difficult to know if a man has hired a woman or is simply have an affair, the latter is none of our business and we're not to take a moral position on it. So even if we suspect that a man has hired a prostitute, it's very difficult to take any action. | |
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07-21-2023 04:26 AM
#31160
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If someone died in their room it would almost certainly be the manager who discovered it. There would likely be no reason for anyone to think anything is wrong until after 12pm when the key hasn't been handed in. At that point, the day manager will knock on the door and wait for a response. If there's no response, they enter the room. A housekeeper wouldn't do this, they would simply wait for the key to be handed in. | |
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07-21-2023 04:37 AM
#31161
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btw the wife of the dude who collapsed called us to let us know he's recovering in hospital and they were grateful for my help. I think I've got a card coming, they asked for my name. I've no idea what is wrong but presumably by the tone of his wife he's not in any trouble. | |
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07-21-2023 05:04 AM
#31162
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Oh and one more thing... it's hilarious how we have fire extinguishers all over the hotel, yet we're specifically told we're not to use one to fight a fire. My focus should 100% be on calling the fire brigade and ensuring the safety of guests outside the hotel in the refuge area. I do not evacuate the building, I do not go room to room knocking on doors and checking people have left, I do not fight fires, I simply grab the things I need (phone, list of guests, fire bag) and leave the building. I might go and help whoever is in room 1, that's the disabled room and is closest to the office and main exit, but other than that, guests are expected to leave when the fire alarm goes off, and frankly are pretty stupid if they do not. | |
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07-21-2023 07:52 AM
#31163
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It doesn't have to be a blanket policy to ID everyone. Most of your guests aren't teenage girls checking in in their dressing gown at nighttime. | |
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07-21-2023 07:56 AM
#31164
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07-21-2023 07:58 AM
#31165
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I don't see how you're reasonably supposed to be able to tell if someone is a prostitute, and as such there's almost certainly no liability issues there. Letting in pedos might be different, but probably unlikely that anything would happen unless you were doing it routinely. | |
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07-21-2023 04:19 PM
#31166
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07-21-2023 04:32 PM
#31167
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I mean, what is your plan if she can't provide ID? Turn them onto the street? Call the police? Once you've asked for ID you create a situation were it's a problem if that ID is not presented. | |
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07-21-2023 05:27 PM
#31168
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07-21-2023 05:30 PM
#31169
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07-21-2023 05:33 PM
#31170
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I mean idk, if we lived in some culture where it was normal for a guy in his 20s to show up late at a hotel with a teenage girl and it were all innocent, like she's his kid sister who for some reason only wore nightclothes, then yeah let them in. | |
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07-21-2023 05:39 PM
#31171
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07-21-2023 09:40 PM
#31172
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Just ask every female customer that walks into the lobby. | |
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07-21-2023 10:46 PM
#31173
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Ong was asking me what Beans accent is when I was visiting. | |
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07-22-2023 04:36 AM
#31174
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What's the dude's name, Monk? I'm from a South Coast city, so it's southern - not posh, not rough. | |
07-22-2023 05:38 AM
#31175
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I think it's kind of interesting how you can almost tell what county brits are from by their accent, but Americans can be easily reduced to: NY accent, New Jersey, Milwaukee and Christopher Walken. Rural areas from Appalachia to New Mexico all sound like a hollywood actor impersonating a stereotypical stupid person according to my sources. | |
Last edited by oskar; 07-22-2023 at 07:24 AM.
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07-22-2023 09:44 AM
#31176
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I'm Brummie, not a Yamyam. We have similar accents but Brummies speak actual English, while Yamyams say stupid shit like "am ya" instead of "are you". Brummies are from Birmingham and Solihull, Yamyams from Dudley, Wolverhampton, Walsall, West Bromwich, Stourbridge and all the shitty little towns like Brierley Hill, Cradley Heath, industrial age shitholes. | |
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07-22-2023 09:54 AM
#31177
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I've had someone distinguish my accent specifically as Solihull, as opposed Birmingham in general. That's 8 miles between town centres with nothing but heavily populated suburbs between. | |
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07-22-2023 12:31 PM
#31178
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07-22-2023 12:45 PM
#31179
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Hollywood has done a lot to homogenize midwest US accents. | |
Last edited by MadMojoMonkey; 07-22-2023 at 12:47 PM.
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07-22-2023 01:58 PM
#31180
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Gary O'Reilly: turns out he's an ex-professional footballer. Born and raised in London, so you're not far off. The town I grew up in is a lot like the London accent, with some added in-bred. | |
07-23-2023 09:50 AM
#31181
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I grew up in a town in Canada of about 60k, 50 miles from the US border. I always assumed we had the standard US-mid-west-minus-the-elongated-vowels-drawl accent. | |
Last edited by Poopadoop; 07-23-2023 at 09:53 AM.
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07-24-2023 11:45 AM
#31182
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07-24-2023 11:49 AM
#31183
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aboot is regional to the far North midwest, too. Minnesota ... Minnesoota to the locals. North Dakota ... Narth Dakoota. | |
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07-24-2023 12:00 PM
#31184
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07-24-2023 12:03 PM
#31185
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The Kiwi accent is funny. Some people can't distinguish between Kiwi and Aussie, but if you're not sure, just ask the person to say what chickens lay. | |
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07-24-2023 12:13 PM
#31186
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I don't have any trouble with Kiwi vs Aussie. | |
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07-24-2023 01:07 PM
#31187
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Edmonton is a long way from the Aboot Center of N.A. I personally have never heard anyone say aboot except in the movie Fargo. | |
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07-24-2023 02:19 PM
#31188
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It's weird how there are similarities between the two but they're also really easy to tell apart, at least after a few minutes of conversation. The Saffers do sound like they say "iggs" instead of "eggs" though, so it's kind of easy to get them mixed up at first. Saffers don't sound like they could be Australian though, while Kiwis do, that's the best way to tell. Also, Kiwis tend to be more relaxed and easy going, largely due to the fact their homeland hasn't been subject to war for a very long time. The Saffers I've met that moved from South Africa to UK are all made of different stuff to the British, they're all strong, confident, hard as nails, don't take shit, I don't think I've ever met a Saffer beta-male, and the women are feisty too. It's a product of their environment. Life in South Africa is much, much harder than life in New Zealand. | |
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07-24-2023 02:20 PM
#31189
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07-24-2023 04:25 PM
#31190
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I mean it's possible a Canadian about sounds a bit more 'oo-ey' that 'owy' to you, but I don't have any trouble telling the difference between those two sounds myself. | |
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07-24-2023 04:37 PM
#31191
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I mean that guy I knew from Newfoundland would say things like 'new' instead of 'no', so there's a good chance he would say aboot I guess. | |
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07-27-2023 12:01 PM
#31192
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This has to be the World's Biggest Karen. Both literally and figuratively. | |
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07-28-2023 06:41 AM
#31193
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Didn't someone say that something like 2/3 of carbon emissions are household emissions? | |
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07-28-2023 07:35 AM
#31194
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Yes, but then someone else pointed out that that figure includes all the extraneous emissions that relate to feeding clothing and everything else for individuals who live in households. | |
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07-28-2023 10:30 AM
#31195
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Wouldn't it just be easier to say that 2/3 of emissions are due to humans having to stay alive? The other 1/3 is humans having fun. | |
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07-28-2023 10:47 AM
#31196
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The 2/3 number was scandalous in nature. It's not like the statement was untrue once you understand what it was actually saying - it's true. It's just not a helpful way to look at these issues as far as that premise of science that tells you to "State your question in a way that implies a plan of action." The implied plan of action in that stat is that household consumers have the power to affect change in 67% of GHG emissions. That is what's untrue. | |
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07-29-2023 06:56 AM
#31197
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I am just extremely confused by the public discourse about climate. Everyone is running around like headless chickens like "what are we going to do?" should we buy organic coffee from Guatemala? Should we recycle our plastics into cute dog sweaters... | |
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07-30-2023 10:25 AM
#31198
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When it comes to elections, Americans give lip service to the environment, but will absolutely lose their minds every time the price of gasoline increases. Politicians have to follow that lead to remain in power. Give lip service to the environment, but keep gas prices low. | |
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08-06-2023 04:17 AM
#31199
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lols | |
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10-03-2023 12:56 PM
#31200
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Anyone else playing Baldur's Gate 3? | |
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