Climate in the 21st Century

Will Humankind see the 22nd Century?

  • Not a fucking chance

    Votes: 44 27.5%
  • Maybe. if we get our act together

    Votes: 42 26.3%
  • Yes, we will survive

    Votes: 74 46.3%

  • Total voters
    160

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
We cAn try to find ways not to make it hurt if we put our minds together
most things that hurt, hurt for a reason.
unless you're very stupid...
you don't stick your hand in a fire twice
you don't piss on an electric fence twice
you don't short out the coil on an older car twice
you don't stick your hand in a running wood chipper twice
you don't vote for a party that shits on the environment twice....
 

rabbita78

Well-Known Member
Leftists spend all of their time, money, & resources to demonize & scream at Americans, Europeans, Canadians, & Australians about pollution
Then they WONDER why nothing is helping the environment

GEE I GUESS IT WILL ALWAYS BE A MYSTERY!!!

map pollution 001.jpg
 
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Dr.Amber Trichome

Well-Known Member
Read an article about Israel doing a nice job with desalination and filling up the sea of Galileo. Jordon in need of water, purchases it from Israel and Israel buys Jordan’s electricity. Well played. As the ice sheets melt humans can take that ocean water that is projected to flood the coast lines and suck it out and use it and in the process stop the costal flooding. :razz:
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Read an article about Israel doing a nice job with desalination and filling up the sea of Galileo. Jordon in need of water, purchases it from Israel and Israel buys Jordan’s electricity. Well played. As the ice sheets melt humans can take that ocean water that is projected to flood the coast lines and suck it out and use it and in the process stop the costal flooding. :razz:
nice idea, but i'm thinking that it wouldn't do much to stop coastal flooding, water runs down hill. No matter where you pump it to, it will eventually run back to the sea.
it's kind of expensive as well, but i'm thinking it might be worth it in the southwest pretty soon, and quite possible the whole damn world as things get worse
 

Dr.Amber Trichome

Well-Known Member
nice idea, but i'm thinking that it wouldn't do much to stop coastal flooding, water runs down hill. No matter where you pump it to, it will eventually run back to the sea.
it's kind of expensive as well, but i'm thinking it might be worth it in the southwest pretty soon, and quite possible the whole damn world as things get worse
It is worth it as well as more progress with weather engineering.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
It is worth it as well as more progress with weather engineering.
weather engineering isn't even really a thing yet, cloud seeding is about as far as we've gotten with it.
anything beyond a very local effect would require technologies we do not yet posses, satellite systems with something like deathray scale lasers, and forcefields, which is starting to get into star trek shit.
but they do still make some pretty amazing discoveries and developments on a regular basis, who knows what the next few years will bring?
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
Read an article about Israel doing a nice job with desalination and filling up the sea of Galileo. Jordon in need of water, purchases it from Israel and Israel buys Jordan’s electricity. Well played. As the ice sheets melt humans can take that ocean water that is projected to flood the coast lines and suck it out and use it and in the process stop the costal flooding. :razz:
There are some real risk in what they are doing. One of the few warm water tolerant coral reefs could be in danger if the pipeline goes ahead.
 
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