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<font size="+2"><i><b>November 27, 2022</b></i></font><br>
<br>
<i>[ " have a heart, do the math" sample testimony before
attendees video report from a young jounalist ]</i><br>
<b>COP27 Week 2 Recap: Did anything get done?</b><br>
Beckisphere Climate Corner<br>
168 views Nov 24, 2022<br>
If you like the work I do, please consider joining the Beckisphere
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Source list-
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://heavenly-sceptre-002.notion.site/COP-27-Week-2-aebc7cc0bbab4824b9415e622a251ef4">https://heavenly-sceptre-002.notion.site/COP-27-Week-2-aebc7cc0bbab4824b9415e622a251ef4</a><br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOmzB5KbVOk">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOmzB5KbVOk</a><br>
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<i>[ from Aljazeera - text and audio ]</i><br>
<b>A radical antidote to climate despair</b><br>
In a burning world, How To Blow Up a Pipeline argues peaceful
protest is not enough.<br>
Fossil fuels are a time bomb, and humans are entitled to stop them.
That is the argument of How to Blow Up a Pipeline, a book by Andreas
Malm calling for activist groups like Just Stop Oil and Extinction
Rebellion to adopt radical tactics against the fossil fuel industry,
including property damage. As COP27 enters its second week,
greenwashing is rife, protest is limited, and fossil fuel emissions
are still rising. After over a quarter-century of UN-sponsored
talking, Malm argues it is time for people to take action into their
own hands...<br>
In this episode: Andreas Malm, author of How to Blow Up a Pipeline
and professor at Lund University...
<blockquote>Halla Mohieddeen: Let’s cut to the chase then. Your book
is called How to Blow Up a Pipeline. What is it about? I mean, is
it an instruction manual?<br>
<br>
Andreas Malm: No, it’s not, and that’s probably the most common
criticism I’ve received. It doesn’t actually teach us how to blow
up a pipeline. No, the title is somewhat metaphorical and perhaps
a little bit provocative. It’s about what tactics the climate
movement should use, and if perhaps the time has come to consider
more militant forms of action than what we’ve used so far,
including sabotage and property destruction.<br>
<br>
Halla Mohieddeen: Well, before we talk about blowing up pipelines,
let’s talk about COP. You protested at the very first COP back in
1995. Fast forward to today, we are being told that we’re nowhere
near where we need to be to avoid destruction on a scale humans
have never known. Do you think these COPs are just a waste of time
then?<br>
<br>
Andreas Malm: Well, yeah, that’s what they’ve been so far. That’s
what they’ve proved to be, because emissions have just continued
to rise and COPs have done nothing to limit them. So yes, it’s
fundamentally a way to sustain an illusion, but it’s hard to
envision any kind of agreement about this in another context in
the United Nations. What needs to be changed fundamentally is the
balance of forces worldwide, between the vested interests of
business as usual and all of us who want to change this
catastrophic trajectory that we’re on...<br>
- -<br>
Andreas Malm: The point is not so much to criticise what XR has
done, but to question the doctrine that the only thing that the
climate movement can ever do is absolutely peaceful civil
disobedience. I am advocating for going beyond that, into
destroying the machines that are destroying this planet, as a
matter of self defence, and even more, defence of other people.
I’m against any idea of the climate movement using violence
against individuals – say, I don’t know, assassinating fossil fuel
executives or something like that. And I don’t know anyone in the
climate movement who is actually even considering that. The
discussion is, should we diversify into targeting the machines,
the dead things, the inanimate objects that are the cause of the
destruction of this planet.<br>
<br>
Halla Mohieddeen: Well, we’ve also seen groups like Just Stop Oil
in the UK take a step in that direction. They’re known right now
for throwing various substances at different works of art, but
earlier this year, they were also smashing petrol stations.<br>
<br>
Just Stop Oil protester: We went to petrol stations and smashed up
petrol pumps and destroyed the machines that are destroying us.<br>
<br>
Halla Mohieddeen: Now, it is fair to say that that tactic hasn’t
won them many fans among people you’d think they’d want to win
over. So how are these tactics supposed to mobilise people and
endear people to your cause?<br>
<br>
Andreas Malm: Well, I am sceptical, or I would even say I’m
critical of the idea of throwing substances on works of art as a
tactic for promoting the climate cause. Perhaps doing it once with
that Van Gogh painting was a way of drawing attention to the cause
of Just Stop Oil, and it did that pretty successfully. But if you
continuously, repeatedly target something, you send the signal
that you’re against that, as if the climate movement were against
art...<br>
- -<br>
Halla Mohieddeen: Andreas, just as a final question, let’s say
that you win us all over. You’re probably not wrong that the
climate movement is going to get more radical the worse things
get. Let’s say these tactics take off. How could sabotage ever be
enough to force the level of action that needs to happen? What do
you say to someone who’s maybe watching COP and just in despair,
thinking that the climate’s too far gone and even this would never
be enough?<br>
<br>
Andreas Malm: No, I don’t think it’s ever going to be enough.
Sabotage on its own is not going to solve the climate problem. It
needs to be one component in a repertoire of action that will have
to include everything, from petitions, to court cases, to
electoral campaigns, to lobbying, marching in the streets, still,
occupying squares, but also a more militant confrontation with the
order bent on burning our planet. If you sit and look at what’s
happening at COP and you draw the conclusion that, okay, the world
is doomed. We’re all just condemned to die very soon. I’m giving
up on everything. Yeah, I would understand that reaction, but I
think it’s a mistake. There is still a lot of damage to minimise
and avoid. We can’t just give up on this planet while it all burns
to the ground. I don’t think that’s a morally defensible position.<br>
<br>
Halla Mohieddeen: Do you have hope?<br>
<br>
Andreas Malm: Well, that depends on what you mean by hope. I’m not
under any illusion that what we want and need is likely to happen,
but you don’t become a political activist because you think that
what you struggle for is likely. You throw yourself into struggle
because you feel that the train is rushing towards the precipice
and you need to stop it. In the end, catastrophic global heating
is the likely outcome of current conditions in the world, but it’s
not the only possible outcome. Which means that, yes, there is
still hope that if we build up sufficient striking force, we can
stop this train or jump off it in time.<br>
</blockquote>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.aljazeera.com/podcasts/2022/11/14/a-radical-antidote-to-climate-despair">https://www.aljazeera.com/podcasts/2022/11/14/a-radical-antidote-to-climate-despair</a>
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<i>[ DW documentary opinion video ]</i><br>
<b>The race for the Arctic is ramping up. Here’s why.</b><br>
DW Planet A<br>
66,940 views Nov 25, 2022<br>
The ice in the arctic is melting, revealing huge amounts of fossil
fuels, rare earths and new shipping routes. And the rush to secure
these has already begun. Will countries continue their race for
economic and militaristic advantages or will they finally work
together to solve the global problem of climate change? <br>
<br>
Credits<br>
Reporter: Monika Sax <br>
Video Editor: Markus Mörtz <br>
Supervising Editor: Joanna Gottschalk, Kiyo Dörrer & Michael
Trobridge<br>
<br>
We're destroying our environment at an alarming rate. But it doesn't
need to be this way. Our channel explores the shift towards an
eco-friendly world — and challenges our ideas about what dealing
with climate change means. We look at the big and the small: What we
can do and how the system needs to change. Every Friday we'll take a
truly global look at how to get us out of this mess.<br>
<br>
#PlanetA #Arctic #FossilFuels <br>
<br>
Special thanks (for research support and background information): <br>
The Arctic Council: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.arctic-council.org/">https://www.arctic-council.org/</a> <br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvRzWzQW2go">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvRzWzQW2go</a><i><br>
</i>
<p><i><br>
</i></p>
<p><i><br>
</i></p>
<i>[ Step 1, buy land with water and sunshine, setup solar power and
build a cabin - add this do-it-yourself electric backup power
after viewing this educational, not instructional video. Step
2..., Step 3, profit! ]</i><br>
<b>How to Power a 120V Offgrid Cabin with Bluetti or Ecoflow Delta
30A Plug</b><br>
DIY Solar Power with Will Prowse<br>
10,715 views Nov 26, 2022<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyKZwc_2RP0">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyKZwc_2RP0</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<br>
<i>[ Trigger Warning -- This is dark, but worthy because of growing
attention to the works of umair haque [yes, that is his name]--
Words from May of this year, are difficult and insightful</i><i>
opinion</i><i>s ]</i><br>
<b>The Age of Extinction Is Here — Some of Us Just Don’t Know It Yet</b><br>
We’re Crossing the Threshold of Survivability — And There’s No Going
Back<br>
umair haque<br>
May 20<br>
<br>
“Why do you think people are a little freaked out by what I’m
talking about these days?”<br>
<br>
I was asking my kid sis. She laughed. “You’re basically telling them
it’s the end of the world?”<br>
<br>
It was the night of the eclipse. A red moon illuminated the sky.
300,000 years had gone by since our kind walked the earth. And now
it would never be the same again.<br>
<br>
Let me try and tell you how I’ve come to think of the Event, as I’ve
begun to call it. The Cataclysm. Extinction. A different earth.<br>
<br>
<b>My friends in the Indian Subcontinent tell me stories, these
days, that seem like science fiction.</b> The heatwave there is
pushing the boundaries of survivability. My other sister says that
in the old, beautiful city of artists and poets, eagles are falling
dead from the sky. They are just dropping dead and landing on
houses, monuments, shops. They can’t fly anymore.<br>
<br>
The streets, she says, are lined with dead things. Dogs. Cats. Cows.
Animals of all kinds are just there, dead. They’ve perished in the
killing heat. They can’t survive.<br>
<br>
People, too, try to flee. They run indoors, spend all day in canals
and rivers and lakes, and those who can’t, too, line the streets,
passed out, pushed to the edge. They’re poor countries. We won’t
know how many this heatwave has killed for some time to come. Many
won’t even be counted.<br>
<br>
Think about all that for a moment. Really stop and think about it.
Stop the automatic motions of everyday life you go through and think
about it.<br>
<br>
<b>You see, my Western friends read stories like this, and then they
go back to obsessing over the Kardashians or Wonder Woman or
Johnny Depp or Batman. They don’t understand yet.</b> Because this
is beyond the limits of what homo sapiens can really comprehend, the
Event. That world is coming for them, too.<br>
<br>
The analogy is often used to describe “climate change” of frogs in a
boiling pot. It’s useful, but only to a certain degree. When the pot
boils, they’re taken out and eaten. We were in a boiling pot, and
now we’re at the stage where we’re about to get taken out and eaten.
This is when things start to get really, really bad — really, really
fast.<br>
<br>
The way that I’ve come to think of the Event — a species that’s been
around for 300,000 years now having altered the climate in ways that
haven’t happened for millions of years, triggering an Extinction
Event — is this.<br>
<br>
Imagine a black hole. Humanity’s lined up before it. Everyone has to
march through. Some are at the front of the line. They reach the
other side first. Some are at the back of the line. They’re still
laughing and joking and pretending, maybe. Nobody much hears from
those who’ve gone through, because, well, it’s a black hole. But on
the other side, nothing is ever to be the same again.<br>
<br>
This is where we are now. We are at the threshold of the Cataclysm.
Some of us are now crossing over to the other side, of a different
planet, one that’s going to become unlivable. This isn’t “going to
happen” or “might happen,” it is actually happening now.<br>
<br>
Those are my friends, for example, in the Indian Subcontinent, where
eagles are falling dead from the sky, where the streets are lined
with dead things.<br>
<br>
Extinction. The Event. You can literally see it happening there.<br>
<br>
They are the first ones through the Event Horizon, if you like — the
lip of the black hole. They are canaries in the coal mine, my Indian
and Pakistani and Bengali friends. They are on the other side, and
are experiencing the world in the Event. And that world is coming
for us all.<br>
<br>
<b>I don’t use the words “climate change” to describe any of this,
because, well, they’re inadequate. </b>The way that we tell that
story has led to a kind of shocking sense of apathy and ignorance
about the reality of what we face. People read the science, and
think that if the temperature rises by one degree, two, three,
what’s the big deal? Ha ha! Who cares? That’s not even a hot day?
Wrong. A better way to tell that story is something like this. On
average, when the temperature rises one degree, the seasons change
by a factor of ten at equatorial regions. One degree, one point
five, which is where we are now — the summers are ten to fifteen
degrees Celsius hotter. Two degrees? Twenty. Three degrees? Thirty.<br>
<br>
We’re <b>heading</b> for three degrees.<br>
<br>
It’s already 50 degrees Celsius in the Subcontinent. Spain is
bracing for an <b>extreme heatwave</b>, of about 40 degrees plus as
is Europe, as is much of America. That’s at one degree or so of
global warming. At two degrees? The Subcontinent hits 60 degrees
Celsius. Spain and Europe hit 50. At three degrees? Equatorial
regions hit 70 degrees Celsius or more. Spain and Europe hit 60.<br>
<br>
I’m sure that some will quibble with that interpretation, so go
ahead and adjust however you like. It doesn’t really matter. At 50
degrees, which is where the Subcontinent is now, life dies off. The
birds fall from the sky. The streets become mass graves. People flee
and try to just survive. Energy grids begin to break. Economies
grind to a halt.<br>
<br>
<i>Extinction happens.</i><br>
<br>
<b>This is the threshold. We are already hitting it. We can see it
now in startling, grim, vivid detail.</b> The Event is not some
kind of abstraction or prediction. Extinction is now really
happening in plain sight in places around the globe — and they are
revealing to us the limits of what our civilization can survive.
That limit is hit somewhere between 40 and 50 degrees. After that
point, life as we know it comes to an end.<br>
<br>
My Western friends still don’t really grasp this at all. They
imagine that as the seasons get exponentially hotter, they can
simply…turn up the air conditioning. LOL. Sorry, it doesn’t work
like that. Why not? Not just because energy grids will fail, or even
because at a certain point even air conditioning just fails. It’s
because of life.<br>
<br>
<b>My Western friends don’t think these days. This fantasy of
turning up the air conditioning and sitting in your apartment or
house? They ignore the now obvious signs. </b>Birds falling from
the sky, Dead things lining the streets. What are you going to do,
sit in your air conditioned home while everything else goes extinct?<br>
<br>
It doesn’t work like that. Those things, those beings — birds, cows,
sheep, chickens, whatever — they provide us with the basics, too.
They perish, we perish. Insects nourish our soil, birds eat insects,
and on and on. My Western friends don’t understand that we are part
of systems. Ecosystems, in this case. And as their foundations are
ripped out, we can scarcely survive. The idea that you can sit in
your air conditioned home in comfort while everything else goes
extinct is a fantasy, a delusion. What will you eat? Who will turn
the soil? Who’ll keep the crops healthy? Where will the basics of
life come from?<br>
<br>
<b>Our civilization collapses somewhere between fifty and sixty
degrees Celsius.</b> Bang, poof, gone. Nothing works after that
point. Everything begins to die — not just animals and us in the
case, but our systems which depend on them. Economics crater,
inflation skyrockets, people grow poorer, fascism erupts as a
consequence. You can already see that beginning to happen around the
globe — but it’s just the beginning. Imagine how much worse
inflation’s going to get when Extinction really begins to bite.<br>
<br>
Everything fails at the threshold we are now reaching. Our
civilization doesn’t survive it. Democracy has its throat slit by
fascism and theocracy, as people, afraid, angry, desperate, turn to
fundamentalist religion or authoritarian brutality to give them
answers — or just a meal. Economies become mechanisms for basic
survival, not opportunity or prosperity. Society and community are
destroyed by the bitter every-man-for-himself quest for
self-preservation. This is the world we’re heading into, and you can
see it now spreading, from America to India to Europe and beyond.<br>
<br>
<b>What happens in such a world? Do people pull together to save it?
Probably not. Inequality spirals even further — the rich finds
ways to monopolize what few resources are left and profiteer. </b>Covid
gave us a vivid example of that. Governments, paralyzed, are
captured by fanatical sects and factions, and nobody much arrives to
help you when you need it. Covid, again. Culture becomes a war,
between those who think of death, basically, as a good thing, a
purification, and those who don’t. Think of America’s bitter
“culture wars.” What happens in such a world? Society turns
predatory, regressive, eats itself — which is what a civilization
collapsing is.<br>
<br>
We are crossing the threshold now. Of Extinction. Of the Event. So
far, it’s been invisible to us, and we’ve been living in ignorant
bliss. The insects are dying off — who cares! Hey, did you see what
Kim Kardashian wore to the Met Gala? The fish are dying off — so
what, LOL, bro, let’s go watch a Marvel Movie!! The earth’s great
systems are all reaching tipping points — the Amazon, the boreal
forests, the ocean currents, the poles — of reinforcing a hotter and
hotter planet. Dude, what’s your problem? Tucker Carlson says we’re
the master race!!<br>
<br>
<b>We are crossing the threshold now. Extinction is visible</b>. The
eagles fall from the sky, taking their last breaths on the way down
to a burning planet. The streets are lined with death. We’re not
frogs slowly boiling in a pot anymore. We’re being taken out of the
pot, and we’re about to be eaten.<br>
<br>
My Western friends are still in denial that any of this will happen
to them. Ignorance is bliss. This world is coming for us all. There
is going to be no escaping it. The ones in India and Pakistan and
Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are some of the first through the event
horizon. But we must all cross it, because, well, we’re all on this
planet. Extinction is something that happens to a planet.<br>
<br>
<b>That doesn’t mean — my usual caveats — that everything dies off.
</b>It means it the way biologists use the term — a mass extinction,
in which many, many things do, and life resets itself, probably, in
new ways. After us, comes a new earth. 300,000 years of us — barely
the blink of an eye. Life will survive. But our civilization won’t.
The Event — the time in between civilizations — will be a dark age.
You can see that dark age falling now.<br>
<br>
It’s in every bird falling from the sky, every animal dropping dead
from the heat, every democracy being shredded by lunatics, in all
the deaths we will never count. Our systems — all of them —
economic, social, political — are beginning to fail.<br>
<br>
Because, my friends, this is Extinction.<br>
<br>
Some us just don’t know it yet.<br>
- -<br>
Umair<br>
May 2022<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://eand.co/the-age-of-extinction-is-here-some-of-us-just-dont-know-it-yet-7001f5e0c79a">https://eand.co/the-age-of-extinction-is-here-some-of-us-just-dont-know-it-yet-7001f5e0c79a</a><br>
<p>- -</p>
<i>[ need more? ]</i><br>
<b>If It Feels Like a New Dark Age Is Falling… That’s Because It Is</b><br>
Why We’re Entering a Dark Age Between Civilizations<br>
umair haque<br>
May 14<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://eand.co/if-it-feels-like-a-new-dark-age-is-falling-thats-because-it-is-458c7c9433b1">https://eand.co/if-it-feels-like-a-new-dark-age-is-falling-thats-because-it-is-458c7c9433b1</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[The news archive - looking back]</i><br>
<font size="+2"><i><b>November 27, 2014</b></i></font> <br>
November 27, 2014:<br>
The New York Times reports:<br>
<br>
"President Obama could leave office with the most aggressive,
far-reaching environmental legacy of any occupant of the White
House. Yet it is very possible that not a single major environmental
law will have passed during his two terms in Washington.<br>
<br>
"Instead, Mr. Obama has turned to the vast reach of the Clean Air
Act of 1970, which some legal experts call the most powerful
environmental law in the world. Faced with a Congress that has shut
down his attempts to push through an environmental agenda, Mr. Obama
is using the authority of the act passed at the birth of the
environmental movement to issue a series of landmark regulations on
air pollution, from soot to smog, to mercury and planet-warming
carbon dioxide."<br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/27/us/without-passing-a-single-law-obama-crafts-bold-enviornmental-policy.html?hpw&rref=politics&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well">http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/27/us/without-passing-a-single-law-obama-crafts-bold-enviornmental-policy.html?hpw&rref=politics&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well</a><br>
<br>
<br>
<p>======================================= <br>
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more at <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
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