[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago)

“Half your arguments are over 50 years ago”

Homie the same people who made those decisions are not only still alive, but they are still the decision makers. There are elected officials currently in the US government that were in office when the US sterilized 1/3 of Puerto Rican women

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago)

There are still impacts to be had that aren’t meaningless, especially on migrating birds and the like which wouldn’t be as impacted by something like a suburb simply existing.

Also just because this one might be suburban (there’s really no indication it is) it is a fact that outdoor cats can decimate ecosystems

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 3 years ago

OUTDOOR CATS DESTROY LOCAL ECOSYSTEMS

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago)

One of my favorite quotes on civilization is from Anthropologist Margaret Mead when she was asked by a student what she considered to be the first sign of civilization in a culture. This is an excerpt from Ira Byock’s The Best Care Possible: A Physician’s Quest to Transform Care Through the End of Life:

Mead said that the first sign of civilization in an ancient culture was a femur (thighbone) that had been broken and then healed. Mead explained that in the animal kingdom, if you break your leg, you die. You cannot run from danger, get to the river for a drink or hunt for food. You are meat for prowling beasts. No animal survives a broken leg long enough for the bone to heal. A broken femur that has healed is evidence that someone has taken time to stay with the one who fell, has bound up the wound, has carried the person to safety and has tended the person through recovery. Helping someone else through difficulty is where civilization starts. We are at our best when we serve others.

A civilization does not exist to build riches, expand its domain, advance technologically, or enforce its will upon other civilizations. All of these are cultures within civilization, but not civilization itself. Civilization, at its core, is a method to care for others and ensure a better quality of life.

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submitted 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago) by opposide@hexbear.net to c/memes@hexbear.net

I present to you :lactose-selfie: and :lactose-intolerance:

Blank png of the selfie

Blank png of lactose intolerance

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submitted 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago) by opposide@hexbear.net to c/the_dunk_tank@hexbear.net

Final final edit: For the sake of story completion and enshrinement into the Hexbear canon, I will leave all of these links here. I will add, however, that this person is clearly unwell, armed, and highly reactionary. They have doxxed themselves in their old Reddit posts (which are not very well hidden if you are determined enough), as well as today on stream and I doubt they’d hesitate to do the same to you. Do not engage with them on any personal accounts.

That being said, do not doxx this person either. As I stated before: they are armed, they are potentially mentally unwell, and they are extremely reactionary. Do not contact law enforcement, do not contact this person, and do not contact this person’s personal relations. You are not only putting yourself at risk, but anybody this unstable person may come into contact with as well.

Final update: Holy shit. This guy might actually have something wrong with him. His YouTube is Nirvgorilla (which he shared with us openly) so I did a quick google search to find it, found a whole Reddit thread dedicated to someone who sounded like they were acting the same exact way as he just did on stream but I wasn’t fully convinced until I saw this comment which talks about speaking to him on voice chat and him going on about Carl Sagan, as he did today on stream for hours. Dude has some serious issues as indicated by the obvious today and extensive history of over a decade of the same behavior exhibited online. He has apparently made two (or more) accounts where he has not only pestered people repeatedly, but used his own accounts to argue with himself for Reddit karma. He also doxxed himself with both first and last name on Reddit while arguing... with himself apparently.

(Update: some brave hexbear soldiers got him to drop the n word in rage and he got banned from twitch lol new stream here)

“I’ve been banned from Reddit uhhhhhh probably 400-600 times”

“oh so what if I say the age of consent should be 11 years old?” lmfao omg he said the line

He’s now playing audio of animal abuse make sure to report

omg this guy is streaming on twitch right now and absolutely raging please go harass him on stream (TW I have no idea what this person is like but they’re using slurs so be careful and also don’t doxx yourself.) OMG WHOEVER IS IN THE COMMENTS MAKING FUN OF 9/11 IS REALLY GETTING TO HIM LMFAOOO

New copypastas just dropped btw lmfao sorry for the long ass screenshot but it is worth the read

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 3 years ago

This is also why chrome makes your computer run slow as fuck

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[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 4 years ago* (last edited 4 years ago)

Yes! I’ve actually written papers about China’s “Green Wall” initiative back when they were doing trials for it and watching it actually succeed feels amazing. These sorts of large scale projects are certainly possible but any large scale project will also have large scale impact. I know one thing that hasn’t happened with the green wall initiative that was predicted is that it HASNT increased rainfall, and as you’ve said this has had an impact on ground water. As for these projects elsewhere in the world, some will have water issues and some won’t. It really depends on where they are happening.

One very scary example, at least to me, is that many places in South America that used to be rainforest but were clear cut for farming simply no longer have the moisture or biodiversity to support a rainforest in the area. Many of these cycles are self-perpetuating, which is what China anticipated happening but unfortunately didn’t.

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 4 years ago

Think of it like this:

Let’s pretend the natural, completely free of human influence planet has 10 carbon units in the carbon cycle. If something were to burn down trees it does upset the natural balance of atmospheric carbon, but you are simply changing where the carbon is, not the total amount. This might upset the climate temporarily, but the total number of carbon units in circulation is still 10.

Now let’s add human activity to the equation. We are taking carbon that was in long term storage (oil, coal, natural gas) and adding it to the 10 carbon units we had before. So now instead of a total of 10 carbon units either in trees, the atmosphere, etc, we have a total of 13. Ignoring the fact that we can’t just plant or expect lush forests everywhere, the maximum impact they could potentially have us not actually all that great.

If we wanted to biologically sequester carbon, we would have better luck using fertilizers directly into the oceans to force algal blooms which then die and sink. Of course, this has other consequences unfortunately

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 0 points 4 years ago* (last edited 4 years ago)

As current tech stands, it is pretty much always better to plant trees than worry about this. One of these capture systems does the work of less than 10 trees before maturity (plus trees serve other great purposes). Granted, this system will continue to sequester carbon while a tree will no longer effectively do so once it is full grown.

In the longer term though, systems like these will ideally be what is used to accelerate the process I was speaking of in my original comment.

Also I have not see the show/movie but we will, at least in my opinion, NEVER have an overpopulation problem in any foreseeable future, and I’m talking thousands of years. I do think it’s fairly obvious, especially when living western lifestyles, that the issue is overconsumption and production, as well as commodifying necessities like housing and healthy foods

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 0 points 4 years ago

Well actually this is the first time I’ve ever been asked this and it’s a hilarious question (BUT NOT BECAUSE IT IS BAD OR DUMB) so let’s undress the question a bit:

Is plastic sequestration? Short answer is yes. There are ways to lock the carbon in plastic out of the carbon cycle for a very VERY long time.

Long answer is no, because as far as Im aware nobody is making plastics out of atmospheric carbon, like you said. If they could this is still a good idea on paper, but any long term storage that I can think of for plastic will result in its eventual decay back into carbon.

It is a great question though, because in theory if we could add plastic to deposition environments and make sure it remains contained that could definitely be a form of sequestration but I don’t see it being feasible at current rates of consumption.

[-] opposide@hexbear.net 1 points 4 years ago* (last edited 4 years ago)

Edit: sorry for the giant fucking wall of text. I do hope this helps some of you guys though. Cheers

Hello it’s your Chapo climatologist here:

None of you are wrong for doomposting about this. We are legit so fucked. We need to SEQUESTER carbon at this point. Emission reduction is obviously good but if we went carbon neutral TOMORROW I don’t think (in my professional opinion) it would be enough on its own to achieve what people think it would. Things will not be fine. We have already baked in several feet of sea level rise at current atmospheric carbon concentrations. We’ve been saying that we had that several feet of sea level rise baked in since pretty much 2000 and literally nobody listened or cared because they just assumed we would have improved by now.

I’ve addressed questions about this before on Chapo and figured I’d answer the most asked few of, “Well what can we do?” And “What can be done?”

You personally? Nothing basically. As we are all likely in agreement here, capitalism and overconsumption are the root of this problem. Without a massive class uprising to overthrow this, I doubt the global consciousness will be coherent enough to have an impact of the powers that be.

On the, “What can be done?” side, luckily you have some of the smartest and most dedicated scientists in the world working on ways to sequester carbon, and the most promising method is accelerating the silicate weathering process which is the most effective tool to combat man made climate change.

For those who don’t want to read or don’t understand, I’ll briefly summarize why this method is important and the most likely candidate:

You may be thinking “oh let’s plant trees” which is good, sure, but consider that we are re-adding carbon which was not actively in the carbon cycle back into it. A mature forest is most times carbon neutral, as carbon output from decaying biological matter is roughly equal to carbon uptake (think about the following: how could forests continue to exist in the first place if they sucked out more carbon from the air than was added to it?)

Now think where we are getting our carbon that we add back to the atmosphere from. We pull it from underground deposits. The beauty of silicate weathering is that it incorporates carbon into rocks, and thus acts as a long term storage vessel when removing carbon from the atmosphere. The big problem though is that this process happens naturally over the course of tens of millions of years as a result of plate tectonics uplifting mountain ranges and these ranges getting weathered (as implied by the name “silicate weathering”).

So now geologists and climatologists are trying to figure out ways to massively accelerate that process, which has only become a remote possibility over the last 15 years.

Of all fields in science, people often don’t realize how young climate science and geology are. We didn’t even know the earth had other layers until less than 100 years ago. We didn’t take our first deep ice core samples until the 1960s. We couldn’t model climates effectively until the 80s. Think of how far we have come in just 60 years. There is a lot to be afraid of, but also a lot of hope to be had. There are tons of people far more intelligent than myself who realize just how dire our situation is and have dedicated their lives to solving these pressing issues.

opposide

joined 4 years ago