Climate Change

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NotRexButCaesar
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Re: Climate Change

Post by NotRexButCaesar »

jodokus31 wrote: Fri Apr 02, 2021 9:31 pm First 1986, second 2011, so next in 2036? Just statistics.
NotRexButCaesar wrote: Fri Apr 02, 2021 7:36 pm Money is created when the government prints money. If everyone payed back debts, the amount of currency would not change.
OK, let's all go to the bank and fetch our money in printed notes...
https://www.rankred.com/how-much-money- ... the-world/

Regarding debts:
https://mises.org/library/our-money-based-debt
That money doesn’t really exist. No money has been “created”.



So with our sample size of 2, I’ll predict that nuclear disasters will exponentially decay in magnitude. Sorry for the sarcasm, but that is bad statistics.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by ickputzdirwech »

You can sometimes read that the risk of a uncontrollable accident at a nuclear power plant is something like 1 in a million years. Those numbers are clearly wrong if you look at past accidents. Why is that? The first issue is that these kind of assessments are bound to forget some possible threads. You just can’t foresee the future. The second issue is that they assume that the reactors are properly maintained and the personnel is properly trained. Reports after the Fukushima disaster showed that this isn’t even the case in rich countries like Germany.

Which brings me to another point I wanted to mention. Nuclear power is incredibly expensive. Governments spend lots of money on it otherwise no company in its right mind would build one. The cost for deconstruction, decontamination and nuclear waste storage is most of the times not even calculated. These are most of the time entirely paid for by governments.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by jodokus31 »

NotRexButCaesar wrote: Sat Apr 03, 2021 1:25 am
jodokus31 wrote: Fri Apr 02, 2021 9:31 pm
NotRexButCaesar wrote: Fri Apr 02, 2021 7:36 pm Money is created when the government prints money. If everyone payed back debts, the amount of currency would not change.
OK, let's all go to the bank and fetch our money in printed notes...
https://www.rankred.com/how-much-money- ... the-world/

Regarding debts:
https://mises.org/library/our-money-based-debt
That money doesn’t really exist. No money has been “created”.
NotRexButCaesar wrote: Thu Apr 01, 2021 1:32 am
Koub wrote: Wed Mar 31, 2021 7:57 pm It's the 20 hour course
:? I wish I had 20 hours to watch videos. :(
Well, maybe you should spend several 20 hours... I guess, I can't convince you
NotRexButCaesar wrote: Sat Apr 03, 2021 1:25 am So with our sample size of 2, I’ll predict that nuclear disasters will exponentially decay in magnitude. Sorry for the sarcasm, but that is bad statistics.
Sorry, we only have 2 samples and a lot of hot air (claims). Usually, 2 points are extrapolated as straight line.
Let's wait for sample 3.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by mmmPI »

NotRexButCaesar wrote: Fri Apr 02, 2021 7:36 pm Money is created when the government prints money. If everyone payed back debts, the amount of currency would not change.
You clearly have no idea what you are talking about.

The Bond system is not the only money creation source i made a simplified sum up of one thing.

Money is created when you go the bank to borrow money. The bank doesn't lend you money it has, instead it creates it "ex-nihilo". When you or a company (and not a governement) pay back your loan, the money is then destroyed by the bank, minus a small part that they keep for themselves to pay for the service they offered.

look it up a little maybe before repeating things that are myth : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractiona ... ve_banking
jodokus31 wrote: Sat Apr 03, 2021 8:55 am Sorry, we only have 2 samples and a lot of hot air (claims). Usually, 2 points are extrapolated as straight line.
Let's wait for sample 3.
there was this one in 1979 => https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Mil ... d_accident.
ickputzdirwech wrote: Sat Apr 03, 2021 7:53 am Which brings me to another point I wanted to mention. Nuclear power is incredibly expensive. Governments spend lots of money on it otherwise no company in its right mind would build one. The cost for deconstruction, decontamination and nuclear waste storage is most of the times not even calculated. These are most of the time entirely paid for by governments.
yes, because governements are proud to provide "cheap" energy to companies, it helps them develop faster than in places where energy is more expensive, and that's way more popular than asking companies to pay for ecologic regulatory measures :D they build their nuke plant with tax payer money.

NotRexButCaesar wrote: Fri Apr 02, 2021 7:39 pm I don’t think nuclear waste storage is a problem now or likely to become a big problem in the near future.
https://phys.org/news/2019-05-dome-paci ... aking.html

The storage from some A-bomb test that occured in 1958 iq leaking into the pacific already.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by Impatient »

Koub wrote: Thu Jul 25, 2019 10:18 pm ...
So far, I don't think the current hot temperatures we have in Europe have been proven to be a direct consequence or illustration of the climate change - despite the climate change in itself has reached a consensus in the scientific community. There might even be places in the world where the weather gets colder. That's about all for me, I know I didn't answer OP's question, but I felt it had to be precised
Look at the diagrams:

https://www.google.com/search?q=average ... production
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Re: Climate Change

Post by jodokus31 »

mmmPI wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 11:16 am
jodokus31 wrote: Sat Apr 03, 2021 8:55 am Sorry, we only have 2 samples and a lot of hot air (claims). Usually, 2 points are extrapolated as straight line.
Let's wait for sample 3.
there was this one in 1979 => https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Mil ... d_accident.
so 7 years, 25 years, and ... ? (Anyway, too much)
mmmPI wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 11:16 am
NotRexButCaesar wrote: Fri Apr 02, 2021 7:39 pm I don’t think nuclear waste storage is a problem now or likely to become a big problem in the near future.
https://phys.org/news/2019-05-dome-paci ... aking.html

The storage from some A-bomb test that occured in 1958 iq leaking into the pacific already.
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/10/24/asia ... index.html
https://nuclear-energy.net/nuclear-acci ... ent-status
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Re: Climate Change

Post by Koub »

Impatient wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 12:31 pm
Koub wrote: Thu Jul 25, 2019 10:18 pm ...
So far, I don't think the current hot temperatures we have in Europe have been proven to be a direct consequence or illustration of the climate change - despite the climate change in itself has reached a consensus in the scientific community. There might even be places in the world where the weather gets colder. That's about all for me, I know I didn't answer OP's question, but I felt it had to be precised
Look at the diagrams:

https://www.google.com/search?q=average ... production
I never questioned the existence of the raise of the average temperature due to the augmentation of atmospheric CO2 level.
I just stressed out that the hot temperature episode we experienced in Europe in July 2019 was not necessarily the direct consequence or illustration of the climate change all by itself. An above average temperature during a couple weeks is not enough to tell "well here is the proof the climate gets hotter" (as well as a cold episode is not the proof the global warming is a myth). We, as humans, are not equipped to sense average values. We can only have a sense of the current temperature. And a temporary hot weather does not necessarily mean a raise of the average temperature.
Yes, the climate has already started changing and the average globe temperature is raising, but it's not responsible for every single heat spike - or at least it's not the only thing responsible. The temperatures have varied well before climate change caused by anthropic activities. However, we can expect more and more of those abnormal heat waves, and the growth of their frequency is one of the direct consequences of the climate change/global warming.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by NotRexButCaesar »

mmmPI wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 11:16 am You clearly have no idea what you are talking about.

The Bond system is not the only money creation source i made a simplified sum up of one thing.

Money is created when you go the bank to borrow money. The bank doesn't lend you money it has, instead it creates it "ex-nihilo". When you or a company (and not a governement) pay back your loan, the money is then destroyed by the bank, minus a small part that they keep for themselves to pay for the service they offered.

look it up a little maybe before repeating things that are myth : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractiona ... ve_banking
More helpful than "you're stupid, look it up" would be some example of a situation where you go from less dollars to more dollars

I am aware of fractional reserve banking. I count debt as "negative dollars": the bank loans you 1$ and -1$.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by Koub »

NotRexButCaesar wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 10:02 pm I am aware of fractional reserve banking. I count debt as "negative dollars": the bank loans you 1$ and -1$.
My limited understanding of the thing is that it's not how it works. The bank actually creates money ex nihilo before lending it. If I decided to take a loan, and got it, I would be able to spend that money without going bankrupt. If I had negative dollars on my account, I would go bankrupt as soon as I would have spent that money.

The money is scripturally created by the banks upon lending, and destroyed when the load is reimbursed.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by mmmPI »

NotRexButCaesar wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 10:02 pm More helpful than "you're stupid, look it up" would be some example of a situation where you go from less dollars to more dollars

I am aware of fractional reserve banking. I count debt as "negative dollars": the bank loans you 1$ and -1$.
I would have choosen ignorant rather than stupid to sum up my aggressive answer. Those things are quite complex and not understanding it after looking it up wouldn't be necessarily sign of stupidity;not quite as triggering as saying stuff that are very not true out of what appears to be ignorance. (imo). However some people learn by having hypothesis on everything and then update their belief when something's wrong. But that take the time to do some research and saying you don't have it means you either don't care or are unable to, none of which convey a tremendous appeal to the idea of spending time to organise some written thoughts for you.

Anyway,

A simplified example where you go from less dollar to more dollar would be when you go to the bank to take a loan to pay for medical fees that would allow you to continue working.

There is forseable interest to perceive if you can be cured since you'd continue working and you will get paid.

The bank then will write on your account the amount of money you requested.

They become your creditor, that amount is written as a debt you owe to them.

Congrats money has been created.

They did not need to have that money in the first place to lend it.

Now there's more money than immediatly before.

When you pay back that money, the bank write off the debt on their book.

Money has been destroyed.

The monetary mass, the amount of money, with that particular view on the topic, is just the lag between when people borrowed and when they pay back.

If you lower the interest rate , then more things enter the category that will generate enough cashflow to pay for the interest. More people borrow, more money is created.
If you increase the interest rate, then less things enter the categary that will generate enough cashflow to pay for the interest. Less people borrow, less money is created.

Money is only created for things that generate immediate interest, spending money for things that don't generate interest means you have money that comes in your pocket from other sources. Like ecology, spending money to save the environment, the planet , the baby seals, your own baby too , who can pay people to do something about it ? who will pay people to do something about it ? That would be an ever-ending task, that cost huge amount of money, for not immediate cash in return that would allow to pay back the debt associated when the money was created.

Wether it is the way governement's way of financing itself ( and other long-lasting entity) which is roughly the bond system and/or the indivual/family way of financing things BOTH seem to require the same mechanism of constant growth.

again that is quite far from the climate change topic as the title says, that's an off-topic in an off-topic subject already from a random stranger on the internet, for what it's worth you can look it up on more serious sources as it's the best way to make sure i'm not saying out loud an wild hypothesis of my own as you did :twisted:

the part where i say it's responsible for the inability to take in account the climate necessity maybe lack of nuances as it's not the only cause but that is definitly a wild hypothesis of my own, but not only :).

the part where i say money is created out of thin air to generate interest, this just describing an old system, the federal reserve of the united states of america but also the european central bank are presently operating under this mode, so is the world bank and the internationnal monetary fund. They have other ways of explaining it that include the whole "why they do it this way". that's interesting on its own, but my point was that with the way money is created, there is a need for constant growth which seem incompatible with the non-extensive planet we all share.


on a side note, that relate to why i feel you can't expect solutions for adaption to human-induced climate-change from governement, industries , law-makers , and so-on, that's not what they do. their purpose is to make a system function and try to perfect it, but that same system in its status doesn't include the previously mentionned mission : not ruining the environment. It is even (imo) incompatible with the other missions it has : improving living conditions of people who think it means consuming more things.

If people keeps the same mentality about consumerism a government/company/ngo that would want to effectively adress ecologic problem would be helpless or authoritarian.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chloroflu ... Regulation

Yes there was a CFC ban, when you look at how much time and effort it took and the results, it doesn't appear likely than the same method could be used to the larger scale it would require to be effective on a the also larger scale that is the the whole climate. While not buying a refrigirator is a very simple decision to make as an individual. If many people make that decision, it then make sense to develop other things to make up for the annoyance of not having a refrigirator. ( AND you could still ban them that's not exclusive).
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Re: Climate Change

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Koub wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 5:44 pm
Impatient wrote: Sun Apr 04, 2021 12:31 pm
Koub wrote: Thu Jul 25, 2019 10:18 pm ...
So far, I don't think the current hot temperatures we have in Europe have been proven to be a direct consequence or illustration of the climate change - despite the climate change in itself has reached a consensus in the scientific community. There might even be places in the world where the weather gets colder. That's about all for me, I know I didn't answer OP's question, but I felt it had to be precised
Look at the diagrams:

https://www.google.com/search?q=average ... production
I never questioned the existence of the raise of the average temperature due to the augmentation of atmospheric CO2 level.
I just stressed out that the hot temperature episode we experienced in Europe in July 2019 was not necessarily the direct consequence or illustration of the climate change all by itself. An above average temperature during a couple weeks is not enough to tell "well here is the proof the climate gets hotter" (as well as a cold episode is not the proof the global warming is a myth). We, as humans, are not equipped to sense average values. We can only have a sense of the current temperature. And a temporary hot weather does not necessarily mean a raise of the average temperature.
Yes, the climate has already started changing and the average globe temperature is raising, but it's not responsible for every single heat spike - or at least it's not the only thing responsible. The temperatures have varied well before climate change caused by anthropic activities. However, we can expect more and more of those abnormal heat waves, and the growth of their frequency is one of the direct consequences of the climate change/global warming.
We can observe climate change by the dynamics of ice melting. Of course, before the industrial revolution, climate change also took place, but this process was much slower than today, when a huge amount of harmful compounds and heat are released into the atmosphere. Warming is destroying the ecosystem, killing polar animals and birds that are accustomed to living in extreme temperatures.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by TheKillerChicken »

Sorry for the necro, but the planet has been shifting patterns for ~3 billion years. My take is that before humanity became stationary, we migrated with the patterns, and as such there is no recent history or records of this. Hell, just last year Honga-Tonga volcano violently exploded and caused ~40% of the o-zone layer to deplete for the next several years. But hey, that is what volcanoes do once in a while. In 2018, when Kilauea erupted in the lower east-rift zone, it emitted ~700 million metric tonnes of Co2 and So2 into the atmosphere. I feel what humanity does is insignificant compared to what the volcanic systems do. There is something else that happens every epoc, mass-extinctions, or as I call "nature's reset button" which eradicates 90% of all life on earth. Mars and Venus also had those until their cores failed. But yea, there was 5 mass-extinctions already and the current Epoc that we are in (Holocene) is in the quatinary phase, so according to many scientists, by next century, the 6th mass-extinction will occur. Each epoc has 4 phases before the great reset. Primary, secondary, tertiary, and quatinary. Nothing new, but these extreme weathers are, what I believe, earth doing its' thing(s).
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Re: Climate Change

Post by quyxkh »

Well, the way science works is, you're trying to construct a model, math when you can get it, that behaves the same way as some part of reality, then you see how the model behaves in situations you haven't encountered and either construct those situations or wait for them to happen IRL, and see if how the model behaves is how reality behaves. That happens enough times, you start feeling confident it works the way reality works. An easy way to check for idiocies, save ourselves a lot of effort, is to run the model on historical data and see if it behaves the ways we've already seen reality behave. We've got models for gravity, light, fluid flows, evolution, la la, on and on. They demonstrably behave the way reality behaves, they've told us to expect some pretty damn counterintuitive things, and those things have shown up exactly as predicted.

We've (humanity we) been working on climate models for decades. No system as complicated as Earth's climate will ever be entirely predictable, there's too much detail, all you can do is get better approximations that are good farther ahead. The models have gotten pretty fucking good: run them on historical measurements, from satellites and weather balloons and ships and ground stations, the trends they say would start showing up are the trends that started showing up. And when they get run on the measurements we're taking, they tell us what to expect, and what happens has, for many decades now, ever more accurately looked like what the models said would happen.

So the people claiming the models are wrong really haven't got a leg to stand on. They've been reduced, for many years now, to intimations of dishonesty, endless rivers of twaddle (Bannon openly calls the tactic"flood the zone with shit"), mulish jackassery and outright lies. Because the models behave the way reality behaves, and anyone who cares to learn how to read them can see it.

Thing is, when we take those models and feed them data reflecting a world where we're not pumping the CO₂ and methane and what not we unleash into the atmosphere, the world they predict looks very different.
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Re: Climate Change

Post by mmmPI »

TheKillerChicken wrote: Sat Sep 02, 2023 6:12 pm My take is that before humanity became stationary, we migrated with the patterns, and as such there is no recent history or records of this. Hell, just last year Honga-Tonga volcano violently exploded and caused ~40% of the o-zone layer to deplete for the next several years. But hey, that is what volcanoes do once in a while. In 2018, when Kilauea erupted in the lower east-rift zone, it emitted ~700 million metric tonnes of Co2 and So2 into the atmosphere. I feel what humanity does is insignificant compared to what the volcanic systems do.
According to statistics :
https://www.google.com/search?-b-d&q=co ... s+per+year
Human emission of CO2 in 2021 was 37 000 000 000 tons vs 700 000 000 for the volcano you describe, or roughly 50 times, each year, the humanity produce as much metric tons of CO2 than 50 of those volcanic eruption.
You can see in 2020 due to COVID there was a reduction in the production of 2000 000 000 tons.

TheKillerChicken wrote: Sat Sep 02, 2023 6:12 pm There is something else that happens every epoc, mass-extinctions, or as I call "nature's reset button" which eradicates 90% of all life on earth. Mars and Venus also had those until their cores failed. But yea, there was 5 mass-extinctions already and the current Epoc that we are in (Holocene) is in the quatinary phase, so according to many scientists, by next century, the 6th mass-extinction will occur. Each epoc has 4 phases before the great reset. Primary, secondary, tertiary, and quatinary. Nothing new, but these extreme weathers are, what I believe, earth doing its' thing(s).
There is no evidence of life in Mars of Venus that has been found to my knowledge, so i don't know how others planet can be used as example for mass extinction in our own planet.

Many of those scientists predicting a 6th mass extinction are attributing it to human impacts on the planet. Which is the scientific consensus, to recognize human impact, and that this is the cause of the 6th extinction. Otherwise they would also predict a huge amount of volcanos or at least explain a cause for that predicted mass 6th extinction no ?

Also are we in the holocene still ? : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropocene

How do you think the early people in the "industrial era" felt about the concept of "industrial era" ?

One of the exctinction may have been caused by meteorites, so earth doing its things is not always true right ?
One of the extinction may have been caused by plants overdevelopping to the point where they changed the atmospheric composition to one that was toxic to them, in a process somewhat similar to what is describe as the human doing no ?
A December 2020 study published in Nature found that the total anthropogenic mass, or human-made materials, outweighs all the biomass on earth, and highlighted that "this quantification of the human enterprise gives a mass-based quantitative and symbolic characterization of the human-induced epoch of the Anthropocene."[155][156]
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