Catastrophising

BasketactortaleBasketactortale Shipmate
edited May 23 in Purgatory
I do not know if anyone else is interested to talk about this topic!

I have recently been thinking about how scientists and environmentalists and greenies/crunchies/ tend towards making everything into a catastrophy.

Which is to say that there are some things that look bad: there clearly are measurable impacts of climate change, desertification and many other things.

But it is not all bad. Industrial agriculture is not thrashing the planet, logic tells us this would be stupid if true because yields would directly and quickly reduce. There clearly is habitat change and species loss going on in some places and that is obviously concerning, but in the main and on the whole that's not happening.

It is tempting to only notice where bad things happen and extrapolate to think that this is representative of everywhere else, even though there is no real evidence that this is true.

Environmental scientists often seem to exaggerate the importance of their research and then over-generalise about the results because this helps with winning grants, getting publicity or both. Nuance and complications get ironed out. Other aspects such as insights from other sciences, politics and ethics get ignored or minimised.

The problem with this mentality is that if one starts to believe that everything is irretrievably broken then there is no prospect of fixing it therefore by definition any effort is wasted effort. In contrast if you think that generally mostly things are working as they should be but that there are serious problems that can be identified then there is a chance of fixing them.

I think there are other things that follow a similar pattern where there is a tendency to exaggerate and focus on the worst parts of an issue and then suggest that this should be taken as indicative of the whole.
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Comments

  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    I do not know if anyone else is interested to talk about this topic!

    I have recently been thinking about how scientists and environmentalists and greenies/crunchies/ tend towards making everything into a catastrophy.

    Which is to say that there are some things that look bad: there clearly are measurable impacts of climate change, desertification and many other things.

    But it is not all bad. Industrial agriculture is not thrashing the planet, logic tells us this would be stupid if true because yields would directly and quickly reduce.

    Or yields are kept up by unsustainable application of oil-based artificial fertilisers and the destruction of all other flora and fauna.

    Journalists tend to be the ones who propagate the most lurid catastrophising; scientists are generally very circumspect. It's just that even the best case scenarios for climate change and species loss are now horrendous. It's not catastrophising to say that the climate is warming faster than at any time we have evidence for, and the rate at which species are going extinct rivals past mass extinction events, it's just fact.
  • I do not know if anyone else is interested to talk about this topic!

    I have recently been thinking about how scientists and environmentalists and greenies/crunchies/ tend towards making everything into a catastrophy.

    Which is to say that there are some things that look bad: there clearly are measurable impacts of climate change, desertification and many other things.

    But it is not all bad. Industrial agriculture is not thrashing the planet, logic tells us this would be stupid if true because yields would directly and quickly reduce.

    Or yields are kept up by unsustainable application of oil-based artificial fertilisers and the destruction of all other flora and fauna.

    Journalists tend to be the ones who propagate the most lurid catastrophising; scientists are generally very circumspect. It's just that even the best case scenarios for climate change and species loss are now horrendous. It's not catastrophising to say that the climate is warming faster than at any time we have evidence for, and the rate at which species are going extinct rivals past mass extinction events, it's just fact.

    We could argue about the detail of food security, but that seems like an academic debate that would be beyond the scope of this website.

    But you are right that there are "tipping points" which could be breached which could easily have extremely serious consequences. The difficulty is identifying accurately what these are, and how close we really are to those breaches.
  • Saying things that are clearly not true as "just fact" is not helping. Are you an expert in the field of historical species extinction events across geological time?
  • sionisaissionisais Shipmate
    Saying things that are clearly not true as "just fact" is not helping. Are you an expert in the field of historical species extinction events across geological time?

    Could you refute those statements with some evidence? There are plenty of words but no quotes from reputable sources.

  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    @Basketactortale You want evidence? Here's a Guardian article on the changing climate which references a government report on what needs to be done to prepare for a hotter climate. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/may/20/uk-built-for-climate-that-no-longer-exists-and-needs-urgent-changes-to-survive-global-heating-report-warns

    Of course it will probably be shoved into a file somewhere and ignored, but that doesn't mean the climate crisis isn't happening, it just means the government doesn't want to spend money on it. And the longer we wait, the more it will cost, until the wet-bulb temperature rises above a survivable level for humans and the dinosaurs* inherit the earth.

    *birds
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    There's a big problem with the climate crisis. Politicians need short-term gains. The planet needs long-term solutions.

    Of course, in the end, the Earth will be fine. Us humans will extinct ourselves along with all sorts of other creatures. But nature will regenerate and a new beautiful planet emerge without the locusts (also known as humans).

    Personally, I find that people who are not interested in nature are not worth knowing.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Boogie wrote: »
    There's a big problem with the climate crisis. Politicians need short-term gains. The planet needs long-term solutions.

    Of course, in the end, the Earth will be fine. Us humans will extinct ourselves along with all sorts of other creatures. But nature will regenerate and a new beautiful planet emerge without the locusts (also known as humans).

    Personally, I find that people who are not interested in nature are not worth knowing.

    It's interesting isn't it?

    Our village has a massive problem with people parking on verges. I cannot get my head around the mentality that would dream of turning a patch of green into a mudbath of tyre tracks, but that's what lots of people seem to have no problem doing.
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    Actually that sounded like catastrophising, so let me clarify what I meant: I don't believe humans are capable of destroying the planet, but we are certainly capable of making it uninhabitable for our species. You say industrial agriculture hasn't destroyed the planet, but it has done considerable damage to natural ecosystems, polluted rivers and incidentally made most of humanity dangerously reliant on a very small number of plant and animal species for food.
  • sionisais wrote: »
    Saying things that are clearly not true as "just fact" is not helping. Are you an expert in the field of historical species extinction events across geological time?

    Could you refute those statements with some evidence? There are plenty of words but no quotes from reputable sources.

    Again, this is an academic debate beyond the scope of the non-specialist. There have been at least 6 extinction events, saying that the current losses show the worst ever is a statement not a fact.
  • Jane R wrote: »
    Actually that sounded like catastrophising, so let me clarify what I meant: I don't believe humans are capable of destroying the planet, but we are certainly capable of making it uninhabitable for our species. You say industrial agriculture hasn't destroyed the planet, but it has done considerable damage to natural ecosystems, polluted rivers and incidentally made most of humanity dangerously reliant on a very small number of plant and animal species for food.

    I don't think this is going to happen anytime soon.

    Agriculture supports 6+ billion people, by any measure that's a massive success.
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    What you think is not evidence. What I think isn't evidence either, but perhaps you will listen to the experts at the Food and Agriculture Organization. Their report on climate change as it affects water and food security is 200 pages long, so I am not going to summarise it for you.

    https://www.fao.org/home/search/en/?q=climate+change+water+and+food+security
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    sionisais wrote: »
    Saying things that are clearly not true as "just fact" is not helping. Are you an expert in the field of historical species extinction events across geological time?

    Could you refute those statements with some evidence? There are plenty of words but no quotes from reputable sources.

    Again, this is an academic debate beyond the scope of the non-specialist. There have been at least 6 extinction events, saying that the current losses show the worst ever is a statement not a fact.

    I didn't say "worst ever" I said "rivals".
  • Jane R wrote: »
    What you think is not evidence. What I think isn't evidence either, but perhaps you will listen to the experts at the Food and Agriculture Organization. Their report on climate change as it affects water and food security is 200 pages long, so I am not going to summarise it for you.

    https://www.fao.org/home/search/en/?q=climate+change+water+and+food+security

    That's true, hence my lack of willing to get into an academic debate with people who are not experts.
  • As an example of this, a scientist was "stating an opinion" at an academic conference which then became a "fact" when repeated endlessly by others, including the FAO, British government and others. But it was never a fact, there's no evidence behind it and plenty of evidence that it is not true. The problem is that debunking a myth of this kind takes a lot of time and effort and the debunked claim has an ongoing life that the boring truth does not have. The truth, as they say, is often convoluted, confusing and partial. Any statement like "33% of all soils are degraded", "we only have 60 harvests left" and so on might make a story in the Guardian but are not actual science.

    https://ourworldindata.org/soil-lifespans
  • sionisaissionisais Shipmate
    Jane R wrote: »
    What you think is not evidence. What I think isn't evidence either, but perhaps you will listen to the experts at the Food and Agriculture Organization. Their report on climate change as it affects water and food security is 200 pages long, so I am not going to summarise it for you.

    https://www.fao.org/home/search/en/?q=climate+change+water+and+food+security

    That's true, hence my lack of willing to get into an academic debate with people who are not experts.

    If you are not willing to get into such a debate given the lack of experts, then what was the point of your opening post?

  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    We are very selfish creatures. But some are much more selfish than others. Some care for bees, insects and the natural world, some couldn't care less.

    It usually helps to follow the money. If someone is getting super rich you can be pretty sure they are selfish when it comes to other people and the natural environment.

    It's sad, and I used to get very angry. But in my old age I've become resigned to the fact that we are a horrible species.
  • sionisaissionisais Shipmate
    Boogie, I’m pushing seventy with a very short stick, so I’m almost old (in my opinion) but like you I agree that we are generally selfish and horrible, but I haven’t become resigned to it. I am therefore an angry old man and I intend to do something about this in my dotage.
  • EigonEigon Shipmate
    @Basketactortale If you think industrial agriculture is doing fine, you might be interested in the legal case that is presently going through the courts to stop industrial chicken factories from polluting the River Wye. The number of salmon in what was once the finest salmon river in the country has plummeted.
  • Eigon wrote: »
    @Basketactortale If you think industrial agriculture is doing fine, you might be interested in the legal case that is presently going through the courts to stop industrial chicken factories from polluting the River Wye. The number of salmon in what was once the finest salmon river in the country has plummeted.

    I am unclear why you think that I believe there is no problems in the Wye valley. That's far from true.

    I read some of the scientific work which is being studied in this area only last week.

    I cannot comment on whether specific farms can or should be held responsible for pollution in the Wye, not least because it's a legal case and it would not be right to discuss it flippantly.

  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Eigon wrote: »
    @Basketactortale If you think industrial agriculture is doing fine, you might be interested in the legal case that is presently going through the courts to stop industrial chicken factories from polluting the River Wye. The number of salmon in what was once the finest salmon river in the country has plummeted.

    I am unclear why you think that I believe there is no problems in the Wye valley. That's far from true.

    I read some of the scientific work which is being studied in this area only last week.

    I cannot comment on whether specific farms can or should be held responsible for pollution in the Wye, not least because it's a legal case and it would not be right to discuss it flippantly.

    You seem to be unwilling to discuss anything that challenges your thesis.
  • Eigon wrote: »
    @Basketactortale If you think industrial agriculture is doing fine, you might be interested in the legal case that is presently going through the courts to stop industrial chicken factories from polluting the River Wye. The number of salmon in what was once the finest salmon river in the country has plummeted.

    I am unclear why you think that I believe there is no problems in the Wye valley. That's far from true.

    I read some of the scientific work which is being studied in this area only last week.

    I cannot comment on whether specific farms can or should be held responsible for pollution in the Wye, not least because it's a legal case and it would not be right to discuss it flippantly.

    You seem to be unwilling to discuss anything that challenges your thesis.

    How would you suggest we discuss it? There is contention amongst scientists who study such things that the current species extinction event compares to past events, largely because establishing the data for species loss in the geological past is extremely difficult.

    Here are some papers on the topic, I look forward to your professional view on the topic and why yours is better informed than those who wrote peer reviewed science on it:

    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/gcb.70476

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.15252/embr.202154193

  • DafydDafyd Hell Host
    It seems to me that both those links support Arethosemyfeet's assertion.
  • BasketactortaleBasketactortale Shipmate
    edited May 23
    Dafyd wrote: »
    It seems to me that both those links support Arethosemyfeet's assertion.

    However:
    We conclude that, although challenging to address, the available evidence suggests that the ongoing extinction episode still falls a long way short of the devastation caused by the bolide impact 66 Ma, but that it has likely surpassed most other Cenozoic events in magnitude, with the possible exception of the Eocene–Oligocene transition (34 Ma), about which much uncertainty remains. Given the number of endangered and at-risk species, the eventual magnitude of the current event will depend heavily on humanity's response and how we interact with the rest of the biosphere over the coming millennia.

    And
    If we take these estimates as a measure, the current anthropogenic biodiversity crisis does not qualify as a comparable mass extinction

    I'm not sure how you got to that conclusion.

    Also this
    The idea that Earth has entered a sixth mass extinction has garnered considerable attention. However, we describe numerous problems associated with comparing recent and fossil extinction rates and in projecting recent extinction rates into the distant future. Current projections of future extinction seem more consistent with ~12–40% species loss, which would be catastrophic but far from the 75% criterion used to argue for a sixth mass extinction. Furthermore, as a conservation goal, stopping 75% species loss over thousands of years seems neither ambitious nor urgent (e.g., what about trying to stop all current species losses instead?). Rather than studying past extinctions and projecting them forward for millennia, we think that a more useful focus is on identifying (and ameliorating) the largest current and impending threats to global biodiversity (see Outstanding questions) and pinpointing and preserving the most imminently imperiled species [53–55].

    https://www.cell.com/trends/ecology-evolution/fulltext/S0169-5347(25)00002-3

    The whole notion of a mass extinction event originates largely from EO Wilson. Who said this
    The most striking fact about the living environment may be how little we know about it. Even the number of living species can be only roughly calculated. A widely accepted estimate by scientists puts the number at about 10 million. In contrast, those formally described, classified and given two-part Latinized names (Homo sapiens for humans, for example) number slightly more than two million. With only about 20 percent of its species known and 80 percent undiscovered, it is fair to call Earth a little-known planet.

    Paleontologists estimate that before the global spread of humankind the average rate of species extinction was one species per million in each one- to 10-million-year interval. Human activity has driven up the average global rate of extinction to 100 to 1,000 times that baseline rate. What ensues is a tragedy upon a tragedy: Most species still alive will disappear without ever having been recorded. To minimize this catastrophe, we must focus on which areas on land and in the sea collectively harbor the most species.

    There is dispute about all of these numbers as well as an internal logical problem. If science only knows 20% of all species then by definition it cannot also know that the rate of extinction of them is 100 to 1000 times greater than the baseline rate, particularly as the "baseline" is never specified.

    Wilson comments from here: https://eowilsonfoundation.org/eow/the-8-million-species-we-dont-know/

    As a footnote, EO Wilson wrote some amazingly powerful things that I have always found engaging. But just saying things does not make them true, even if you are the greatest ant ecologist that ever lived.
  • ThunderBunkThunderBunk Shipmate
    Some people just won't work out which is their eye and which is something else. The fact you're sitting on it means it's probably not your eye.

    We haven't got time for people to stand up and notice it. Hindsight is a luxury we don't have. We need to take precautions, some of which we won't need, because repair will be impossible or infinitely expensive.

    If there is time, and we still have the opportunity to give up our addiction to hindsight.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Basketactortale has said s/he does not want to get into a debate with non-specialists on this matter. Perhaps Basketactortale needs to show his/her own credentials.

    I confess I am not an expert in environmental problems, but I am a keen observer. This is what I have been seeing over the years.

    Mrs Gramps and I moved to the Palouse over 35 years ago during a hard winter. We had to dig through three feet of snow to get to our house (we moved the first of January). It was a bitter cold winter that year with temperatures dropping to -20F several times. Compare that to this winter. I did not have to get out my snow shovels at all this last winter at all. It did not get below 0F either.

    The spring after we had moved in saw all the local reservoirs in the area at full pool. This year the one major reservoir from which much of the industrial agricultural farms in Idaho relies is at 61% pool this spring. This will mean they will have to stop irrigation probably the end of July just before much of the crops will ripen.

    Reservoirs throughout the American West will be in crisis mode this year. The Colorado system is disastrously low, almost at 0 pool which means they will not be able to provide electrical power to Utah, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico and California. Agricultural use will be very limited there.

    Coming back to Eastern Washington where I live over ninety percent of our electrical power is hydro. The power company here is saying they will have to begin importing electricity by the end of July. By importing we will have to import through Canada or rely coal generated power from obsolete coal fired plants which were slated to be shut down by now.

    90% of the land around here is owned by national insurance companies. The farmers around here mostly lease the land from these companies. We are talking about very large grain fields. Fortunately we have gotten enough rain for the crops to make it to harvest which begins in July but experts are saying the yields will be quite low compared to what they were 30 years ago, Farmers around here pride themselves in never every having a complete crop failure, but there have been a number of lean years, and they seem to be coming with increasing frequency.

    A big issue around here is the forest. When we moved here 30 years ago we could expect about two weeks in August to be smoky, but that was mostly to grass farmers burning the grass on their land to shock the grasses into producing seed for harvest. Now forest fires have taken over. Thirty years ago, late August and September was the forest fire season. Now we can expect forest fires to start up at any time. And they burn longer and far hotter.
    The forests around here are managed as a large industrial crop from which we produce lumber and paper products. When they burn, those products cannot be produced.

    To be sure, the climate around here goes through cycles, our dry cycle is called El Nino. The wet cycle is called La Nina. We were supposed to have had a La Nina cycle these past four years, but it was extremely poor--very weak. This year we are to enter an El Nino cycle. Normally they go through four year cycles, but the El Ninos are getting stronger and lasting longer. La Ninas are getting weaker and shorter.

    No debate, just observations.

    Now 100 years ago, the American West and Midwest, went through a catastrophic period for industrial agriculture. It is known as the dust bowl years. Farmers had been plowing through native grasslands at alarming rates. Their practices changed the climate tremendously. It took a while to pull through it, but in order to come out on the other side, farming practices had to change. Crop rotations, contour farming, allowing the land to rest every few years helped.

    We are now going though the driest years in over the past 100. I would like to know how we are going to get though these years. I think it will take more than just a few changes in farming practices this time.

    Basketactortale will probably scoff at the J curve climatologists have been talking about. From where s/he lives, s/he might not have experienced it. But from were I live, I see it.
  • RuthRuth Shipmate
    I think there are other things that follow a similar pattern where there is a tendency to exaggerate and focus on the worst parts of an issue and then suggest that this should be taken as indicative of the whole.

    Like what?
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Did the original poster ghost this thread?
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    Did the original poster ghost this thread?
    Seems really premature to ask that. Aside from the fact that he lives in the UK, where it’s late at night now, people do have lives away from the Ship. I mean, it’s only been half a day.

  • BullfrogBullfrog Shipmate
    It might not be a catastrophe in my generation. But I am the sort of person who tries to think of the kind of world my grandkids are going to have to deal with.

    There are entire populations of people who live on islands in the South Pacific who I feel pretty assured are taking all of this "catastrophic" stuff pretty seriously.

    I guess it's not a catastrophe for me, living in the American midwest, but I can understand that "catastrophe" is relative to where you are in time and space.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Bullfrog wrote: »
    It might not be a catastrophe in my generation. But I am the sort of person who tries to think of the kind of world my grandkids are going to have to deal with.

    There are entire populations of people who live on islands in the South Pacific who I feel pretty assured are taking all of this "catastrophic" stuff pretty seriously.

    I guess it's not a catastrophe for me, living in the American midwest, but I can understand that "catastrophe" is relative to where you are in time and space.

    Wait until the Yellowstone caldron explodes. You will be downwind from it.

    In all seriousness, how is your water table fairing? I see the Ogalla Aquifer is likely to dry up in 20 years. https://climatecosmos.com/climate-news/ogallala-aquifer-could-dry-up-in-20-years-yet-its-rarely-discussed.

    I also have seen a number of articles dealing with the forever chemicals that are being found in the Ohio Aquifer.

    I guess you won't need to worry about the Yellowstone Caldron for maybe the next 5 to 50,000 years plus.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    Did the original poster ghost this thread?
    Seems really premature to ask that. Aside from the fact that he lives in the UK, where it’s late at night now, people do have lives away from the Ship. I mean, it’s only been half a day.

    The thread shows Basketactorate posted his last message at 4:04 pm, London time. Perhaps s/he had a hot date last night. S/He should be waking up soon. I guess I could wait till tomorrow morning (for me) to see if the ghost reappears.
  • Gramps49 wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    Did the original poster ghost this thread?
    Seems really premature to ask that. Aside from the fact that he lives in the UK, where it’s late at night now, people do have lives away from the Ship. I mean, it’s only been half a day.

    The thread shows Basketactorate posted his last message at 4:04 pm, London time. Perhaps s/he had a hot date last night. S/He should be waking up soon. I guess I could wait till tomorrow morning (for me) to see if the ghost reappears.

    I am not clear what you want me to say. You clearly think things about me that are not true, I do not and have never denied climate change nor do I challenge your observations. How this relates to anything I wrote, I cannot imagine.

    Also why do you think I am "ghosting"? I have posted several times on this thread, I have not replied to you a) because I was asleep and b) because your post was so wrong-headed that there did not seem to be anything there to reply to.
  • Ruth wrote: »
    I think there are other things that follow a similar pattern where there is a tendency to exaggerate and focus on the worst parts of an issue and then suggest that this should be taken as indicative of the whole.

    Like what?

    Another example is that there's regular discussion about soil biodiversity, mainly meaning the microbes. There's a suggestion that fewer microbes means less general health of the soil, which relates to the notion of "ecosystem services"; which suggests that soils with a reduced diversity of microbes are able to do less things in an ecosystem.

    There is some evidence that this is a true phenomena, however it is often extrapolated widely from quite localised data.
  • quetzalcoatlquetzalcoatl Shipmate
    It's certainly of interest how local and global catastrophes interact. Or perhaps I should use the word extrapolate. I used to be involved in monitoring bird populations in the UK. Here there are collapses of some birds, e.g., sparrows, nightingales. As against that, some species have expanded, e.g , red kites, ravens, buzzards. The general mood among birders is gloomy, for example, agricultural birds are declining. However, to see this as a global trend is tricky, and requires a lot of data gathering.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Wrong headed?

    To review the claim of the OP was
    I have recently been thinking about how scientists and environmentalists and greenies/crunchies/ tend towards making everything into a catastrophy.

    and if that were true industrial agriculture would be collapsing.

    Correct me if I misunderstood.

    One problem with that assertion is a system like industrial agriculture can be highly productive right now but degrading foundations can make future productivity more difficult.

    My point is I live smack dab in an area that is highly industrialized agriculture and the foundations for its existence is indeed collapsing.
    Over 30 plus years of observations have shown me

    Snowpacks are shrinking which means less irrigation water resulting in lower yields.

    Reservoirs throughout the west are much below averages which will lead to emergency fallowing of land.

    Longer Fire Seasons leading to less lumber and pulp for paper products.

    I also mentioned how changes to El Nino and La Nina cycle changes are impacting agricultural production in my area.

    I am not trying to prove industrial agriculture has already collapsed. I am trying to show that the environmental conditions industrial agriculture depends on are already deteriorating.

    Calling my examples wrong-headed misses the point. My examples weren't about ideology; they were about real-world stresses I am seeing that farmers are already having to deal with. If these trends continue--and I do not see them changing in the near future--Western Industrial Agriculture will collapse.

    @Basketactortale, you have said you do not have time to debate non experts in these areas, but I am still wondering what is your expertise?
  • I'm not sure on what basis you think agriculture will collapse. Perhaps if you engage with the topic instead of making snide comments about me we can have a conversation; I am an ecologist and have wide scientific interests in these issues.

    Please do find some scientific papers that support your view.
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    Both of you seem concerned with agriculture and food production for humans.

    Who will think of the natural environment?
  • ThunderBunkThunderBunk Shipmate
    edited May 24
    The expectation that we can wait for fully audited accounts before taking action is simply misplaced. We have to act based on the forecasting currently available, because in all cases, previous forecasts, even the most pessimistic, have proven too optimistic. The climate has warmed faster and become more stable faster than all but the most pessimistic ever thought.

    Or to take an example closer to home, for me: there is little research done on how to help late-diagnosed neurodivergent adults. But this doesn't mean I can wait for the research to be done to address my own neurodivergence: I have to try what is available, and see what improves my life.

    I understand your inclination and respect your knowledge, but I feel that the situation doesn't leave time for the body of research that you are talking about to accrue before we make decisions. Rather, we have to abandon caution and try lots of things, and keep doing them for long enough to see what is working. This involves treating the current generation as an enormous test group, but rather as with earlier researchers into vaccines, what choice do we have but to experiment on ourselves if we want to survive? We have already used up the time we had to proceed otherwise, working harder on business as usual, rather than putting an alternative in place before it was needed.
  • BullfrogBullfrog Shipmate
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    Bullfrog wrote: »
    It might not be a catastrophe in my generation. But I am the sort of person who tries to think of the kind of world my grandkids are going to have to deal with.

    There are entire populations of people who live on islands in the South Pacific who I feel pretty assured are taking all of this "catastrophic" stuff pretty seriously.

    I guess it's not a catastrophe for me, living in the American midwest, but I can understand that "catastrophe" is relative to where you are in time and space.

    Wait until the Yellowstone caldron explodes. You will be downwind from it.

    In all seriousness, how is your water table fairing? I see the Ogalla Aquifer is likely to dry up in 20 years. https://climatecosmos.com/climate-news/ogallala-aquifer-could-dry-up-in-20-years-yet-its-rarely-discussed.

    I also have seen a number of articles dealing with the forever chemicals that are being found in the Ohio Aquifer.

    I guess you won't need to worry about the Yellowstone Caldron for maybe the next 5 to 50,000 years plus.

    I think that one is pretty remote, though if it happens we're all toast anyway.

    Climate change is going to come sooner. And yeah, water use is going to be a big deal everywhere, I think.

    Water rights are already a big political fight out west, I expect that could become a big deal globally.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Boogie wrote: »
    Both of you seem concerned with agriculture and food production for humans.

    Who will think of the natural environment?

    Just because I was addressing the pending collapse of industrial agriculture which Basketactortale brought up does not mean I am not concerned about the natural environment. Fact is the stresses on the natural environment which I have listed in part are the foundations for modern agriculture.

    I have mentioned declining snowpacks in the west resulting in diminished water throughout the region. There are the increasing wildfires that are burning hotter and longer and releasing that much more carbon and other elements into the atmosphere. I can mention the decline in the fisheries all up and down the West Coast. Fact is, the Pacific Northwest has closed off the spring chinook season this year. As a kid, I can remember how loaded the rivers would be with those red backs. Birders are telling me they are seeing species that have not usually come this far north.

    Point is, everything is interconnected. We cannot have a healthy agriculture without a healthy natural environment.



  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    edited May 25
    The use of "greenies" in the OP feels a bit pejorative to my Canadian ears. I am not even sure what "crunchies" are. (This could be a pond difference.)
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Crunchies AIUI are sort of extreme hippies. They are the sort of people who ask how much wild garlic they need to mix into urine to treat advanced cirrhosis of the liver. Anti Vax. Anti "big pharma" in general. Off grid, very suspicious of authority.

    Although considered far left they resemble elements of the alt right.
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    Ah, so both of the terms in the OP were pejoratives. Thanks.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    I've heard "crunchy" used in a less extreme way. A "crunchy mum" feeds her kids organic foods, wooden toys rather than plastic, extended breast-feeding, cloth nappies etc. I know someone who would describe herself as "crunchy" and her kids are all vaccinated.
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    Ok. These pond differences are always interesting for me to learn.
  • sionisaissionisais Shipmate
    I've heard "crunchy" used in a less extreme way. A "crunchy mum" feeds her kids organic foods, wooden toys rather than plastic, extended breast-feeding, cloth nappies etc. I know someone who would describe herself as "crunchy" and her kids are all vaccinated.

    Oh, and no “War Toys” until they discover the bow and arrow. Knew a kid like that who was very dangerous.

  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Caissa wrote: »
    Ok. These pond differences are always interesting for me to learn.

    "Crunchy" is actually an American term, derived from "granola crunchy" - ie someone who made their own granola rather than buying commercial cereal, back when that was unusual. I generally hear it used in the same way as @North East Quine by self-identifying "crunchy" people who are a bit hippyish but still normal. "Greenie" I assume just refers to someone concerned with "green issues" - I don't think it's a UK term so much as just a descriptor @Basketactortale came up with, maybe for people linked to the Green Party.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Also while the type of person @KarlLB describes exists, it's not super common in the UK and is at the very extreme end. Generally in my experience the more extreme types get sucked in due to having less access to healthcare, or sometimes having a chronic illness that's less easy to treat.
  • HeavenlyannieHeavenlyannie Shipmate
    edited May 25
    Yes, I used to be a moderator on a cloth nappy forum (in the days when I made and sold cloth nappies made from organic and vintage fabrics, and wool nappy covers; I’m quite the hippy) and would fit most of NEQs descriptors. I would be relaxed to be described as ‘crunchy’ and I’m certainly not an extremist. Neither am I anti-vaccines; I’m a ex-nurse and lecture in public health.
  • chrisstileschrisstiles Hell Host
    Pomona wrote: »
    Also while the type of person @KarlLB describes exists, it's not super common in the UK and is at the very extreme end.

    I'm not aware that it's less common in the UK than elsewhere - and have certainly seen academic work on 'cosmic right' 'querdenken' style formations that indicate it's an ambient presence across multiple countries.
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