If we're past the tipping point on Greenland it doesn't much matter. We could actually do all that, and Greenland's ice sheet would still be gone. Therefore it's become an inevitability. We will lose Miami. We will lose New York City. We will lose Miami. Houston is on the bubble. New Orleans. Charleston. They are gone. If there's anything you want to visit in Florida, well, plan a trip. Take your kids. Your grandkids will never get to see it. Like Australia's Great Barrier Reef, Florida will mostly pass into the past.clearspira wrote: ↑Wed Aug 26, 2020 6:51 pm The problem as I see it is that in order to reduce pollution levels to a point that actually matters we would have to extend the Covid-19 lockdown... forever.
No planes living the ground, no cars allowed on long journeys, nothing.
And once we've marvelled at the world we've saved, we can also marvel at the queues for the homeless shelters as millions of jobless seek their soup. TL;DR, it really is not as simple as ''pollute less''. We are WAY beyond that point now.
Millions homeless and jobless is also inevitable. Those cities will go, the homes in and near them will go, and that's that. We could try to limit further damage before we discover brand new ways to fuck ourselves, but understand this - millions of Americans on the streets, and Americans becoming refugees within our own nation is something we're locked in for now. We have to prepare for a refugee crisis of our own citizens.
That's the reality of Global Warming.
It'd be nice if we didn't get a food crisis, because millions of homeless starving people, well, get ready to see some real riots.