Resurrecting this thread because it's closer to the topic of what we were talking about re: the Vancouver BC floods coverage in the Severe Weather 2021 thread.
TH2002
wrote:
Does anybody remember what we blamed bad weather on before climate change showed up? I do agree we have a climate change but can we actually blame every bad weather event on climate change?
Tornado in Dixie Alley? Climate change.
Floods in the Northeast and Canada? Climate change.
Droughts and wildfires in California? Climate change.
Mosquitoes? Climate change.
A butterfly lands on a flower in the rainforest? Climate change.
Yes climate change is real but good grief. Blaming literally everything on climate change has reached a point of hilarity. And if people aren't blaming climate change, they're blaming HAARP.
I sure miss the days when natural disasters were still seen as natural, and when not everything was immediately attributed to climate change.
Me, too, and I also miss the days when reporters reported the news and didn't try to shape public opinion along the way. Such a 60s thing! (I grew up in those times.) Won't miss that media-is-the-message trend when it finally fades away.
Journal the heck out of your private time, folks, but please stick to the facts and cover them as objectively as humanly possible when working.
Can you imagine the coverage they would have given to the Arctic Ocean freezing over some 2.5 million years ago, or ice sheets first appearing on Antarctica's open lands in the late Eocene (I think)? Or Sundaland, off Southern Asia, turning into an archipelago when the last ice age ended?
That last one happened on
H. sapien's watch, but it didn't matter because everyone was mobile. Cities seemed like a good idea, after the ice sheets melted, and then, over time that's long to us but a wink of Earth's eye, we've forgotten what natural really is.
So now Venice and Bangkok are drowning, weather patterns
are shifting, and all our chattering classes are doing is holding conferences and name calling and virtue signalling and exploiting real natural disasters that affect real people locally.
Granted, dithering about a tough problem
is human behavior, but the situation calls for more practical adaptations ASAP.
And if we can fly helicopters on Mars, we can do this. Maybe some countries have already
figured that out.