[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago

queue AENIMA background track

[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

If this stays in the hands of judges and elites you wont win. People should storm the court house. full strength mob all the extinction rebellion people jan6th style, just go in and strike fear into the minds of these people.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago

In houston, too humid for evaporative cooling to work.

IF it was me i would buy the smallest most efficient AC and run it on solar panels bought off used resale sites that have them for 1/3rd new price you can build a simple super insulated miniroom with those rigid insulation panels taped together.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

direct thermal industrial processes.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

There’s a lot I don’t like about electric vehicles: it’s a bandaid solution to what replacing suburban sprawl with walkable and bikable cities would actually fix, but it would still shift some of the transportation emissions into the electricity generation category which we seem to want to tackle.

electric bikes and mixed zoning could make a huge efficiency change for the west. a few solar panels are enough to charge electric bikes at the household level. I wish some economist would look at how much percent of all fossil fuel dependent commuting could be eliminated with this combo

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Wind Cannot Power Manufacturing (brief.bismarckanalysis.com)
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[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago

yeah secular cycles is great , particularly if you want a map of post fossil fuel future if we fumble the energy transition long term, the malthusianish cycles will start again. his blog is good too.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago

yeah lol. i mean elizabeth warren is a vicious neoliberal authoritarian cunt but she has no political power or support. but bernie and aoc are both moderate principled politicians for the most part.

For a better take on what dalios saying better to read peter turchin and avoid the billionaire capitalist cockamamie version

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[-] [email protected] 4 points 3 weeks ago

an extraordinary streak of 415 days above previous highs and we just crossed back to the previous year level

[-] [email protected] -3 points 3 weeks ago

So basically you are poopooing an article you didnt read because you got bothered by one decontextualized pull quote.

"The article might have been well-informed and factual, but starting with such an absurd premise, I couldn’t maintain interest long enough to find out."

why bother commenting if you haven't read it or even knowing if the "absurd premise" is even in fact a premise required to support the rest of the thing?

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The Great American Poisoning (justinmares.substack.com)
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[-] [email protected] 3 points 4 weeks ago

To be fair , not once has the IEA been right about anything, its been kind of a running joke for decades.

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What the heck happened in 2012? (www.theintrinsicperspective.com)
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[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

It boggles my mind how easy it is to tribally code an issue that should be completely uncontroversial in order to make it unsolvable. Everyone should agree that we shouldn't have every mother having pfas in their breast milk, but with a few thousand dollars and a PR firm you can make that an issue think its a good idea because their ideological enemy thinks the opposite.

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

Its like back when every official person said you cant register dirty from poppy seeds on food and all these people were busted for opiates and got convicted for it and then when it was finally independently tested it turns out you can fail from eating a couple poppy seed bagels

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Table of Contents Theme issue ‘Climate change adaptation needs a science of culture’ compiled and edited by Anne C. Pisor, J. Stephen Lansing and Kate Magargal Whether we’re facing job loss or extreme climate events, people use cultural solutions to manage risk. By studying the solutions people use to deal with climate change, researchers learn which solutions tend to emerge given different conditions—like local geography, structural constraints, or kinds of extreme event. This theme issue brings together articles from prominent researchers to document what solutions communities have used, past and present; whether these solutions worked or not; and why. Understanding how climate change adaptation unfolds will help researchers, policymakers, and organizations better support communities as they respond.

A collection of data sets associated with this issue can be found here on the Dryad digital repository.

Read a blog post about the theme issue from one of the Guest Editors.

This issue is available to buy in print. Visit our information for readers page for purchasing options.

INTRODUCTION

Introduction Climate change adaptation needs a science of culture Anne Pisor, J. Stephen Lansing and Kate Magargal Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220390 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0390

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract PART I: MICRO

Research articles Climate micro-mobilities as adaptation practice in the Pacific: the case of Samoa Anita Latai-Niusulu, Masami Tsujita and Andreas Neef Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220392 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0392

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Research articles The impacts of climate change, energy policy and traditional ecological practices on future firewood availability for Diné (Navajo) People Kate Magargal, Kurt Wilson, Shaniah Chee, Michael J. Campbell, Vanessa Bailey, Philip E. Dennison, William R. L. Anderegg, Adrienne Cachelin, … See all authors Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220394 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0394

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Research articles Socio-economic predictors of Inuit hunting choices and their implications for climate change adaptation Friederike Hillemann, Bret A. Beheim and Elspeth Ready Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220395 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0395

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Research articles Small-scale farmer responses to the double exposure of climate change and market integration K. L. Kramer and J. V. Hackman Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220396 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0396

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Research articles Understanding constraints to adaptation using a community-centred toolkit Danielle C. Buffa, Katharine E. T. Thompson, Dana Reijerkerk, Stephanie Brittain, George Manahira, Roger Samba, Francois Lahiniriko, … See all authors Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220391 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0391

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract PART II: MESO

Research articles Operationalizing cultural adaptation to climate change: contemporary examples from United States agriculture Timothy M. Waring, Meredith T. Niles, Matthew M. Kling, Stephanie N. Miller, Laurent Hébert-Dufresne, Hossein Sabzian, Nicholas Gotelli and Brian J. McGill Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220397 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0397

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Research articles Adaptive irrigation management by Balinese farmers reduces greenhouse gas emissions and increases rice yields J. S. Lansing, J. N. Kremer, I. B. G. Suryawan, S. Sathiakumar, G. S. Jacobs, N. N. Chung and I. Wy A. Artha Wiguna Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220400 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0400

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Research articles Minority-group incubators and majority-group reservoirs support the diffusion of climate change adaptations Matthew A. Turner, Alyson L. Singleton, Mallory J. Harris, Ian Harryman, Cesar Augusto Lopez, Ronan Forde Arthur, Caroline Muraida and James Holland Jones Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220401 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0401

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract PART III: MACRO

Research articles Navigating polycrisis: long-run socio-cultural factors shape response to changing climate Daniel Hoyer, James S. Bennett, Jenny Reddish, Samantha Holder, Robert Howard, Majid Benam, Jill Levine, Francis Ludlow, Gary Feinman and Peter Turchin Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220402 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0402

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Research articles Efficiency traps beyond the climate crisis: exploration–exploitation trade-offs and rebound effects Jose Segovia-Martin, Felix Creutzig and James Winters Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220405 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0405

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract

Review articles Climate change and long-term human behaviour in the Neotropics: an archaeological view from the Global South Vivian Scheinsohn, A. Sebastián Muñoz and Mariana Mondini Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220403 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0403

Abstract Full text PDF References Preview Abstract PART IV: CLOSING

Opinion piece Climate change adaptation and the back of the invisible hand H. Clark Barrett and Josh Armstrong Published:18 September 2023Article ID:20220406 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2022.0406

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State or societal collapses are often described as featuring rapid reductions in socioeconomic complexity, population loss or displacement, and/or political discontinuity, with climate thought to contribute mainly by disrupting a society’s agroecological base. Here we use a state-of-the-art multi-ice-core reconstruction of explosive volcanism, representing the dominant global external driver of severe short-term climatic change, to reveal a systematic association between eruptions and dynastic collapse across two millennia of Chinese history. We next employ a 1,062-year reconstruction of Chinese warfare as a proxy for political and socioeconomic stress to reveal the dynamic role of volcanic climatic shocks in collapse. We find that smaller shocks may act as the ultimate cause of collapse at times of high pre-existing stress, whereas larger shocks may act with greater independence as proximate causes without substantial observed pre-existing stress. We further show that post-collapse warfare tends to diminish rapidly, such that collapse itself may act as an evolved adaptation tied to the influential “mandate of heaven” concept in which successive dynasties could claim legitimacy as divinely sanctioned mandate holders, facilitating a more rapid restoration of social order.

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Climate variability and natural hazards like floods and earthquakes can act as environmental shocks or socioecological stressors leading to instability and suffering throughout human history. Yet, societies experience a wide range of outcomes when facing such challenges: some suffer from social unrest, civil violence or complete collapse; others prove more resilient and maintain key social functions. We currently lack a clear, generally agreed-upon conceptual framework and evidentiary base to explore what causes these divergent outcomes. Here, we discuss efforts to develop such a framework through the Crisis Database (CrisisDB) programme. We illustrate that the impact of environmental stressors is mediated through extant cultural, political and economic structures that evolve over extended timescales (decades to centuries). These structures can generate high resilience to major shocks, facilitate positive adaptation, or, alternatively, undermine collective action and lead to unrest, violence and even societal collapse. By exposing the ways that different societies have reacted to crises over their lifetime, this framework can help identify the factors and complex social–ecological interactions that either bolster or undermine resilience to contemporary climate shocks.

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How Diclofenac is killing Zoroastrianism (www.stoneageherbalist.com)
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

There may not even be enough vultures to eat our corpses at the end of the world.

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