Kestrel

joined 4 years ago
 

James Inhofe, former Republican senator who called climate change a ‘hoax’, dies aged 89

crab-party crab-party crab-party

Inhofe resigned as senator for Oklahoma in January 2023, suffering long-term effects of Covid-19.

His widely ridiculed snowball stunt came in 2015, during a rambling speech in which he claimed climate conditions on Earth were the work of a supreme being, and attempted to discredit a Nasa report that found that 2014 was the hottest year recorded globally to date.

“My point is, God’s still up there,” Inhofe said during a 2012 interview during promotion for his book focusing on global warming as “a conspiracy”.

“The arrogance of people to think that we, human beings, would be able to change what He is doing in the climate is, to me, outrageous.”

Following the scandal over US service members photographed abusing prisoners at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison in 2004, Inhofe said he “was more outraged at the outrage” than the torture of the inmates.

packwatch rip-bozo-grave bye

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 28 points 10 months ago (3 children)

Talking about Bernie doing well after Nevada in '16 he says

People said this isn't gonna work

Which people, my guy?

cap-think

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 17 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Use a piglet pfp for extra trolling points

"Oh this pig picture? My friend has a tattoo of it and I just think it's cute. Wait why are you talking about that now?

pooh-wtf

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 9 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

The comparison I most often see is that marine cloud brightening could potentially offset the loss of the aerosol masking effect from sea shipping companies cutting sulfur from their fuels. The aerosol masking effect is estimated to be somewhere between 0.5–1⁰ C which is now being realized. So Marine cloud brightening could, potentially at an astronomical scale, could offset that. Or we could put sulfur back in the fuels I guess lol

 

Last month, the City of Alameda blocked scientists from continuing basic research into an experimental approach that may, one day, slow global warming.

The research was being done by atmospheric scientists from the University of Washington, and a nonprofit called SilverLining. SilverLining is funded by a consortium of philanthropic foundations and individual donors. Despite the researchers' credentials, the city council remained skeptical and voted unanimously to halt the work.

"We need to know more about this before you come to our city and start these experiments," concluded Alameda Mayor Marilyn Ezzy Ashcraft.

Marine cloud brightening is a scalable potentially majorly helpful mitigation strategy to keep us from going completely off the tipping points rails and this dip shit city council said you can't do research because you haven't done enough research

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 11 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Teaching my mom about why things are the way they are by casually dropping historical materialism as if I read about it in The Atlantic

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 7 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

The Thirsty Dentist

Viridian Brontide

Aw, Shucks!

Best Buds Brigade

Yellow Pencil

Last Road Home, Part 3

Too Much Soap

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 15 points 10 months ago

How could I forget

140
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by Kestrel@hexbear.net to c/chapotraphouse@hexbear.net
 

Transcribed from ep 847

"He's doing okay... he and I hang out pretty frequently. He's got some mobility issues and unfortunately some aphasia."

"...But I'm over at his place every week doing readings about the Seven Years War and having fairly high level conversations with him about like the spread of global capitalism in the 18th century. Just not really in a way that is mic ready right now. We'll see... I mean we're working on it. We're making a little progress every week. I see a path, I just have no idea what the timetable for any of this could be, and I don't think he does either, so hopefully updates when we have it..."

He also said they're putting out a book based on the Spanish Civil War episode scripts edited into a nice looking book. Limited run, with proceeds going to support Matt, his recovery, and his family. Preorder available sometime next month.

matt-guerrilla matt-jokerfied matt partiotism matt-grillin mattjak

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 18 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Just ran into my old high school flame at the grocery store. Haven't seen them in like 10+ years and now I feel all weird

kirby-spin

[–] Kestrel@hexbear.net 3 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Hang in there with us comrade

We're all we've got 🫂

 

This is hilarious. The U.S. Corps of Engineers has dangled a $42 million carrot to replenish sand on beaches in front of expensive houses but the homeowners don't want it at the expense of having to create public access easements (because federal dollars can only go towards improving public, not private, beaches). This town is going to get annihilated by the next big storm because these little tyrants want to keep their beaches private.

 

and transitions into a new egalitarian way of being that will stave off the climate crisis and being everything into harmony"

Like how many words do you need to reinvent the thing. A lot of those types are just ignorant libs who need a push, but I think some of them, like Roger Halan or Jem Bendell, are maybe avoiding saying the words intentionally for any number of reasons.

 

Get in here losers

We're dunking on everything

 

i-voted

 

I joined Turchin and a few others who were establishing a new field—a new way to investigate history. It was called cliodynamics after Clio, the ancient Greek muse of history, and dynamics, the study of how complex systems change over time. Cliodynamics marshals scientific and statistical tools to better understand the past.

The aim is to treat history as a "natural" science, using statistical methods, computational simulations and other tools adapted from evolutionary theory, physics and complexity science to understand why things happened the way that they did.

curious-marx

One of the most common patterns that has jumped out is how extreme inequality shows up in nearly every case of major crisis. When big gaps exist between the haves and have-nots, not just in material wealth but also access to positions of power, this breeds frustration, dissent and turmoil.

"Ages of discord", as Turchin dubbed periods of great social unrest and violence, produce some of history's most devastating events. This includes the US civil war of the 1860s, the early 20th-century Russian Revolution, and the Taiping rebellion against the Chinese Qing dynasty, often said to be the deadliest civil war in history.

All of these cases saw people become frustrated at extreme wealth inequality, along with lack of inclusion in the political process. Frustration bred anger, and eventually erupted into fighting that killed millions and affected many more.

wowee

Perhaps one of the most surprising things is that inequality seems to be just as corrosive for the elites themselves. This is because the accumulation of so much wealth and power leads to intense infighting between them, which ripples throughout society.

In the case of Rome, it was the wealthy and powerful senators and military leaders like Julius Caesar who seized on the anger of a disaffected populace and led the violence.

This pattern also appears at other moments, such as the hatred between southern landowners and northern industrialists in the run up to the US civil war and the struggles between the Tsarist rulers and Russia's landed nobility during the late 1800s.

Meanwhile, the 1864 Taiping rebellion was instigated by well educated young men, frustrated at being unable to find prestigious positions in government after years of toiling away at their studies and passing the civil service exams.

What we see time and again is that wealthy and powerful people try to grab bigger shares of the pie to maintain their positions. Rich families become desperate to secure prestigious posts for their children, while those aspiring to join the ranks of the elite scratch and claw their way up. And typically, wealth is related to power, as elites try to secure top positions in political office.

marx-joker

These patterns probably sound familiar. Consider the college admissions scandal in the US in 2019.

very-smart

Donald Trump is only one recent and fairly extreme version of this motif that pops up time and again during ages of discord

can-excuse-1

If the past teaches us anything, it is that trying to hold on to systems and policies that refuse to appropriately adapt and respond to changing circumstances—like climate change or growing unrest among a population—usually end in disaster. Those with the means and opportunity to enact change must do so, or at least to not stand in the way when reform is needed.

three-heads-thinking

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Kestrel@hexbear.net to c/videos@hexbear.net
 

FYI in 1917 Lenin stormed the ice palace and took it from the snow queen

 

Let's fucking goooooo

lets-fucking-go

 

crab-party crab-party crab-party crab-party crab-party

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