Greta Thunberg exposed as low hanging fruit picker.

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
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Ghawar
Good on Greta to keep the ball rolling!!
Would you heed Greta's call and make yourself a part of the critical mass
of individuals to trigger structural changes in our society?

The last fifth of the book lays out how we could meet this daunting challenge. What’s needed is a critical mass of individuals who are willing to make lifestyle changes and be heard. This could trigger a social movement strong enough to force politicians to listen and create systemic and structural change. In other words, it’s time to start acting like we’re in a crisis. Thunberg doesn’t end the book by offering hope. Instead, she argues we each have to make our own hope.

One Greta lackey proposed in her book the key to effect the changes needed is for
that critical mass to reach 3.5% of the population. Oh boy, I can't wait to see 3.5% of
Canadians taking to the street to protest Trudeau's climate policy.
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
29,365
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Would you heed Greta's call and make yourself a part of the critical mass
of individuals to trigger structural changes in our society?

The last fifth of the book lays out how we could meet this daunting challenge. What’s needed is a critical mass of individuals who are willing to make lifestyle changes and be heard. This could trigger a social movement strong enough to force politicians to listen and create systemic and structural change. In other words, it’s time to start acting like we’re in a crisis. Thunberg doesn’t end the book by offering hope. Instead, she argues we each have to make our own hope.

One Greta lackey proposed in her book the key to effect the changes needed is for
that critical mass to reach 3.5% of the population. Oh boy, I can't wait to see 3.5% of
Canadians taking to the street to protest Trudeau's climate policy.
You will surely see at least 3.5% of the population taking to the streets in Pee Pee's decision to reverse all these Climate Change policies in place if he takes hold of the reigns. Big, big "IF"!!
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,610
2,116
113
Ghawar
You will surely see at least 3.5% of the population taking to the streets in Pee Pee's decision to reverse all these Climate Change policies in place if he takes hold of the reigns. Big, big "IF"!!
That is one possibility. But Greta may not be as predictable
as you think. As far as I remember she generally spared climate-
deniers in her attacks on world leaders' lack of climate action.

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Looks like Greta Thunberg isn't buying Justin Trudeau's climate
action promises



Greta Thunberg Just Shared An Article About Justin Trudeau’s “Climate Hypocrisy”
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Greta Thunberg’s new book urges the world to take climate action now

Feb 17, 2023
Erin Wayman

The best shot we have at minimizing the future impacts of climate change is to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Since the Industrial Revolution began, humankind has already raised the average global temperature by about 1.1 degrees. If we continue to emit greenhouse gases at the current rate, the world will probably surpass the 1.5-degree threshold by the end of the decade.

That sobering fact makes clear that climate change isn’t just a problem to solve someday soon; it’s an emergency to respond to now. And yet, most people don’t act like we’re in the midst of the greatest crisis humans have ever faced — not politicians, not the media, not your neighbor, not myself, if I’m honest. That’s what I realized after finishing The Climate Book by Greta Thunberg.

The urgency to act now, to kick the addiction to fossil fuels, practically jumps off the page to punch you in the gut. So while not a pleasant read — it’s quite stressful — it’s a book I can’t recommend enough. The book’s aim is not to convince skeptics that climate change is real. We’re well past that. Instead, it’s a wake-up call for anyone concerned about the future.

A collection of bite-size essays, The Climate Book provides an encyclopedic overview of all aspects of the climate crisis, including the basic science, the history of denialism and inaction, and what to do next. Thunberg, who became the face of climate activism after starting the Fridays For Future protests as a teenager (SN: 12/16/19), assembles an all-star roster of experts to write the essays.

The first two sections of the book lay out how a small amount of warming can have major, far-reaching effects. For some readers, this will be familiar territory. But as each essay builds on the next, it becomes clear just how delicate Earth’s climate system is. What also becomes clear is the significance of 1.5 degrees (SN: 12/17/18). Beyond this point, scientists fear, various aspects of the natural world might reach tipping points that usher in irreversible changes, even if greenhouse gas emissions are later brought under control. Ice sheets could melt, raise sea levels and drown coastal areas. The Amazon rainforest could become a dry grassland.

The cumulative effect would be a complete transformation of the climate. Our health and the livelihood of other species and entire ecosystems would be in danger, the book shows. Not surprisingly, essay after essay ends with the same message: We must cut greenhouse gas emissions, now and quickly.

Repetition is found elsewhere in the book. Numerous essays offer overlapping scientific explanations, stats about emissions, historical notes and thoughts about the future. Rather than being tedious, the repetition reinforces the message that we know what the climate change threat is, we know how to tackle it and we’ve known for a long time.

Thunberg’s anger and frustration over the decades of inaction, false starts and broken pledges are palpable in her own essays that run throughout the book. The world has known about human-caused climate change for decades, yet about half of all human-related carbon dioxide emissions ever released have occurred since 1990. That’s the year the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its first report and just two years before world leaders met in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 to sign the first international treaty to curb emissions (SN: 6/23/90).

Perversely, the people who will bear the brunt of the extreme storms, heat waves, rising seas and other impacts of climate change are those who are least culpable. The richest 10 percent of the world’s population accounts for half of all carbon dioxide emissions while the top 1 percent emits more than twice as much as the bottom half. But because of a lack of resources, poorer populations are the least equipped to deal with the fallout. “Humankind has not created this crisis,” Thunberg writes, “it was created by those in power.”

That injustice must be confronted and accounted for as the world addresses climate change, perhaps even through reparations, Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, a philosopher at Georgetown University, argues in one essay.

So what is the path forward? Thunberg and many of her coauthors are generally skeptical that new tech alone will be our savior. Carbon capture and storage, or CCS, for example, has been heralded as one way to curb emissions. But less than a third of the roughly 150 planned CCS projects that were supposed to be operational by 2020 are up and running.

Progress has been impeded by expenses and technology fails, science writer Ketan Joshi explains. An alternative might be “rewilding,” restoring damaged mangrove forests, seagrass meadows and other ecosystems that naturally suck CO2 out of the air (SN: 9/14/22), suggest environmental activists George Monbiot and Rebecca Wrigley.

Fixing the climate problem will not only require transforming our energy and transportation systems, which often get the most attention, but also our economies (endless growth is not sustainable), political systems and connection to nature and with each other, the book’s authors argue.

The last fifth of the book lays out how we could meet this daunting challenge. What’s needed is a critical mass of individuals who are willing to make lifestyle changes and be heard. This could trigger a social movement strong enough to force politicians to listen and create systemic and structural change. In other words, it’s time to start acting like we’re in a crisis. Thunberg doesn’t end the book by offering hope. Instead, she argues we each have to make our own hope.

“To me, hope is not something that is given to you, it is something you have to earn, to create,” she writes. “It cannot be gained passively, through standing by and waiting for someone else to do something. Hope is taking action.”

Her new book continues her excellent work.
She uses her name to help publicize the work of scientists who are not allowed to publicize their own work.

Read it, because its full of smart articles by smart scientists.
 

Ceiling Cat

Well-known member
Feb 25, 2009
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oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
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Ghawar
She seems happy these days, behaving nothing like she actually
believes we are in the beginning of a mass extinction. I guess she is
now more mature than the person in the video.

Getting the book Greta created to provide the world with facts on and
solutions to climate change would only cost you around $45. Wish she
could just make it free as a PDF file so people in the poor parts of the
world like Pakistan and Bangladesh can read it and be spared from future
natural disasters. If you don't want to dish out the money to buy her book
to enrich her charity foundation and still want to make her happy just heed
her call to spread her messages using methods you see fit.

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Greta Thunberg tells 'View' hosts that climate activists must now go beyond 'legal methods'

February 17 2023

During ABC’s "The View," Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg urged her fellow climate change activists to step outside of "legal methods" to achieve their climate goals.

While appearing as a guest during the show's Friday episode, Thunberg argued that if the people of who made great strides in social justice and civil rights throughout history only stuck to using the legal channels they were offered, "we wouldn't be where we are today."

The activist advocated that real climate change action can only come from such radical action.

Co-host Sunny Hostin prompted Thunberg’s point by bringing up her recent arrest while protesting at the site of a German coal mine that was slated for a major expansion.

German police detained the 20-year-old in January for refusing to leave the tiny German town of Luetzerath, which was scheduled to be bulldozed to make way for the mine expansion.

Photos show the young climate activist smiling as German police carried her offsite.

Impressed with the display of activism, Hostin asked Thunberg, "Was this the first time you’ve been apprehended like that? And given how passionate you are, is it safe to assume this won’t be the last?"

Thunberg admitted it will probably happen again as "we are moving in the wrong direction when it comes to the climate." She said, "So unfortunately, if we continue like now, we will probably see more and more people doing the same thing and me included."

She added, "I feel like I want to in the future be able to look back and say I did everything I could in this time where we were experiencing an accelerating climate crisis and where we still could avoid the worst consequences of it."

Thunberg pointed to historical movements that brought about societal change, urging modern activists to look to them as guides for activism, especially in the way they pushed the envelope.

She said, "If we want to see real changes… if we look through history, if people who were advocating for, for example, social justice, if they had only used the legal methods, then we wouldn’t be where we are today for example when it comes to racial rights, and women’s voting."

She then stressed that the climate change crisis is as existential of a threat as racism or other human rights issues that warrant this type of response. She added, "So we need to think outside the box, because this is an existential crisis."

 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
29,365
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That is one possibility. But Greta may not be as predictable
as you think. As far as I remember she generally spared climate-
deniers in her attacks on world leaders' lack of climate action.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Looks like Greta Thunberg isn't buying Justin Trudeau's climate
action promises



Greta Thunberg Just Shared An Article About Justin Trudeau’s “Climate Hypocrisy”
If she is critical of Trudeau in spite of all the positives with regards to Climate Change, imagine how she would be slamming Pee Pee Poilievre when he gets rid of the Carbon Taxes, and just goes ballistic with building pipelines across Canada whether it is in your backyard or not!!
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts