- damn, it’s hot

August 2, 2011

As of July 31, heat records have been set 2,676 times this summer, and it’s only a little more than half over.  Flooding is so bad that entire towns have been swallowed up, and some will never come back.  These floods are mainly from the greater-than-usual mountain snow this past winter, which is now melting and running down the Mississippi River and its numerous tributaries.  Why so much melting?  It’s friggin’ hot.

 Global warming is real, a fact, not fiction.  However, there are two questions surrounding it:  1. Is man causing it?  2. Should we take any action to slow it down?  The answer for 2 is “of course.”  The answer to 1 is “does it really matter?”

 Warmer air increases evaporation.  Greater evaporation means less water (drought) from where it was taken and more water in the atmosphere.  More water in the air means greater downpours and storms, including record tornadoes that have killed 650 people and counting.  More dangerous storms, drought, and floods mean more displaced people.  More displaced people will eventually mean overcrowding in areas of greater safety.  More displacement means more jobs lost, more unemployment drain, and more mortgages abandoned.  More drought means less food from farmers.  Less food means increased prices at the super market.  Increased prices means…I think you get the idea.

 Let’s pretend that global warming is a cycle that cannot be stopped.  Even if that’s true, we can still make efforts to slow it down.  We can still use fewer fossil fuels and explore cleaner alternatives.  We can still increase solar power for homes and cars.  We can still decrease incinerators and coal-fired power plants.  We can still plant more trees to both absorb the sun’s rays and clean poisons from the air.

 What if we take action when we didn’t need to.  What harm is done?  I guess businesses will have to spend a little more money for modifications to their factories.

 What if we DON’T take action when we should have?  I guess…we’re in trouble, and eventually it’ll be too late.


- are you scared yet?

June 11, 2010

 

This picture is not a product of Photoshop or anything like that.  This is a sinkhole that pulled the rug from beneath a three-story building in Guatemala City, Guatemala.  Amazingly, nobody was hurt.  More amazingly, it happened.

This fits in too well with the rash of apocalyptic movies that have been released over the past half a dozen years such as 2012, The Day After Tomorrow, and Knowing.  It used to be easy to dismiss those films as a different type of “slasher” movie.  Instead of teenagers in lust, it was Earth on the wrong end of the knife. 

Now we’ve got the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, flash floods across the world, and city blocks getting sucked into the planet.  Like it or not, Mother Earth is not happy, and her punishments are getting worse.


- saving the world

April 25, 2010

- a continuing series on how to save the planet -

1. ALL plastic packaging needs to be recyclable plastic.  there’s no reason that any plastic has to be non-recyclable.

2. plastic shopping bags need to be outlawed.  when i was in italy a few years ago, i noticed that supermarkets and many other stores did not have bags.  if you went shopping, you brought bags with you.  i use woven, cloth bags that cost a buck.  everyone needs to buy a few of these and take them with you when you go shopping.  it doesn’t cost much, and it saves a great deal.

3. cigarettes need to be illegal.  there is nothing positive that comes from smoking other than a great deal of tax money for the federal government.  cigarette butts create too much litter, the smoke adds to global warming, and the cancer that results drains great financial resources from our families.


record snowfall and global warming

February 25, 2010
World Drought Map
more than 5% of the world population
lives in extreme, life-threatening drought

In the Northeast, we’ve been hit with record snow this winter.  Of all the problems that the snow has brought, there are two I care about most.  First, how to make up all of the lost school days.  My current schedule shows I’ll be in school until at least June 28.  With today gone and tomorrow in jeopardy, June 30 would not be a surprise.  The second problem, and more important problem, is how this winter is being misinterpretted by those who claim that global warming and climate change is a hoax.

Too many loudmouths, the usual suspects reading Republican scripts, have said that you can’t have record snow if we have global warming.  They distort the arguement by pretending to not know or ignoring the fact that the word “climate” means long-range weather and not individual days or weeks, such as would produce record snowfall.  If you understand what an average is, then you can understand that you will have highs, mediums, and lows at any given time, but you must follow trends and calculate averages to tell the whole story.  They know what the story is, but they want neither to read it nor for you to read it.  Of course there will be sub-freezing days during a climate crisis as that’s a normal abnormality.  However, focusing on one day is like reading one page of a book and believing you know the whole story.  What they also don’t realize is that this record snowfall is actually evidence that proves climate change rather than discrediting it. 

Climate change is not just temperature.  It’s also about the redistribution of moisture.  Behind my house is a farm owned and operated by a local family since forever.  I was at my back fence one day as the farmer was walking along the edge of his cornfield.  (Yes, I have thought about jumping the fence for corn, tomatoes, peppers, watermelons, etc)  After he laughed at me because of how much time and effort I put into growing something as easy as grass, I asked his opinion on global warming and climate change.  He stopped, looked around, and pointed at the field. 

“See that plastic?”  There were rows upon rows of sheets of black plastic running across the field.  Every couple of feet a plant sprouted through it.  It was something I had noticed but didn’t think much about.  “Never needed that before.  Do now.  You might remember when you were a kid.  It’d rain once or twice a week, little by little, and I never had to water these fields.  Ain’t like that now.  It’ll be dry for a month, then it’ll pour for two days.  People tell me I must be thrilled about all the rain, but I tell them it’s a bad thing.  We get two days of rain, and the roots drown, crops all die.  That plastic does two things.  When it’s in the 90′s for a month, it traps the moisture on the roots and keeps the soil wet.  When it pours for two days, it helps the extra water run off without washing away the soil.”

Climate change, as I said, is also about the redistrubution of moisture.  The map at the top of this entry shows areas around the world that are currently suffering severe drought.  Water is finite.  There’s a limited, fixed amount on the planet at all times in various forms, such as snow, ice, rain, etc.  If there are areas in the world suffering extreme drought, then there must also be areas who now have the moisture that has left the drought areas.  Have you noticed the flooding in the news?  Have you seen the unprecedented days of rain in the Los Angeles area?  What about the mudslides that wash houses away?  When I drive to work, most houses have ponds in their front yards from the amazing rain and snow we’ve gotten.  Back in 2001, this same area was in the midst of a record drought, and now it’s flooded.  Up until last year, my town has had three years of water restrictions, and now it’s flipped to flooding.  This is all part of climate change and global warming.

Just like the evolution/creationism debate, nobody can 100% prove or disprove either side of global warming and climate change, but there’s a big difference in the approach.  With evolution/creationism, it’s all in the past.  It happened already, and there’s nothing that anybody can do to change it.  Regardless of how humans got here, we’re here.  However, climate change can still be acted upon if it does in fact exist.  That leaves two options.  Take steps to solve a problem and improve a crisis that’s not really there.  It’s like insurance.  If we take the steps necessary to stop or slow global warming, there is no question that the planet and its people will be healthier and safer.  The other option is to do nothing when something very much needs to be done.  We can continue on the path that has caused and will escalate great environmental destruction, including the human consequences, and do nothing about it.  I would rather take steps that are not needed than to do nothing when I had the chance to help. 

Would you rather take medicine when you didn’t need it, or would you rather not take it when you should have?  Just give me a glass of water – half full – to save some for the next guy.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 833 other followers

%d bloggers like this: