A Controversial Play - and What It Taught Me About the Psychology of Climate | David Finnigan | TED

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 พ.ย. 2024
  • When playwright David Finnigan launched a new play in 2014, controversially titled "Kill Climate Deniers," he was not prepared for the blowback. But the conversations with climate skeptics of all stripes ultimately taught him a fascinating lesson about how many of us think about - and act upon - the climate crisis. (Recorded at TED2024 on April 17, 2024)
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    • A Controversial Play -...
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ความคิดเห็น • 2K

  • @erin9harbacek
    @erin9harbacek หลายเดือนก่อน +2551

    He makes some good points here but I really wish we could move the conversation of climate science to understanding instead of “believing”. Do you UNDERSTAND climate science…. Not do you “believe in it” that makes it an opinion, which it is not.

    • @tvuser9529
      @tvuser9529 หลายเดือนก่อน +104

      Agree, it's not about belief. I usually talk about "accepting the science". Because it looks like there are those who understand the science just fine, but refuse to accept it, i.e. they deny it with their actions. Chief here are the Exxons, the Shells, the Equinors, etc.

    • @sergeyn.syritsyn6748
      @sergeyn.syritsyn6748 หลายเดือนก่อน

      the belief is into the instituion of science and climate research in particular. The deniers basically believe that there is whole "conspiracy to fake up evidence" for global warming. There is little point to argue facts with them until it becomes critical to everyday existence

    • @chilliechee12
      @chilliechee12 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Thanks

    • @mesterha
      @mesterha หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don't think we can expect the majority of people to truly understand climate science. People need to trust experts for a range of issues. It's classic division of labor. Unfortunately, this is what climate deniers exploit.

    • @jamespardue3055
      @jamespardue3055 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      Exactly. I'd rather 'know' something than merely 'believe' it. It's foundational, now we can build on that.

  • @DeadCat-42
    @DeadCat-42 หลายเดือนก่อน +416

    I had to point out to a young denier that I own a pair of Ice skates.. I live in Southern Ohio. It hasn't been cold enough to ice skate here in 30 years. I just looked at the 20 something and said, "I own Ice skates, I used to Ice skate HERE as a child." (the last ten years we barely had snow) he actually looked thoughtful .. like "Oh, how do I deny this?" . I asked him if he's ever been ice skating outside? I told him flatly, this isn't the same climate I grew up in. It has changed a great deal. My brother in law was a climate denier, but he's also a diary farmer, it's been a decade since he changed his mind because reality is where farmers live.
    The Climate HAS CHANGED already.

    • @antediluvianatheist5262
      @antediluvianatheist5262 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      You know those packets of seeds with the little picture on the back with the growing zones?
      Now get one from 10 years ago.
      Different picture.

    • @karlfranzemperorofmandefil5547
      @karlfranzemperorofmandefil5547 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Oh my God that's me. I just realized that we used to ice scate on lakes in my childhood and I can't remember the lakes near me being frozen in the last decade

    • @apocolototh1948
      @apocolototh1948 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Yeah, a thing where I live: weve had the hottest day since record 10 times in the last 12 years

    • @Roddy1965
      @Roddy1965 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      The Rideau Canal in Ottawa, Ontario, was the longest naturally skating rinks in the world, but the last few years, it hardly opens. it used to be open for a month or two for skating by thousands of people that would travel here just to do it. Last winter it was open for a day, maybe two. It is radically different than when I moved to Ottawa 25 years ago.

    • @anna9072
      @anna9072 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      When I was a child in Seattle, the ponds would freeze over in the winter so we could skate on them. When my mother was a child, Green Lake froze solidly enough that a team of horses with a cart could be driven on it. The climate is warming, there is no “if” about it. The only question is whether we can, at this point, do anything that will slow or reverse it. Unfortunately, convincing enough people that they need to make major lifestyle changes in order to avert a crisis is probably not going to happen. Those that are comfortable don’t want to disturb the status quo, those that are struggling don’t have the energy to focus on much except surviving.

  • @ZodyZody
    @ZodyZody หลายเดือนก่อน +221

    I think a large part of inaction is the overwhelming feeling of helplessness in the face of such astronomical changes that we now face.

    • @capnkirk5528
      @capnkirk5528 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Actually the "helplessness" is not REAL and is cultivated by the RICH who aren't willing to give up any of their money, power or control.

    • @scopie49
      @scopie49 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

      I feel the helplessness is more about how the masses would need to fight against the billion dollar corporations to make any actual changes. Voting enough people into power that would take climate change seriously and actually implement laws that force corporations to take responsibility for their emissions is already an uphill battle. Even IF we had climate politicians it then comes back to the people. Perfect example is.. Well we obviously need to get rid of coal as a leader in our energy production. But coal is a huge part of my job right now. If we lose coal entirely I don't have a job. So the half of me that wants climate protections enforced and the half of me that needs my job are at odds with each other. There are a lot of jobs on the line which makes the whole conversation even more muddied because some people will be directly affected. And corporations will 100% use that fact to turn us on each other. They already have. So yes, it all feels overwhelming and pointless to even try because corporate greed is unavoidably corrupt.

    • @theangriestbassplayer7492
      @theangriestbassplayer7492 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      The current system makes meaningful individual action very difficult. It's not designed for people who want to be better and instead favors the ones who want to keep doing what they've always been doing. Real change needs to be driven top-down and that's not going to happen unless there is money to be made.

    • @Hoakaloa
      @Hoakaloa 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      and our entire way of living has to change. i read a lot about how we have to change to renewable energy but not much about how we have to change the way we extract resources, make too much stuff that no one really needs in the name of economic growth, throw away so much that cannot be reused, and poison ourselves and our only home with the stuff we make. i know there are millions of individual humans who are working diligently to try to educate the rest of us. but in a system in which economic wealth = power and those with that power do not seem to care what the future is going to be like...sighing and gesturing generally at everything. i sadly do not think we as a species have the intelligence, wisdom and self-sacrificing ability to do what needs to be done. i don't know how Jane Goodall remains an optimist. i am now 62. i thought i would be dead before things would start to get bad. i was wrong. i do think that if we do as much as we can to change our ways things could be less horrific than they would be if we do little or nothing. but i am not kidding myself into thinking this enormous closed planetary system can simply flip back to the way it was before the industrial revolution. we humans are an accelerant the likes of which the planet has only experienced as asteroids and super volcanoes.

    • @afreezaphorogiancossack2194
      @afreezaphorogiancossack2194 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      And as the speaker said, part of the denial as well. Some people fight harder to defend their comfort than to defend their lives.

  • @GaryOsmondson
    @GaryOsmondson หลายเดือนก่อน +774

    For the first time in earth history a species is aware of an impending mass extinction, but largely chooses to ignore it.

    • @AvangionQ
      @AvangionQ หลายเดือนก่อน +54

      ✋ Impending?
      👉 Ongoing.
      World Wildlife Fund: `69% average decline in wildlife populations since 1970.`

    • @bjb7587
      @bjb7587 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Sure, but that statement makes no sense. What other species has been aware of their impending extinction, let alone made a choice whether to act?

    • @anderj235
      @anderj235 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      Don’t Look Up

    • @bestbehave
      @bestbehave หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      @@bjb7587 Read it again. This is the first time that a species is aware of of empending extinction. _And_ we collectively chose to ignore it.

    • @my_dear_friend_
      @my_dear_friend_ หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Of course this very thing might have happened before to another species on another planet somewhere far, far from here.

  • @hunnybunny814
    @hunnybunny814 หลายเดือนก่อน +323

    The immovable object is not politics... It's greed.

    • @BluDynamo
      @BluDynamo หลายเดือนก่อน

      And that is the absolute truth. Tack on a persistent, arrogant, and irrationally-defiant unwillingness for people to change their behaviors and we're getting to the root of the problem. I hear it SO often in my part of the country, where a large percentage of the population drives large pointless gas-guzzling white trucks and state that climate science is "fake science". For some reason most of their trucks are white....not sure why. VERY few of them work construction, haul things in them, or do "truck things" at all. They just drive them around like they are intended to be commuter vehicles. My next door neighbor is one of those people. He works a desk and phone job for a computer security company. He makes about $60k a year, but bought and financed that $80k white, large , lifted truck. I have NEVER ONCE seen him put anything in the back of it in the 5 years I've known him. In that same time, I have added a high-effeciency solar and back-up system to my house(making our property 96% self-supporting...no power bill, but I sell the extra to the power company), updated my house to all-electric utilities, and purchased 2 wonderful used electric vehicles for our family of 4 to use as commuter cars. All of that costs less than the truck he's driving. All of mine is also now paid off because of the money I've saved in utility bills, gasoline, car maintenance, and natural gas. He laughs at my choices. That right there is part of the problem. He truly thinks that I'm the misguided one and foolish, while he's still paying a monthly $200 natural gas bill, $150 power bill, and getting 20 miles per gallon on his 60 mile-a-day commute back and forth to work 5 days a week. You really can't change that man's Fox-News mentality. It's baked into his logic, which is really quite prevalent in American society. It's frustrating. The good news is that 3 of the neighbors on my street also installed solar in the last year. Progress.

    • @juliam6442
      @juliam6442 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Ideological hogwash

    • @justindcook9
      @justindcook9 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Politics is largely inextricable from greed now adays. If we can remove the greed from politics we would be in a better place on almost everything. The stranglehold of neoliberalism is real and pervasive.

    • @SiqueScarface
      @SiqueScarface หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The immovable object is that we as a whole have to decide: Do we want climate change? Do we not want climate change? What can we do? And who will pay how much for it? And those questions are inherently political.

    • @Tubeytime
      @Tubeytime หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      If you go even deeper, it's not greed but fear. Fear of falling down the social ladder.
      When you dig to the bottom there is always a primal motive. Get rid of it and you solve everything that follows.

  • @Echo81Rumple83
    @Echo81Rumple83 หลายเดือนก่อน +560

    My late father worked for NOAA/NODC for nearly 30 years. He basically helped to make the oceanographic data available for public viewing, so he knew damn well that climate change was real. Statistics may be difficult to master, more so to present it comprehensively, but there's no denying we're cooked, metaphorically AND literally.

    • @poulhenne
      @poulhenne หลายเดือนก่อน +72

      That is why the Project2025 has a removal of NOAA and EPA as their first priority.
      That is how believers handle contradicting evidence, the religion must always be on top.

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      In the 1970's my mother was a zoologist at Leeds University in the UK. Her friend there worked on global warming as they called it then. I was taught about it when I was 6 or 7 as just a matter of basic fact.

    • @miguel5785
      @miguel5785 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      The talk was not so much about climate science as it was about the social consequences of climate change. Maybe the problem is not that people do not understand the science, but that they are not ready to share the burden.

    • @trueriver1950
      @trueriver1950 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      ​@@miguel5785George Bush: "the American way of life is not up for negotiation"

    • @anguscampbell1533
      @anguscampbell1533 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Sharks are now showing up in the waters around the island where I live in ever increasing numbers. Sharks were not a common sight in previous years and it is attributable to changing prey numbers where their "normal" habitat is and increasing water temperatures occurring over a longer period in the summer season.

  • @FindTheFun
    @FindTheFun หลายเดือนก่อน +264

    You can read Calvin and Hobbes comics from the 80s and even back then they are complaining about Climate Change and how nothing is being done to fix it. This has been a LONG time coming.

    • @richardrigling4906
      @richardrigling4906 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@FindTheFun over 300 years - since the beginning of the industrial revolution

    • @srone
      @srone หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      You can read Eunice Foote from the 50s...1850, who knew about green house gases.

    • @karstenschuhmann8334
      @karstenschuhmann8334 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      ​@@sroneCorrect and the first global calculation (the first very simple climate model) was published in 1897 by later Nobel Laureat Svante Arrenius.

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There's an interview by Olof Palme, Swedish PM, from 1974 where he motivated Sweden's then ongoing nuclear buildout by climate change.

    • @Andreas-hh9yg
      @Andreas-hh9yg หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Alexander von Humboldt wrote in 1844 that humanity changes the climate "through the production of great masses of steam and gas at the industrial centres."

  • @jabezcrisp7899
    @jabezcrisp7899 หลายเดือนก่อน +401

    Funny that he says 'I believe in the science of climate change.'
    We don't talk about any other science this way, because it doesn't require your faith. 'I understand the science of climate change' is the accurate way to put it.

    • @thomaslilly5834
      @thomaslilly5834 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

      @@jabezcrisp7899 to be honest, the correct way would be (imho): I understand how science works, and therefore trust in its result (even if they make mistakes sometimes - it's the best and most rational we have). So no need to understand the details of any scientific topic, but also no need for belief, or "blind trust" if you want. It's "justified trust" .

    • @schreiber9864
      @schreiber9864 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Because modern science is about belief and nothing else. Science in its purest form is a repertoire of methods and concepts as an attempt of understanding the world around us. It is not a dogma to be followed, it is an ongoing process of disputing findings and theories. There never is a “settled science” and there never is “scientific fact”. So if you believe in science you wouldn’t attend a TED talk imposing your ill-informed moralistic views on a class of people you hardly know anything about.

    • @CodeHK
      @CodeHK หลายเดือนก่อน

      Flat Earthers talk about science that way too. Since both climate change and flat Earth is rife with conspiracy theories and pseudo-science.

    • @Ansonidak
      @Ansonidak หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      There is one other science I can think of in this context: Evolution.

    • @jabezcrisp7899
      @jabezcrisp7899 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Ansonidak A good point well made

  • @SimonBransfieldGarth
    @SimonBransfieldGarth หลายเดือนก่อน +198

    The underlying question you are asking is "collectively, how much should we change our behaviours to benefit other people?". The collective answer seems to be "not much". The next question will come in the future "how much should we collectively change our behaviours to benefit ourselves (i.e when climate change is directly affecting wealthy northern nations, not just largely poorer countries in the tropics)?" That is probably still some years away.

    • @finemandibles2671
      @finemandibles2671 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      The more important conversation is how much we can profit from these countries we impoverished before their populations start sailing for our shores.

    • @mcgunn74
      @mcgunn74 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I'll change my behavior when they stop blowing up oil fields!

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson หลายเดือนก่อน

      Lololololol. Sure

    • @wolfgangpreier9160
      @wolfgangpreier9160 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      " to benefit other people" Why? I do not want to benefit you. I want you to benefit yourself and your kids. Nothing more and nothing less. Be less altruisitic and more egoistic and egoman. Look after yourself and your family and fight for them.

    • @TonyBasuro
      @TonyBasuro หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@finemandibles2671 those ships are sailing.

  • @comotucovfefe4349
    @comotucovfefe4349 หลายเดือนก่อน +282

    Mother Nature does not negotiate. Bon voyage!

    • @Echo81Rumple83
      @Echo81Rumple83 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Mother Nature will ALWAYS have the last word.

    • @graydanerasmussen4071
      @graydanerasmussen4071 หลายเดือนก่อน

      People idealize nature. They are wrong. Nature ISN'T nice! That's why we call her a mother.

    • @bestbehave
      @bestbehave หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Echo81Rumple83 And she can be a _mother_ ....

    • @CrniWuk
      @CrniWuk หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@bestbehave Yeah. The one that throws a slipper after you ...

    • @San-lh8us
      @San-lh8us หลายเดือนก่อน

      what can we do though? i mean WE, me, and you, what can we do about it really?

  • @Marchant2
    @Marchant2 หลายเดือนก่อน +354

    Who to listen to when it comes to climate change:
    1) PHDs in climate science who have spent the majority of their lives investigating climate change and who have all come to the same conclusion: mankind is causing the earth to heat up.
    2) Joe Schmoe who drives a gas guzzling pickup truck and who works at a call center in any given city.
    That's a tough one.

    • @paulroundy8060
      @paulroundy8060 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Add to that group people who see it as a real problem, but not a cataclysm like most climate activists think it is. If it isn't a cataclysm, then it's obvious that our actions to fight it can also cause harm, so then it becomes an optimization problem to ultimately do the least harm.

    • @geraldbutler5484
      @geraldbutler5484 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      @@paulroundy8060Obviously,the do least harm means wherever and whenever possible stop burning stuff! It’s that simple and is happening with increasing frequency worldwide.

    • @505Hockey
      @505Hockey หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      @@paulroundy8060 It's a cataclysm in slow motion which leads most people to believe it isn't a real problem. Those people are wrong.

    • @OldScientist
      @OldScientist หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Or listen to the IPCC?
      There is no objective observational evidence that we are living in a global climate crisis.
      The UN's IPCC AR6 WG1, chapter 12 "Climate Change Information for Regional Impact and for Risk Assessment", page 1856, section 12.5.2, table 12.12 confirms there is a lack of evidence or no signal that the following have changed:
      Air Pollution Weather (temperature inversions),
      Aridity,
      Avalanche (snow),
      Average precipitation,
      Average Wind Speed,
      Coastal Flood,
      Agricultural drought,
      Hydrological drought,
      Erosion of Coastlines,
      Fire Weather (hot and windy),
      Flooding From Heavy Rain (pluvial floods),
      Frost,
      Hail,
      Heavy Rain,
      Heavy Snowfall and Ice Storms,
      Landslides,
      Marine Heatwaves,
      Ocean Acidity,
      Radiation at the Earth’s Surface,
      River/Lake Floods,
      Sand and Dust Storms,
      Sea Level,
      Severe Wind Storms,
      Snow, Glacier, and Ice Sheets,
      Antarctic Sea Ice,
      Tropical Cyclones.

    • @ChristopherBennett-rq5nq
      @ChristopherBennett-rq5nq หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@geraldbutler5484 A lot of the burning going on is fires on EVs and scooters and diesel generators to charge EVs

  • @goodfortunetoyou
    @goodfortunetoyou หลายเดือนก่อน +69

    The key point here is not to address understanding, it is to address consequences.
    By all means, fix the climate, but when you propose a policy, make sure that your proposal benefits the class of people who don't care about it. Don't argue with them, get them on board.

    • @brendanoneil3489
      @brendanoneil3489 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      yes, my argument; stuff the dolphins, rainforest can get pulped ...all I need is reliable, secure and sustainable energy policy for my lifetime. Decarbonising the energy grid is a necessity irrespective of any climate issues. Trivialising the man made element of global warming and inevitable bickering around it, but instead focusing on energy supply and security long term is a good strategy - don't argue, get them on board.

    • @user-gf6gf2iy2k
      @user-gf6gf2iy2k หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Like public transport and walkable cities.
      But we saw the top-driven backlash and bizarre rhetoric and conspiracy theories over the concept of walkable communities.

    • @questgivercyradis8462
      @questgivercyradis8462 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      In theory, I agree with you. In practice, it is very difficult. The denialism runs deep. Already pointed out, the public transit and walkable cities plans get a lot of push-back. People, especially in the USA, are very attached to their cars *for everything*. It is a very foreign concept to use a bicycle to go to a grocery store 1-3 miles away for most people in suburbia - I'm the anomaly in my area, going by bicycle for such trips. Rural communities who want to stay rural fear having buses and trains connecting them because that would lead to becoming a city in their minds, and they (reasonably) don't want to be in a city.... but that's not necessarily what would happen.
      Yes, work to give people the benefits to changes required for a better environment, but expect denialism and resistance along the way (some rational, and a lot of irrational).

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The greens refuse nuclear power. That's a major part of why we're cooked. And still to this day, they refuse to let go of their mental block.

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      @@brendanoneil3489 I tried that yesterday. "Why do you hate windmills and solar farms? If anything, EVs are reducing demand on gasoline, which should lower prices for you."
      The climate denier came back with, "well we have no idea what all of that reflected solar radiation from the panels is going to do the atmosphere! They (you know, "they") just keep going from one thing to the next trying to fix everything instead of just letting it be!"
      We're toast and as much as that saddens me, it's deserved. We've allowed corporate greed to poison the minds of the governed.

  • @christopherlund1198
    @christopherlund1198 หลายเดือนก่อน +171

    I am sure this has been said before: A self fulfilled prophesy. The more this is delayed, the more and drastic those consequences they fear will become.

    • @poulhenne
      @poulhenne หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sadly the boomers are correct, when they say it won't be an issue in their lifetime.

    • @paulroundy8060
      @paulroundy8060 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      But under no conditions do plausible emissions scenarios lead to cataclysmic society ending outcomes. At the end of the century, the most likely outcome, with no change in policy, is warming around 2.4-2.5C relative to pre industrial, just 1C higher than the present! It's not harmless, but far from a mass death type scenario, especially since agriculture is on top of it through crop development and agricultural practices that enable more production in less suitable situations.

    • @Robbedem
      @Robbedem หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@paulroundy8060 Why only look to the end of the century? People born today will (hopefully) live longer than that.
      So imho the expected temperature increase for 2200 should be taken. And while 2,5 is already on the high side, in 2200 it will be even more because even if all CO2 emisisons were stopped now, temperatures would still keep rising for almost 50 years.

    • @wolfgangpreier9160
      @wolfgangpreier9160 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      "The more this is delayed, the more and drastic those consequences they fear will become" Yes, the more wealth and work it will cost.

    • @christopherlund1198
      @christopherlund1198 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@paulroundy8060 Ironically; albeit about Libs, this video is all about denial.

  • @1970Phoenix
    @1970Phoenix หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    I think you're giving most climate deniers far too much credit. In my opinion, it simply comes down to petty tribalism and identity politics, not an analysis of the actual science or the consequences of a changing climate. There is a reason why there is a strong correlation between climate denial and the acceptance of other conspiracy theories.

    • @mattsharpey361
      @mattsharpey361 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Valid, but it doesn’t address the systemic problem, which is our economic system.

  • @kareltracy
    @kareltracy หลายเดือนก่อน +62

    I remember hearing professors complain in early1996 about how attendees at an environmental conference had come there by planes, and how we as students in a wilderness survival course often reached the parks by burning fossil fuels.

    • @amberyooper
      @amberyooper หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      The problem is that there's really no other way to travel any distance from where you live. Damned if you do, and damned if you don't. I think that's what makes doing something effective about climate change is so difficult and disruptive.

    • @danieljulian4676
      @danieljulian4676 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      People travel because they want to and can afford it. Eventually they won't be able to afford it in large numbers. That will be OK, because there won't be that many places worth traveling to.

    • @dougpatterson7494
      @dougpatterson7494 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Criticizing people who want to experience the outdoors is foolish. Criticizing people who fly to the other side of the world to see forests is more justifiable as is chastising those who fly private to climate change conferences.

    • @1timbarrett
      @1timbarrett หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      It’s an odd contradiction in behaviour versus beliefs, isn’t it? I have family members who superficially flaunt being ‘green’ yet continue to fly overseas for annual holidays and to purchase additional homes. 😢

    • @nick11925
      @nick11925 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Thats why this is a governmental, large-scale infrastructure problem, not a problem of individual choice/action: the solutions require huge changes in the way society functions (limiting personal/non public travel, enforcing production and manufacturing limits/regulations on environmentally harmful products and practices, etc) If it is not solved by government level solutions, the problems will continue to exist because people will always choose convenience for themself over sacrifices for a future they may not be living in.

  • @alien9279
    @alien9279 หลายเดือนก่อน +173

    Something about these videos ALWAYS brings out the anti sciemce crowd and what always seems like bot comments in mass :/

    • @Candlewick14
      @Candlewick14 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      OooOOOooooo not the anti science crowd!

    • @user-qt5eh9wb7g
      @user-qt5eh9wb7g หลายเดือนก่อน

      Disagreeing with you is anti-science, we know, we know....
      The climate has been changing since the world began.

    • @Echo81Rumple83
      @Echo81Rumple83 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Most likely Putrid's KGB bots.

    • @nsbd90now
      @nsbd90now หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@Candlewick14 Careful there! They've got lots of thoughts and prayers!

    • @kimchristensen2175
      @kimchristensen2175 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Not bots. There really are that many stupid/selfish people.

  • @hallodidldu
    @hallodidldu หลายเดือนก่อน +162

    One aspect is missing. The massage therapists and the highschool teachers nowadays do not simply trust anymore in what schientists say. They want to UNDERSTAND what’s going on. And here comes the problem: in order to understand, you have to spend your life studying on a certain, very narrow topic. No non-scientist is able to do that in parallel to normal life. At the same time, by nature a human being‘s brain can hardly stand that there is something it is not able to understand. This causes frustration and anger. Now there comes a guy, ‚explaining‘ or better teaching a complex topic like climate change in very simple words and statements like „climate was always changing“ or „plants need CO2 to grow, so why bother?“. And guess what, such simple statements are directly ‚understood‘ by most people‘s brains and their ego is pleased. Now, they are able to go into a conversation on such a complex topic like climate change and tell by themselves to other people or even scientists what’s really going on. Because they ‚understood‘. And that feels so powerful.
    Now, try to take this ‚power of understanding‘ back from all these people and convince them that they have been stupid and did NOT understand anything. Good luck.

    • @tomiday66
      @tomiday66 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      Great comment. So people felt powerful KNOWING that the Great Turtle carried the sun across the sky every day. Meanwhile the scientists had to accept the fact that the more answers they found the more questions they generated.
      History just keeps on rhyming.

    • @CleverAccountName303
      @CleverAccountName303 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      There are many books available for every grade level/reading ability that explain the topic.

    • @Statsy10
      @Statsy10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@CleverAccountName303You missed his point badly.

    • @CleverAccountName303
      @CleverAccountName303 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

      @@Statsy10 The theory of a greenhouse effect is just as simple to understand as the examples he mentioned. I understood it when I was 8 years old. People refuse to understand things that they don't want to understand, while they are capable of understanding very complex things if it reinforces their beliefs or they believe it benefits them in some way.

    • @Statsy10
      @Statsy10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@CleverAccountName303 I believe there is actually more truth in your assessment about lining up with people's befiefs, to be honest.

  • @chuckbisbee7520
    @chuckbisbee7520 หลายเดือนก่อน +70

    I have always said to my friends as a gardener: "Nature doesn't give a f**k what you do, say, or believe. It will just keep right on doing what it has always done, chugging along without a care." Only people care or don't.

    • @fastestdino2
      @fastestdino2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Pretty much. No matter what happens the universe around us will exist for a very long time whether humans still exist or not.

    • @questgivercyradis8462
      @questgivercyradis8462 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Sure the earth and universe will exist after us. I'd rather keep them in a state where we can exist longer, however.

    • @valkoharja
      @valkoharja หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@fastestdino2this is an embarrassing dodge. Nobody is claiming the universe ends because of us, but wrecking the biosphere is truly idiotic and morally evil. You want to pretend causing extinctinctions is not morally wrong, and it’s bizarre.

  • @yamboo2854
    @yamboo2854 หลายเดือนก่อน +58

    In germany we have a saying: Nach mir die Sintflut. Which basically means, that i accept the facts of climate change, but by the time, it hurts my life, i'm already six feet under. Let the next generations deal with it, i don't want to change my habits. And that is the way, 90% of western world people behave.

    • @karlwheatley1244
      @karlwheatley1244 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That's a telling but depressing phrase.

    • @HansLemurson
      @HansLemurson 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

      Or as King Luis XV of France allegedly said: "Après moi, le déluge"

    • @chihirostargazer6573
      @chihirostargazer6573 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Do they not consider that reincarnation might actually be a thing?

    • @reuireuiop0
      @reuireuiop0 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@HansLemursonThat King had one I less, it was the longest reigning King Louie XIV. Louie XV was an inbetweenie, King Louie XVI ended under the guillotine. No deluge for him

    • @HansLemurson
      @HansLemurson 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@reuireuiop0 Thanks for the correction.

  • @laletemanolete
    @laletemanolete หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    Shoot, as a teacher in environmental science, this hit really hard.

    • @tenthousanddaysofgratitude
      @tenthousanddaysofgratitude 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I’ve stopped flying. I grow a lot of my own food. I make do and mend, upcycle and recycle. I wait till my computer or phone will no longer function before replacing them. And I realized this morning that if I really believed we were in climate crisis, I would only travel by foot or bicycle. This is only one small thing in a multitude of things that I must change, but haven’t.

  • @michaelhutson6758
    @michaelhutson6758 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    I think a quote from C.S. Lewis of all people fits; it's from his novel "The Pilgrim's Regress":
    "If all men who try to build are but polishing the brasses on a sinking ship, then your pale friends are the supreme fools who polish with the rest though they know and admit that the ship is sinking."

    • @heidi4752
      @heidi4752 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ouch.

  • @garygoins2280
    @garygoins2280 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

    WOW! This is a great and thought provoking presentation. It does exactly what TED Talks were ment to do. Keep it up!

  • @cheersmodreams691
    @cheersmodreams691 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

    Unfortunately, their rightness about the changes does not cancel out their wrongness that climate change is real, and their wrongness is the part that gets the most attention and prevents us from dealing with their rightness.

  • @ashaide
    @ashaide หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    He should have focused more on the last part of his talk, or at least explained why he thought people who preach climate change are themselves "soft deniers."
    The things he said are merely part of what comes with living in a society built around the technology we have. There are many, many attempts to put us all on a more sustainable future but that movement is fairly recent, like maybe the late-20th century when acid rain was a thing and there was a move to ban CFCs.
    Meanwhile, the basis of our "advanced" civilization has been in place since the start of the Industrial Revolution centuries ago.
    He has a point, a valid one. I wish he'd spent less time discussion it because the lesson can be lost by someone simply saying he sounds so much like many corporate PR people who put the burden of dealing with climate change on ordinary consumers - use less plastic, ride an EV - while Industry and Enterprise keep killing our ecosystems.

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If someone REALLY believes climate change is an existential threat, he should fight for nuclear power, yes? But they don't. Greens and progressives propagandize each other to believe it's unnecessary, too dangerous, too slow, too expensive. Not even recognizing the inherent contradiction in believing renewable energy is super-fast and super-cheap, beating the proven nuclear solution, yet climate change will keep going, doing us all in. So I agree with him, the climate change preachers are some of the biggest soft deniers.

    • @nathangriffiths6218
      @nathangriffiths6218 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He did explain that, quite clearly I thought. "soft deniers" are those who say they accept climate change is real but have not really accepted what the major consequences of that are going to be (mass migrations, changes in farming and food, coastal inundation), which if we're being honest is most people.

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@nathangriffiths6218 There is a blog called Less Wrong, and there is an article regarding Stag Hunts, Prisoner's Dilemmas, and Schelling Pub problems. I think the title is that the Shelling Choice is Rabbit.
      The point, if you'll allow it, is that when failure of the stag hunt (averting climate change) is imminent, the obvious choice is to defect (rabbit, or rather to enjoy modern comforts while they last). Each of us needs to make a choice, but we only win if we ALL choose to fight climate change. If only some of us give up creature comforts, then some die hot and some die comfortable. Who would choose to die hot when they could choose comfort? How do we get everyone onboard with averting disaster instead?

    • @DasRaetsel
      @DasRaetsel หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Lawrence330 Positive incentives. Carrot and the stick

    • @karlwheatley1244
      @karlwheatley1244 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@DasRaetsel The problem with carrots is that "the medium is the message" and you can't use pleasurable incentives to teach the lesson that we must learn to forego lots of short-term pleasures--and give up power and cash wealth too.

  • @jacobbuzan374
    @jacobbuzan374 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Plenty of us believe it, but there's nothing we can do about it. We don't have the resources to live off the grid. We barely make enough to afford rent every month.

  • @mw1606
    @mw1606 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    meh, a long way of saying "you can't make a man understand something if his livelihood depends on him not understanding it." Consumers don't design cars. Consumers don't build power plants. Consumers don't build computers. They don't refine fuels. But the complex system that does build and design those things are subject to influence, regulation, and politics. Climate activists don't have to stop buying cars to influence climate policy.
    I do not think we are in time to live another 100 years without massive disruption of human society and social order. I think we have passed that point, even though it does not look that way. But in the event we could do something, it would be zero-emission power grids for everyone in the world. The developed world could get there, but without gifting the rest of the world dispatchable baseload power too cheap to meter, it won't matter to anyone. The rest of the world will keep building coal-based baseload power and steel, still use petroleum products to power mobility and work, and climate change will run it's course over humanity.

    • @seanlahm4826
      @seanlahm4826 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I completely agree. Was just saying the same thing in too many words .

  • @user-yf1ml8jt3i
    @user-yf1ml8jt3i หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Climate is already changing. I work with people all over the planet. And in the past 5 years the amount of climate caused catastrophes or extremeties has been off the chart. I hardly go a week now without either colleagues affected by extreme weather, flooding or climate anomalies. And even in less severely hit places, places that are traditionally not warm, it's warm way into the autumn, and the winters have left them with barely, if any, snow, where it used to be snow-covered every year.
    I've read most interesting books on climate and climate change - and while not all changes are BAD, for humans, the changes come with effects that we simply do not know the outcome of. Whole ecosystems and biospheres are already collapsing, and the intertwined connection between these will eventually cause an unsustainable future, for the amount of people we are on the planet.
    That means, now at the height of human population, all these eventually 10-11.000.000.000 people will need food and shelter. They will want luxuries, and they will want to move around. And the planet will not be hospitable enough to accomodate that.
    And then the chaos ensues.
    We can deny all we want. But the planet does not care. Cause and effect. And we, along with the biological life on this planet will be affected, wether we deny it or not. It has already begun.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      No one denies climate changes. We deny that co2 is the culprit.

    • @karlwheatley1244
      @karlwheatley1244 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The average global temperature (which is the core issue) had been very stable for the last 6,000 years--until we started burning fossil fuels--and were supposed to be quite stable for the next 50,000 years.
      Thousands of research studies and 40+ years of quite accurate climate models prove that our emissions caused roughly 98% of all global warming since 1900. Even children's science fair experiments prove that adding more CO2 to a glass jar makes it heat up more when a light is shined on it. Also, if it wasn't CO2 warming the planet, then Exxon's own scientists wouldn't have been able to create a climate model back in 1982 that quite accurately predicted through 2022 how much warming our future emissions would cause... but they did, and many other climate models have quite accurately predicted how much warming our emissions would cause. This debate has been over for decades in climate science.

    • @etienne8110
      @etienne8110 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@dr_shrinkersame.
      Denying science without evidences .

    • @benniewenniger2075
      @benniewenniger2075 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nice long story
      The data says that there are no more floods, hurricanes, wildfires, etc then 100/150 years ago.
      As a matter affect there are many less victems nowaday‘s then back then.
      Climate is changing, and yes C02 is partly causing it.
      We need to addept to it.
      Thinking we can control the climate is very arrogant.
      We are not going to be able to stop the upcoming country‘s from using fossil fuels.
      Climate changes yes.
      Climate emergency no.
      We have to use our resources wisely

    • @blargithonify
      @blargithonify 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@dr_shrinker science says co2 is the culprit, that’s still denial. Fossil fuel industry creates propaganda to convince people that the problem isn’t burning fossil fuels, so that they can keep making money.

  • @AlvinLee007
    @AlvinLee007 หลายเดือนก่อน +134

    I keep my carbon movement as low as possible. But I no longer preach climate science. Let the storms come. Let the tides rise. Humanity is too busy climbing the economic ladders for Mother Nature.

    • @jgprice9990
      @jgprice9990 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      A lot of the world is also too poor to care. In african countries where poverty is high they burn gasoline in generators so they have light and electricity. Eco friendly solar arrays or wind turbines (not to mention the infrastructure) are simply too expensive.

    • @JohanThiart
      @JohanThiart หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I care more about my bowel movements …..

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Drama queen

    • @billpetersen298
      @billpetersen298 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That’s the whole problem. We don’t know how, to go below low consumption. With billions of us doing it.

    • @JohanThiart
      @JohanThiart หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@billpetersen298 we know how to go below low consumption. We choose …. the opposite behaviour.

  • @r.i.p.volodya
    @r.i.p.volodya 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Why ban a PLAY about 'taking over a government' when there are so many FILMS about the same thing, 'White House Down' etc. ?

  • @teemulaulajainen9410
    @teemulaulajainen9410 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    "If you believe something but you act like you don't believe it, do you really believe it?" Good point. Although, I'd rather understand climate science than believe it, but I guess nobody can understand everything, so there must exist some believing too.

    • @thomaslilly5834
      @thomaslilly5834 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      You don't have to understand every scientific topic. But you should have an at least basic understanding about what science is and how it works (including the insight that if scientists go wrong at one point, it does not dequalify science as a whole). So that you can TRUST, not believe, science.

    • @teemulaulajainen9410
      @teemulaulajainen9410 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@thomaslilly5834 Yeah, "trust" is a good word for describing the attitude towards science.

    • @seanlahm4826
      @seanlahm4826 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It is a good point but truly missing the mark. I could argue that quote pertains more to American Christians more than anything else. They claim to follow the teachings of Jesus, but any chance they get they are voting against helping poor people. So in one aspect they want to believe , but their actions say something completely different. But I digress. As an individual , how big of a carbon "footprint" can one truly have? Meaning, yes, I believe in the science but I do drive a gas powered car. But the changes that need to happen , need to be on a MACRO level . Not MICRO. Corporations , Local, State and Federal Govt's. Farms. Oil companies, car companies etc... Without the cooperation of these large polluters to do their part we have no chance of turning the tide. We can as individuals only do so much. Our strongest tool is to vote for politicians who first believe in the science or at least admit to it and secondly are committed to actually doing something about it. Which means , STOP TAKING MONEY FROM OIL COMPANIES. We can all drive around in EVs and recycle until there isn't one gas powered car left on the road and it still wouldn't match the methane output of farmlands and large corporations who use dirtier energy to save money. This is the battle. Republicans say "Nothing to see here. Global warming is fake news. Trust in God. These liberals want us eating tofu and walking to work. It will hurt the economy." Etc... Until they change , it really doesn't matter what we continue to believe or not believe as citizens. Only when our votes DEMAND that they do. But we need help from the people who can do this on a MACRO level. BTW, I don't need to BELIEVE that the average global temperature is reaching record levels every year and that increase corresponds with the beginning of the Industrial revolution. Nah, because that is not a belief. That is just a simple FACT. One that only a geologist who works for the oil companies would refute.

  • @josephmatuszak3855
    @josephmatuszak3855 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    What I learned is, most of humanity is arrogantly ignorant to any danger until it hits them in the face.

  • @klesus
    @klesus หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    6:41 This is the most baffling thing about climate deniers because how on earth could they get the issue about global warming so wrong? The list that David brings up is a list of consequences, but climate deniers interpret this as an agenda somehow. In the end, both sides of the table want the same thing but they choose to think different about the same argument 🤯

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      Climate change deniers don’t doubt climate changes. They doubt co2 is the reason. There is too much data to suggest co2 doesn’t warm the atmosphere.

    • @Christian_Prepper
      @Christian_Prepper 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      *GREATEST Climate Change Talk EVER!*
      *The audience was absolutely stunned you could hear a pin drop. 😲 Talk about a shower of cold reality.*
      *You sound like a fair-minded, thinking person so I share the following for your consideration.*
      *Sadly, most people will fail to understand the point of his talk. It was not actually about "deniers". It was that most climate change "believers" only pay lip service while living hypocritically.*
      *See, I believe he is incredibly honest so I will assume he didn't mention people like me because he genuinely hasn't met us yet.*
      *I do not "deny" the climate is changing or the climate science. But because he agreed that, that list of consequences are inevitable as a result of the "solutions" already being forced on everyone (except on the hypocritical "priesthood of climate change") then I choose not to comply. But live free of fascism.*
      *We recently got a glimpse at how those climate solutions will play out:*
      *"PANDEMIC! LOCK DOWN! NO FREEDOM....for you. meanwhile me and my friends and family will travel whenever and wherever we want and enjoy ourselves because WE are 'essential', not school teachers, not food service, not whatever it is you do to feed YOUR family."*
      *THAT was the final straw of trust and belief in those taking the lead. And that healthy craving for freedom can no longer be held back, because when the waters rise and the temperature gets hotter, guess what, WE CAN MOVE! Humans have been moving to better parts of the planet for thousands of years! Adapt & overcome!*
      *Well guess what, scientists that worship Darwin are about to witness the so-called "survival of the fittest" play out on a grand scale. Want everyone on board? Then no more "Just for thee and not for me" crap. But sadly, the rich and powerful will never do it. They can afford to pay extra "carbon tax" and continue to live as they wish.*

  • @Belidonne
    @Belidonne หลายเดือนก่อน +43

    I'm slowly switching over all of my habits to more eco friendly ones. I also plan to build my business in the most eco way possible, even when extremely difficult. Everyone needs to continue their lives and make a living, that is why I vote with my dollar; the most powerful tool that I own in this society.

    • @djayjp
      @djayjp หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Hopefully that includes going vegan, the single most important effect an individual, ordinary citizen can have.

    • @jgprice9990
      @jgprice9990 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@djayjpIt is impossible to be vegan these days and tbh a lot of the vegan alternatives are not much better for the planet. Like belts, a pure leather belt will last you your life it wont fray or rip… yet a vegan friendly leather free belt is made of laminated plastic fibres which lasts a few months at best… now that belt is sitting in a landfill never biodegrading.
      Also look at food, have you seen the amount of artificial crap listed in vegan produced foods? Modified starches, sugars, oils, and its all bad for you.

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Will make 0 difference

    • @youtubewatcher1555
      @youtubewatcher1555 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That's really great work. As someone involved with climate groups, changing personal habits was how I first got started, because when I ultimately realized I had to do more than just focus on my own behavior, my own experience of how easy (or sometimes not easy) it was informed me on what change was needed at the structural level.

    • @paulnewman2000
      @paulnewman2000 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@RobertMJohnson _Even_ _if_ your meagre efforts will make 0% effective difference, what kind of wuss goes down without a fight?

  • @heidi4752
    @heidi4752 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Wow, he's got a good point. We understand that climate science is accurate, but in many ways we live as if it isn't.

    • @Nehes.6743
      @Nehes.6743 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Just like smoking. You know damn well what a pack does to your Body and what future youre creating. Yet there are over 1 billion ppl addicted to nicotin. Ignorance will be our downfall.

    • @slowburn1764
      @slowburn1764 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      And alcohol

  • @citylumberjack9169
    @citylumberjack9169 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    YES. Truth hurts. People don't like to admit that responsible choices are often hard - especially when your choice benefits people and generations you will never know.

    • @Christian_Prepper
      @Christian_Prepper 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      *GREATEST Climate Change Talk EVER!*
      *The audience was absolutely stunned you could hear a pin drop. 😲 Talk about a shower of cold reality.*
      *You sound like a fair-minded, thinking person so I share the following for your consideration.*
      *Sadly, most people will fail to understand the point of his talk. It was not actually about "deniers". It was that most climate change "believers" only pay lip service while living hypocritically.*
      *See, I believe he is incredibly honest so I will assume he didn't mention people like me because he genuinely hasn't met us yet.*
      *I do not "deny" the climate is changing or the climate science. But because he agreed that, that list of consequences are inevitable as a result of the "solutions" already being forced on everyone (except on the hypocritical "priesthood of climate change") then I choose not to comply. But live free of fascism.*
      *We recently got a glimpse at how those climate solutions will play out:*
      *"PANDEMIC! LOCK DOWN! NO FREEDOM....for you. meanwhile me and my friends and family will travel whenever and wherever we want and enjoy ourselves because WE are 'essential', not school teachers, not food service, not whatever it is you do to feed YOUR family."*
      *THAT was the final straw of trust and belief in those taking the lead. And that healthy craving for freedom can no longer be held back, because when the waters rise and the temperature gets hotter, guess what, WE CAN MOVE! Humans have been moving to better parts of the planet for thousands of years! Adapt & overcome!*
      *Well guess what, scientists that worship Darwin are about to witness the so-called "survival of the fittest" play out on a grand scale. Want everyone on board? Then no more "Just for thee and not for me" crap. But sadly, the rich and powerful will never do it. They can afford to pay extra "carbon tax" and continue to live as they wish.*

  • @Acradius
    @Acradius 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I'm not in denial, I just know that me walking to work every day and not eating hamburgers isn't going to make a lick of difference compared to shutting down multi-billion dollar corporations.

    • @maxirubrum7383
      @maxirubrum7383 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      The individual matters. Of course Shell is the Problem, but would shell be so powerful without the customers, the individual? Same with McDonalds. You alone don't have the power in your hands, but society does. Shrugging and saying that your action doesn't matter makes the movement fail.

    • @Acradius
      @Acradius 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@maxirubrum7383 Respectfully, I don't believe that the scale of change we need to reach can be accomplished by relying on individuals. What we need is a massive cultural shift in how we think about resource usage, especially on a nationwide or global scale.

    • @maxirubrum7383
      @maxirubrum7383 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@Acradiusyou're right! But I think we shouldn't underestimate the power of the individual. The statement you're giving by boykotting those corporations might not seem to make a big change, but it's planting a thought.
      Otherwise, it has to happen so fast now, and since especially the west tends to rather right wing politics, it might doesn't matter anymore. We won't make it. Only thing left to do is not getting children.

    • @Acradius
      @Acradius 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@maxirubrum7383 A step I'm already taking, for better or worse.

    • @tututaurus
      @tututaurus 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      THAT!! The system has to change.

  • @paullanoue5228
    @paullanoue5228 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Don’t know what the climate is like where this gentleman lives, but the U.S. Gulf Coast where I live climate change is kicking the crap out of us. Florida is about to be hit with a second major hurricane in two. Our flood insurance is now more expensive than our house notes. People may not believe climate change scientists, but insurance bills don’t lie.

    • @icevariable9600
      @icevariable9600 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      And if you asked any other Floridian if they believe in climate change, they’ll deny that it’s real.

  • @richardrigling4906
    @richardrigling4906 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    The key point of the talk is for us to recognize the consequences of global warming and start altering our way of life to accommodate the changes. Things like massive migration out of the equatorial zones into the temperate zones. Migration away from coastal and low land area to higher ground. Things like planning and adjusting agricultural practices to accommodate change. The list is really long, and we will all experience it. Whether we plan for it or not is our current decision.

    • @SteveLomas-k6k
      @SteveLomas-k6k หลายเดือนก่อน

      ?? Everyone in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan is flocking to Texas, Arizona, Florida if they can figure out how. And I hope to join them one day. people much prefer warmer weather.

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Not sure this will go fast enough to benefit much from planning. People will do what they do, and the invisible hand of the market will solve it. The major problem perhaps is countries being increasingly tough on migration.

    • @karlwheatley1244
      @karlwheatley1244 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SteveLomas-k6k "people much prefer warmer weather." The only problem is that our lives and food supply are totally dependent on the health of Earth's ecosystems and rapidly heating all the ecosystems on Earth is pushing them toward collapse/mass extinction event. People moving to hotter places with less water just accelerates the collapse.

    • @SteveLomas-k6k
      @SteveLomas-k6k หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@karlwheatley1244 Well the comment was about migration. But crops also thrive on CO2, making them more drought resistant- never mind the benefit from milder nights, I live in an agricultural area where late spring frosts are a killer, farmers have huge fans on airplane engines to try to avoid that happening. Crop yields would benefit greatly if global warming ever happened. They have already benefited hugely from the extra CO2 nutrition.

  • @edgeldine3499
    @edgeldine3499 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    To be fair the individual lacks power, as a group we can enact laws and regulations and provide systems to make these things easier.. I can’t travel without a car, I live in a place that can get to -80 and charging stations are few and far between so electric vehicles are not practical. Also Some of us can’t afford them… I’m actually finally considering a hybrid but it seems like a lot of companies are transitioning to all electric (I drive a ford focus from 12 yers ago and it was used when I got it) I can recycle but the recycling bin still goes to the landfill because the cost is prohibitive as we basically let the poor countries recycle our stuff. Fresh and local food is hard to come by (Specifically local) and I live in a farming state.. you gotta sign up for it and can pick up veggies once every other week. The other place in town is inconvenient… and more expensive than the chain grocery store a block away. We need to change systems and try and do personal things to impact everything.

    • @gothic_ace2037
      @gothic_ace2037 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      theres a really cool solar car being built called the aptera, it seems like a great alternative to an electric car, the starting price is at around $30,000 which is actually amazing. im hoping to one day be able to afford one (its gonna take me a hot minute since my checks arent that big)

    • @Christian_Prepper
      @Christian_Prepper 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      *GREATEST Climate Change Talk EVER!*
      *The audience was absolutely stunned you could hear a pin drop. 😲 Talk about a shower of cold reality.*
      *You sound like a fair-minded, thinking person so I share the following for your consideration.*
      *Sadly, most people will fail to understand the point of his talk. It was not actually about "deniers". It was that most climate change "believers" only pay lip service while living hypocritically.*
      *See, I believe he is incredibly honest so I will assume he didn't mention people like me because he genuinely hasn't met us yet.*
      *I do not "deny" the climate is changing or the climate science. But because he agreed that, that list of consequences are inevitable as a result of the "solutions" already being forced on everyone (except on the hypocritical "priesthood of climate change") then I choose not to comply. But live free of fascism.*
      *We recently got a glimpse at how those climate solutions will play out:*
      *"PANDEMIC! LOCK DOWN! NO FREEDOM....for you. meanwhile me and my friends and family will travel whenever and wherever we want and enjoy ourselves because WE are 'essential', not school teachers, not food service, not whatever it is you do to feed YOUR family."*
      *THAT was the final straw of trust and belief in those taking the lead. And that healthy craving for freedom can no longer be held back, because when the waters rise and the temperature gets hotter, guess what, WE CAN MOVE! Humans have been moving to better parts of the planet for thousands of years! Adapt & overcome!*
      *Well guess what, scientists that worship Darwin are about to witness the so-called "survival of the fittest" play out on a grand scale. Want everyone on board? Then no more "Just for thee and not for me" crap. But sadly, the rich and powerful will never do it. They can afford to pay extra "carbon tax" and continue to live as they wish.*

  • @federicomedinauy
    @federicomedinauy หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The premise of the talk is good, but I think the conclusion is innacurate.
    The problem with climate change is deniers is that they prevent the conversation to move forward. We can’t productively talk about how to tackle the problem when we’re still stuck on whether it’s a real issue or not. And this is especially problematic when it reaches politicians.

  • @JerbPa
    @JerbPa หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I grew up Evangelical Christian. I’ve radically moved away from that cultural and religious perspective at this point but when I was in my twenties, I was the youth director at our church back in the nineties. One of the first lessons I taught was based on a song called “beyond belief” and I challenged my students that their faith is meaningless unless it is put into action, they have to move beyond believing something into allowing it to radically shape their lives and behavior. Perhaps that perspective is what allowed me to escape the movement, because it never was just aimless belief to me.
    Although, I disagree with his final premise. I don’t think it’s that we’re in denial; folks I know who agree climate change is happening-we all know and agree we need massive changes and there will be massive consequences. We’re desperate for our governments to take big action, we welcome the change because we know it is necessary and that avoiding it means worse consequences. We don’t get on planes because we’re in denial of anything. We get on planes because we have to get somewhere and it’s either burn fossil fuels in a car, bus, boat or plane to do it and generally those decisions are made for you by your work/family schedule and the size of your bank account. I suppose there are some electric trains but the electricity is generated by fossil fuels and they’re super expensive. I’ve never been able to afford it compared with driving or flying.

    • @0topon
      @0topon หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Great comment

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I also think governments need to take action, but society is divided on how. I think nuclear is our best shot, but we're refusing to do it due to irrational fears and due to green mythology concerning its feasibility. For sure there's no point in me as a grass root to try to be more frugal.

  • @AlfW
    @AlfW หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    One of my favorite bands made a song about raising a child and not being able to teach it anything about the future because of what you said. It's a dystopian song. But actually it's the upcoming reality. Your talk made that clear once again.

    • @moiaussi7722
      @moiaussi7722 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      You can't just comment that without dropping the song title

    • @AlfW
      @AlfW 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@moiaussi7722 It's in German and metal with harsh vocals, so I thought I won't mention it.

    • @moiaussi7722
      @moiaussi7722 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@AlfW well i got good news for you, I am German!
      Gimme

    • @AlfW
      @AlfW 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@moiaussi7722Ok, it's The Hirsch Effekt - 2054, and because you won't understand most of the lyrics from the vocals (as it's screams most of the time), here's the lyrics:
      Ewig Wachstum für eine Welt, in der nichts wächst.
      Was kehrt dich eigentlich der Erhalt, das Sein und der Mensch?
      Reise mit mir durch die ganze Welt.
      Ich zeige dir einen fremden Ort
      bevor er untergeht - auch weil wir hierher gereist sind
      Wann bring ich dir bei dass alles, was ich dir beigebracht hab’, nichts zählt?
      Das wird wertlos für deinen Erhalt
      Wie wird es sich anfühl’n, wenn du merkst, jеder, der dir nah war, hat dir was vorgemacht?
      Nеin, es wird nichts mehr für dich übrig sein.
      Stets am Ende dieses Kreises meines Bangens der Moment, wo ich mich frag
      Wann gesteh’ ich, dass das hier nie deine Zukunft wird
      Lass mich hier nicht allein
      Lass mich hier nicht allein
      Vater, lass mich hier nicht allein
      Kenn’ kein Mangel
      Noch Entbehrung
      Wie soll ich so nur besteh’n? Denn du hast mich für diese Welt nicht gemacht
      So wie es wird
      Ist dir das dein Leben wert?

    • @urosmilosevic5299
      @urosmilosevic5299 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@AlfWPlease send it!!!! I wanna hear it so bad

  • @IExpectedBSJustNotThisMuchBS
    @IExpectedBSJustNotThisMuchBS หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Seriously, this is why I think people want to deny it because they're afraid of large scale migrations and I blame this fear for the rise in right-wing movements around the world.

  • @cthymnn2010
    @cthymnn2010 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    This biggest challenge is to rewire the human mind to cope with this unavoidable problem. Outstanding Ted Talk.

  • @michaelashworth4172
    @michaelashworth4172 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Particularly interesting because he's talking about Australia, where climate change denial was so tenacious back then (selling cheap coal to China enabling its industrial boom seemed a good idea at the time - to the ignorant and, sadly, to the cynical).

  • @musickid43
    @musickid43 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    So people fear the consequences of trying to fix the problem. They feel it is easier to ignore it and let the next generation handle it. Unfortunately the longer we wait, the harsher reality will be.

  • @towzone
    @towzone หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I’ve tried to make the world a better place my whole life. Most people are just part of the problem, and they drag us all along into the abyss with their stubbornness.

  • @studiosandi
    @studiosandi หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I always figured people denied a climate change because that means they would have to take responsibility for their actions and change the way they are living their lives.

  • @rachelbraaten5285
    @rachelbraaten5285 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Understanding that climate change is real means that we must take action. Every suburb should have a small electric bus that circulates around the city frequently enough that it's convenient to use. We're not going to "electric car" our way to a greener future.

  • @TrevorHaldenby
    @TrevorHaldenby 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Great talk, David! How wonderful to see you on stage this many years later!

  • @fastestdino2
    @fastestdino2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I think for the average lay person it doesn't help that a lot of the politicians who talk about the environment themselves fly planes and ride in big SUV's. It has a pretty big demoralizing effect on the masses I'm sure. Unfortunately, people who have a good understanding and competency on a topic aren't usually picked to run things in our modern political system, it often has more to do with having the right politics and promising only good free things for the masses. Nobody wants to take the plunge to accept the fact they may need to make some sacrifices here and there because of general mismanagement. This gets impressively confounded when this mismanagement goes back generations and you're asking young 20 year olds to pick up the slack.

  • @WildcraftBritain
    @WildcraftBritain หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Well said, bit sweeping generalisation on people, but it’s true in the sense people who have an insight into the science and believe in the process are in denial about the consequences 😢 I wonder how many people experiencing the floods in Europe, or the passing heatwave, will understand the coming change 🤔 interesting times indeed 😮🌀

  • @scorcheris-empathy
    @scorcheris-empathy หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    CORRECTION: Actual current increase in global temp significantly higher than stated, herein and elsewhere, as shown Sept 12, 13 and 14, 2001 when airlines were not allowed to fly for three days. Global temps skyrocketed! Upwards of more than 1.5 degrees F when contrails no longer reflected sunlight back out towards upper atmosphere. Mr. Finnegan’s analysis is spot-on. Even downplayed. Mother earth is coming for deniers AND those who, like my family, have spent the past 60 years fighting to “SAVE THE WHALES” (our first national campaign from the ‘70’s). The deniers’ arguments are a;ways the same and are, more recently, shifting to: Well? The Climate is changing BUT? It’s natural! Humans had no part in these changes.
    Alas, we knew THAT was coming, too. 😢
    As the permafrost melts, the NEXT challenge for those who remain will be: Where to find the ‘high ground’? Away from the methane flows already choking out those with respiratory illnesses. Where is it safe from fires and resulting smoke? Who are these arsonists intentionally fueling the flames of our demise? Let alone, where will the clean air and water be for the next seven generations?
    ANSWER: Not in some billionaire’s underground bunker.
    Mother earth is coming for EVERYONE.

    • @Christian_Prepper
      @Christian_Prepper 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      *GREATEST Climate Change Talk EVER!*
      *The audience was absolutely stunned you could hear a pin drop. 😲 Talk about a shower of cold reality.*
      *You sound like a fair-minded, thinking person and I agree with much of your comment, so I'll share the following for your consideration.*
      *Sadly, most people will fail to understand the point of his talk. It was not actually about "deniers". It was that most climate change "believers" only pay lip service while living hypocritically.*
      *See, I believe he is incredibly honest so I will assume he didn't mention people like me because he genuinely hasn't met us yet.*
      *I do not "deny" the climate is changing or the climate science. But because he agreed that, that list of consequences are inevitable as a result of the "solutions" already being forced on everyone (except on the hypocritical "priesthood of climate change") then I choose not to comply. But live free of fascism.*
      *We recently got a glimpse at how those climate solutions will play out:*
      *"PANDEMIC! LOCK DOWN! NO FREEDOM....for you. meanwhile me and my friends and family will travel whenever and wherever we want and enjoy ourselves because WE are 'essential', not school teachers, not food service, not whatever it is you do to feed YOUR family."*
      *THAT was the final straw of trust and belief in those taking the lead. And that healthy craving for freedom can no longer be held back, because when the waters rise and the temperature gets hotter, guess what, WE CAN MOVE! Humans have been moving to better parts of the planet for thousands of years! Adapt & overcome!*
      *Well guess what, scientists that worship Darwin are about to witness the so-called "survival of the fittest" play out on a grand scale. Want everyone on board? Then no more "Just for thee and not for me" crap. But sadly, the rich and powerful will never do it. They can afford to pay extra "carbon tax" and continue to live as they wish.*

    • @scorcheris-empathy
      @scorcheris-empathy 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      For the PREPPERS: We know you. You are not some new, enlightened ilk. While WE were in the old growth forests hugging the trees, you were the ones cuttin’ ‘em down.
      BTW: The Rapture? It ALREADY happened.

    • @scorcheris-empathy
      @scorcheris-empathy 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Christian_Prepper For the PREPPERS: We know you. You are not some new, enlightened ilk. While WE were in the old growth forests hugging the trees, you were the ones cuttin’ ‘em down.
      BTW: The Rapture? It ALREADY happened.

  • @geralldus
    @geralldus หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    In a highly controlled, individualistic and materialistic society the concept of personal extinction is intolerable, this then is externalised into a denial of species extinction. So if you accept your own mortality, decay and death, you can more readily accept species extinction along with the terrifying loss of control that that engenders.

  • @millermbe
    @millermbe 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I've been on about this for years! It's our lifestyles. We think we can make things better without changing how we do day to day tasks. The technology we need is ancient, water collection, Grey water use, in home aquaponics to grow food for our families. But the steps can be small. Start a window sill herb garden.
    But the biggest problem is urban environments, we need self sustainability within out city limits...

  • @christiana2472
    @christiana2472 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    My god can he please stop talking about carbon footprint of individuals and start talking about the co2 emissions of the 20 biggest companies on earth?
    BP managers are laughing that their idea of individual carbon footprints is still holding on in 2024... This is a total desaster for climate change and he is part of it

  • @billkemp9315
    @billkemp9315 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    YES! The ONLY thing that is constant is change.

  • @donnakano3697
    @donnakano3697 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Interesting perspective on the whole issue of climate change. As a (very) former climate researcher, I not only believe, but understand the science behind climate change. We have a culture in the US of, “If I say it isn’t true, then it doesn’t exist.” We do that with climate change, air pollution, education, tax laws, school shootings, etc. People seem to believe if they ignore something, it doesn’t exist. While I could do more to fight climate change, we have downsized and consume far less consumer goods than we did in the past. I drive a hybrid which is 17% more polluting than an electric vehicle (based on where we live). We consume far less than 50% of the water than we did five years ago and about 60% of the electricity than we did then. Two people won’t change the fate of the world, but we can try to slow down its demise.

    • @questgivercyradis8462
      @questgivercyradis8462 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      We'd be in a lot better place if most people did a little bit more, as you have. We can't immediately change the world we're stuck in - sometimes automobiles are necessary, our food is in plastic bags, and our clothes wear out. Most folks don't want to do *anything* unfortunately :(

    • @theharper1
      @theharper1 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Everyone needs to understand that every little bit counts. If everyone does a little, it adds up to a lot. If the majority do nothing, things will only get worse. I have friends who laugh at efforts to reduce carbon emissions in Australia because emissions in China keep going up. I agree that the answer isn't to export the emissions to other countries, but at the same time, the answer isn't to carry on with business as usual.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not buying it. Co2 doesn’t warm the atmosphere. Vostok ice core showed it lags, it doesn’t lead.

    • @theharper1
      @theharper1 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @dr_shrinker have a look at Venus. PS you missed the point.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@theharper1nah. You missed the point. Venus is closer to the sun and its atmosphere is 1300 psi. Earth is like 14 psi. Venus atmosphere is almost a solid.
      So. Go outside and put a glass of coke near a bonfire and put another one 10 feet away. Which one gets hotter faster?

  • @Randomrayray666
    @Randomrayray666 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Excellent Ted talk thank you, David is right, I’ve been fighting my dad on this for decades now and never took the time to realize he’s right but just so wrong.

  • @genieb
    @genieb 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Brilliantly put David, thanks for sharing this!

  • @sumoneskid
    @sumoneskid หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    5 minutes in, this was painful to watch. Your second half was some of the best spoken words I've heard on the subject.
    It's easy to point a finger at an industry. We make our own choices on what to spend money on. Would you spend $100 a year to ward off climate change? $1000? More? It will surprise you what the average person is willing the change. Believe or deny might be the wrong question to ask. What are you willing to change might be the right one.

    • @Christian_Prepper
      @Christian_Prepper 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      *GREATEST Climate Change Talk EVER!*
      *The audience was absolutely stunned you could hear a pin drop. 😲 Talk about a shower of cold reality.*
      *You sound like a fair-minded, thinking person so I share the following for your consideration.*
      *Sadly, most people will fail to understand the point of his talk. It was not actually about "deniers". It was that most climate change "believers" only pay lip service while living hypocritically.*
      *See, I believe he is incredibly honest so I will assume he didn't mention people like me because he genuinely hasn't met us yet.*
      *I do not "deny" the climate is changing or the climate science. But because he agreed that, that list of consequences are inevitable as a result of the "solutions" already being forced on everyone (except on the hypocritical "priesthood of climate change") then I choose not to comply. But live free of fascism.*
      *We recently got a glimpse at how those climate solutions will play out:*
      *"PANDEMIC! LOCK DOWN! NO FREEDOM....for you. meanwhile me and my friends and family will travel whenever and wherever we want and enjoy ourselves because WE are 'essential', not school teachers, not food service, not whatever it is you do to feed YOUR family."*
      *THAT was the final straw of trust and belief in those taking the lead. And that healthy craving for freedom can no longer be held back, because when the waters rise and the temperature gets hotter, guess what, WE CAN MOVE! Humans have been moving to better parts of the planet for thousands of years! Adapt & overcome!*
      *Well guess what, scientists that worship Darwin are about to witness the so-called "survival of the fittest" play out on a grand scale. Want everyone on board? Then no more "Just for thee and not for me" crap. But sadly, the rich and powerful will never do it. They can afford to pay extra "carbon tax" and continue to live as they wish.*

  • @StopWhining491
    @StopWhining491 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Organizing our own extinction. Clever.

  • @shawnhenderson2091
    @shawnhenderson2091 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Collective inaction breeds apathy which leads to the continuation of collective inaction, a self feeding cycle of doom

    • @softhotty
      @softhotty หลายเดือนก่อน

      Shawn 100% accurate. Denial and distraction is what alot of us are engaged in. Mad Max seems to be our future...at best.

    • @Christian_Prepper
      @Christian_Prepper 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      *GREATEST Climate Change Talk EVER!*
      *The audience was absolutely stunned you could hear a pin drop. 😲 Talk about a shower of cold reality.*
      *Love your comment. You sound like a fair-minded, thinking person so I will hare the following for your consideration.*
      *Sadly, most people will fail to understand the point of his talk. It was not actually about "deniers". It was that most climate change "believers" only pay lip service while living hypocritically.*
      *See, I believe he is incredibly honest so I will assume he didn't mention people like me because he genuinely hasn't met us yet.*
      *I do not "deny" the climate is changing or the climate science. But because he agreed that, that list of consequences are inevitable as a result of the "solutions" already being forced on everyone (except on the hypocritical "priesthood of climate change") then I choose not to comply. But live free of fascism.*
      *We recently got a glimpse at how those climate solutions will play out:*
      *"PANDEMIC! LOCK DOWN! NO FREEDOM....for you. meanwhile me and my friends and family will travel whenever and wherever we want and enjoy ourselves because WE are 'essential', not school teachers, not food service, not whatever it is you do to feed YOUR family."*
      *THAT was the final straw of trust and belief in those taking the lead. And that healthy craving for freedom can no longer be held back, because when the waters rise and the temperature gets hotter, guess what, WE CAN MOVE! Humans have been moving to better parts of the planet for thousands of years! Adapt & overcome!*
      *Well guess what, scientists that worship Darwin are about to witness the so-called "survival of the fittest" play out on a grand scale. Want everyone on board? Then no more "Just for thee and not for me" crap. But sadly, the rich and powerful will never do it. They can afford to pay extra "carbon tax" and continue to live as they wish.*

  • @Dr.Gehrig
    @Dr.Gehrig หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Well done. I wanna see this play. Glad this brought it to my attention. Is there video of it anywhere?

  • @colinwhite5355
    @colinwhite5355 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Never truer words spoken. Lip service is neither action nor belief. Superb presentation.

  • @richardhardin9184
    @richardhardin9184 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I believe we need to educate climate deniers what and how CO2 affects our planet's atmosphere. There are simple experiments that show exactly how CO2 causes the atmosphere gets warmer over time. Ask a climate denier what climate change is and how fossil fuels affect the climate. If even one person can explain it, I would be absolutely surprised. People like myself whi have studied science with an understanding of how science answers critical questions. Lack of education in science along with ignorance will affect us ALL.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      lol. Then you could explain what planet we used to conduct this experiment? Seems there’s only 1 Earth and we have no way to conduct an experiment to that scale.
      Also, every heard of Milankovitch cycles, then you must explain why co2 rose and dropped every few hundred thousand years, without using temperature as a cause.

    • @DasRaetsel
      @DasRaetsel หลายเดือนก่อน

      People need to really to hone in on who's to blame. I'm willing to bet a conspiracy theorist who doesn't believe in climate change just has a deep mistrust of big industry--Big Oil, Big Pharma, Big Ag, etc. and all they need is someone to connect Big Oil lies to climate denialism. Same reason why people don't trust Big Tobacco because they lied about cancer causing chemicals all these years.

  • @darinhitchings7104
    @darinhitchings7104 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I spent 1/3 of 2024 writing a "chapter" on tipping points that I was invited to write for a book... I ended up with 75 pages of text, 75 figures at present... it's going to become 5-7 smaller chapters... I haven't even attempted to address technology or politics or special interests or behavioral psychology impacts on economics yet...
    I do not have a formal background in climate science but am largely self taught. What I do have is a phd in systems engineering, feedback cycles, modeling, stochastic, decision making under uncertainty and statistical inference. If you can't understand how these tools might be applied to understanding climate science... well let me summarize the state of affairs with the following: feedback cycles ( aka tipping points, ecological avalanches ...) are not a side story to the conversation about climate change; they are the *entire* conversation.
    And furthermore "climate change" ( which is obviously a mix of perpetual, natural changes as well as anthropomorphicly generated, unnatural ones... ) is just the tip of the iceberg. We have feedback cycles that couple together the effects of a) climate change, b) biodiversity, c) pollution, d) human behavior.
    So I'll summarize the situation with the following: a) the situation is catastrophically more severe than 99.9999% of humans realize, even professional climate scientists (if they spent their career studying climate science that's tantamount to saying they have *not* spent their career studying inference/prediction/feedback cycles/ stochastic systems / non-linear estimation... I'm more broad less deep, they're the opposite. We're complementary to each other. And if the world was sane we would have teams of people with complementary skills working together. This is absolutely not the case...). b) these impacts are not 60, 80, 100 years in the future. This is not some future generation's problem. We're looking at society as we know it becoming unglued within 20 years. And just like investors in the stock market... we don't have to wait for some very negative event to happen to spook the market. The ecological "investors" (e.g. the set of people who like to eat at least once a week...) will anticipate the market... and that anticipation in and of itself is capable of destroying our social stability entirely.
    Agriculture is the Achilles Heel of humanity -- Naomi Klein
    The planet has resources enough for 680 million people to live an American lifestyle, sustainably... there are currently 330 million Americans already and 8 billion- 330 million other people. Ie we're burning through the world's resources ~12x faster than is sustainable... and the rate at which this situation is growing worse is growing exponentially through time.
    So as this speaker very aptly suggests... your retirement plans, your 401k, your vacation home, your dreams of putting your baby through an Ivy League school 20 years from now... these ideas are mirage with no substance at all. You don't need to be trying to optimize between Harvard and MIT 20 years from now if the United States doesn't exist 20 years from now... and likewise for our notions of material wealth / value.
    The state of the biosphere, the oceans, our crops, pollution, invasive species, the balancing act between organisms across the planet is in complete SNAFU status right now. It's a total burning, reeking dumpster fire.. which is growing exponentially worse over time.
    So seriously folks, it's time to start focusing on what matters in life. I don't want to see people watch their children die... and that's exactly where we're headed right now. Wildly out of control... for hundreds and hundreds 9f different self-reinforcing reasons.
    We're in a 0 sum game between past and future where we're putting 0% emphasis on the future and 100% emphasis on the present. And a certain number of atrocities may occur in consequence.
    If our political system can't change and learn to plan on a 20, 50, 100, 1000, 100k year time horizon instead of a 1 day, 1 week, 1 financial quarter, 1 election cycle planning horizon then humanity is finished.

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      *"The planet has resources enough for 680 million people to live an American lifestyle, sustainably..."*
      I have never been impressed by such calculations. They typically include CO2-emissions in some arbitrary way as the major contributor, and CO2 emissions are fixable when we want to fix them, especially through nuclear power.
      *"Ie we're burning through the world's resources ~12x faster than is sustainable..."*
      Everyone doesn't live like Americans so this doesn't compute, even if there were some valid numbers behind the original claim about having resources only for 680 million.
      *"The state of the biosphere, the oceans, our crops, pollution, invasive species, the balancing act between organisms across the planet is in complete SNAFU status right now. It's a total burning, reeking dumpster fire.. which is growing exponentially worse over time. "*
      Some indicators aren't good, to be sure, but I'm sorry, this is exaggerated. "Getting exponentially worse" how? It makes no sense.

  • @JonathanFouts-z3y
    @JonathanFouts-z3y หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Everybody believes what they have they deserve. And we come up with rationalizations to justifying our wants. Combating climate change requires sacrifice and behavior changes. This is more than most people are willing to do.
    Marketers are constantly trying, often successfully, to tell us what we need--a larger house, an exotic vacation, a new phone, etc. All these things take energy. Is it possible to be content with what we have?

  • @Marc-ElianBegin
    @Marc-ElianBegin หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Very interesting and valuable twist at the end. Thank you for the insight.

  • @sabofx
    @sabofx หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanx David, Your talk actually moved me. 😗

  • @epincion
    @epincion หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Excellent talk and illustrative of the problem

  • @Johundaherohonda
    @Johundaherohonda หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    People are mean they think they'll die anyways so they don't care about the future generations i think people would destroy earth one day its sad to even think about the world being destroyed

    • @trader2137
      @trader2137 หลายเดือนก่อน

      why would i care about the future, my impact is negligible if none, a single volcano eruption or meteorite impact can destroy whole planet regardless of your actions. Also in future there will be better technology to "fix" the climate... no need to waste money nor resources now on this.

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think the world will be fine. There will still be 10^24 kg of rock orbiting the sun.
      Humanity will be harmed in various ways. But the average human will likely be better off than today due to technological improvement and economic growth. (or if not, it's because of something else, like nuclear war or AI doom. Not climate change).
      Polar bears might well go extinct. At least in the wild. Same for a bunch of other animals. A lot of the species going extinct will be small and uncharismatic bugs.

    • @misshapenwhale5045
      @misshapenwhale5045 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      This is true their is only a shred of a chance we will be able to live a good life(or any life) in the future and the deniers are destroying it.

    • @hab0272
      @hab0272 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I wonder what are the factors could make people do care about future generations in the first place.
      Having children or young relatives? Having a responsible attitude in general? Believing in reincarnation?
      Just throwing up some ideas.

    • @JescoLincke
      @JescoLincke 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Rest assured that as a species we will have made ourselves extinct well before destroying the planet...

  • @phonsefagan5649
    @phonsefagan5649 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    The speaker seems to have stumbled into a non-sequitur at the end. Understanding and giving credence to the scientific evidence does not imply that one is in denial of the potential consequences of inadequate action.
    Yeah, we still fly using fossil fuels... obviously because that's the only option possible for rapid travel at present. But to deny the science by willful ignorance, and actively oppose technological and societal efforts to transition to sustainable practices, is to practically guarantee the arrival of the events that the 'deniers' most fear.

    • @thomastempe3301
      @thomastempe3301 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Listen again.
      He's saying we need to lead our lives in a way that takes into account the reality of climate change, not just try to minimize our footprint.
      Even if we acknowledge climate change, even if we minimize our carbon footprints, it's still happening. It's still wrecking avoc on our cities and food sources, and migrations. What are we doing to *adapt*?

    • @phonsefagan5649
      @phonsefagan5649 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@thomastempe3301 Yes it is wreaking havoc and is likely to get worse. But people who understand and accept the evidence for climate change, and who actively support economic and political strategies for change, are being consistent in thought and action - even if the change is not happening fast enough. And, a big part of the reason that change is not happening fast enough is because of the political and economic roadblocks created by the actual "deniers".
      I get that he's saying we should be more scared and proactive. But I think that to suggest not being scared enough or not planning for the very worst is a type of 'denial' that's no better than those who deny the science is a bridge too far, and likely to do more damage to the cause of solving the climate problem than good.

  • @garychurch9237
    @garychurch9237 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The last minute is very important and a call to action.

  • @q-tuber7034
    @q-tuber7034 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Some valid points here, but what makes genuine climate deniers is not the arguments they hear and repeat but identity politics. A particular style of conservatism is their personal brand, and they embrace whatever beliefs and talking points go along with that brand. This doesn’t make them unique; we all tend to keep our beliefs in line with our brands; it just becomes particularly problematic when the brand involves denying basic science.
    What will solve the problem is for conservative thought leaders, those who maintain the brand, to shift the terms of their political critique (back) from “is it real?” to “what should we do about it”? (And what makes that so hard is that in the Trump era conservative “leaders” are taking their cues from the base instead of leading.)

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      Or perhaps they aren’t on board with the carbon tax hoax.

    • @anthonymorris5084
      @anthonymorris5084 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Pot calling kettle black. The "climate movement" as opposed to climate science, is the domain of the Left. It is activist driven and willfully misrepresents the science. Science tells us it's warming. It's the climate movement claiming that this is a crisis.

  • @whanethewhip
    @whanethewhip หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    When you get into a pointless debate online and somehow end up on TED telling your side of it.

  • @EdmOil83
    @EdmOil83 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    This is a good example of why I don't like TED talks much anymore, I don't care about the whole backstory on the play, how it went or how it made you feel. Cut the time of this video in half and just tell me what you learned about the psychology of climate denial.

    • @anthonymorris5084
      @anthonymorris5084 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I gave up after 5 minutes and headed to the comment section.

    • @Fiskaal
      @Fiskaal หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The video is 10 minutes long. Sounds like a pretty shot attention span to me.

  • @KludgeMaker
    @KludgeMaker หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I'm an optimist. I think tens of thousands of us will survive to re-populate.

    • @thomaslilly5834
      @thomaslilly5834 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes. But joke aside: This is also just one of the many "counterarguments" by climate "skeptics": They say, oh, this is all alarmist, mankind wil survive. But that's not the question. Mankind would also survive a worldwide thermonuklear war, imho. The question is, in what state?
      For me, it is crisis enough to know that 50 years from now, the habitats of, let's say, 2 billion people will not be habitable any more. The consequences will be catastrophic, making WW2 look like a minor issue. But mankind will survive. If that is "alarmist", so be it.

    • @capnkirk5528
      @capnkirk5528 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Oh it will be MILLIONS. Which is still only one person in a thousand, but not nearly as bad as you seem to think.
      The more interesting thing to think about is:
      When does the climate change impact become so economically damaging as to collapse the US economy. 50 years? 30 years? 10 years?
      The US economy is ALREADY close to collapse simply due to the excesses of capitalism and greed (you can only abuse the peasants so much before they revolt, and US peasants are armed, even the really poor ones).

    • @filispirit
      @filispirit หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      No food? No life on 🌎 get real

    • @CT-vm4gf
      @CT-vm4gf หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think so too, our current civilisation will crumble but there will still be some of us remaining.

    • @kimchristensen2175
      @kimchristensen2175 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@filispirit There'll be food and lots of dead humans, but there are billions of us. Don't need more than 0.1% of us to survive as a species.

  • @dustinmorrison6315
    @dustinmorrison6315 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    These types of talks are just meaning making coping. We need talks on our options for climate control and fundraisers for action.

    • @kmoses582
      @kmoses582 หลายเดือนก่อน

      High taxes will save us

  • @richardjones9007
    @richardjones9007 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Did not expect, but now appreciate, his concluding point. Brilliant.

  • @SuperBicycleRepairMan
    @SuperBicycleRepairMan หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Many good points made, well delivered too. But I don't believe the gravity of all these interlinked consequences of the climate disaster are well realised. Couple this with people's ability to kick the can down the road, I'll do it tomorrow! attitude. And you realise what the deniers have really achieved is far more powerful. By injecting doubt, vitriol and hate into the "debate" (it's not a debate!) potential discussion goes against polite and friendly conversation. So it doesn't get discussed. How can you consider or be held accountable for something that doesn't get talked about?
    No wonder people just do the wrong thing all the time, safe in their little worlds. Why bother insulating your house when you could have a holiday. Buy a massive SUV or truck instead of a compact. Ask politicians how they are going to look after future generations and not just this one. I don't know, but I reckon your first idea was a solid one. Get people talking. Maybe in a different way.

  • @nnjjee1
    @nnjjee1 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Clever but ultimately meaningless turns of phrases. No, deniers aren’t “right” they’re wrong and doing far less than others

  • @scottsutoob
    @scottsutoob หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    He says what I have been saying for a long time. Those who deny the science of climate change are no worse for our future than those who understand it, yet do nothing different. The problem really comes down to is there actually a viable solution? At this point I personally don't think there is.

    • @TimMountjoy-zy2fd
      @TimMountjoy-zy2fd หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Well you can be defeatist and DO NOTHING or we can be optimists and believe we can fix this. Currently the optimists are running the show and we are doing two things world wide and we won't stop until they are completed (80%+). We are building renewable grids and backing them up with hydro, pumped hydro, Gas Peakers and Batteries. The other thing we are doing is we are electrifying transport. That's probably about 50-60% of our emissions. Now there is nothing we have seen in this technology which looks like it will not work.
      So lets gets these done and see what we can do about Steel and Cement production while doing something positive in the meantime.
      PS EV's are in their infancy. Like everything electronic they will gat faster charging, longer range, more features, more function and most of all CHEAPER than ICE's.
      PPS An off the wall prediction cos China is seen as a major problem. History will be about how China saved the world by mass manufacturing the solutions and delivering them so cost effectively that we transition while cutting costs. Lets see on this one .....

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Greens can start demanding an expansion of nuclear power to replace natgas and coal? (Cue the meme about a based guy being thrown out the window of a board room.)

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TimMountjoy-zy2fd around 56% of global coal consumption is in China, and it keeps using more and increasing its share. So yeah, let's see.

    • @scottsutoob
      @scottsutoob หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TimMountjoy-zy2fd Being optimistic is nice. But sometimes it runs right into the brick wall of reality. If you think the optimists are running the show you must be living in a very insulated bubble. Politicians keep having their show meetings and setting pretend goals and we all quickly go back to business as usual.
      We realists have looked at the problems and have seen so many pitfalls it makes us pessimists.
      The first is people will not change. Sure there are a few people out there buying EVs and being all “sustainable” and there might even be quite a few who give lip service, but again reality shows up. The majority not only keeps doing business as usual, but many are actually quite hostile to changing their ways. People freaked out when then tried to get rid of plastic straws at McDonald for goodness sake. BTW plastic straws have nothing to do with climate change. Change is not going to happen unless and until it is forced upon people.
      The second is the supposed solutions are “renewables” which are neither renewable nor sustainable. There simply are not enough mineral resources minable and refinable at the rate we need them to prevent the looming tipping points. Just to temper some of your unrealistic optimism Google the search string: is there enough copper for renewable energy. Here is the AI Overview result, “No, there is not enough copper to meet the needs of renewable energy, and the supply-demand gap is expected to grow.” You can do similar searches for cobalt, nickel, neodymium, etc. Lithium seems to have sufficient quantities but mining and refining at a rate needed for timely transition is problematic. Plus refining lithium consumes a huge amount of water; some half to two million gallons H2O per ton Li. Where is that going to come from in the drought prone warming world? Some of these resource and grid connection issues are already starting to cancel wind turbine projects, especially off shore. The transition to renewables is quite mathematically challenged as well. Take California as a good example. Right now California makes around 40% of its electricity with natural gas, and about 8% with nuclear. They want to shut these down, so bye bye to 50% of the state’s generating capacity. BTW nuclear is non-GHG emitting and is one of the safest electricity generating methods. On a per unit of energy created it creates the least amount of radioactive waste, but people are irrational. Meanwhile California wants to convert all cars to EVs. Currently they burn 40 million gallons of gasoline every day, an energy equivalent of 1,5 times the electrical energy currently generated. So they want to eliminate one half of their generating capacity while needing three times more electricity. Somehow the optimism fades.
      Third let’s play with the concept of “net zero” which will never be achieved, but we can be optimists can’t we? Right now the concentration of CO2 is around 430 ppm. This is the highest it has been since the Pliocene three million years ago, when the earth was about 5 °C warmer. Basically anyone who thinks we can stay below 2 °C is living in fantasy land. There is a warming lag time of 10 to 30 years. So if we got to net zero tomorrow, warming will continue for quite some time. The guestimated residence time of CO2 in the atmosphere is all over the place. It might be as short as 5 years, but some NASA publications put it at 300-1000 years. If that is the case we are really screwed.
      Have a nice day.

  • @dontlook571
    @dontlook571 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Oil companies even deny oil spills in front of their noses, we ask more then they can deliver, if you want to change, consume less

  • @TheSphat
    @TheSphat 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Strong Speech. I flew one time to and from vacation in 2006, and decided after that: "I do not need to fly, this is not natural and i miss out so much underneath me." I gave up my car in 2011 and it is fine. Being climate change denier is just being lazy.

  • @fernandoherranz4095
    @fernandoherranz4095 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Plant more trees, drive less and slower, eat less meat and pre-packaged foods, use less AI, walk more, talk to real people more, use less social media, turn your lights off when you don't use them, water your lawn less, buy less crap, and maybe it'll make a difference.

    • @kmoses582
      @kmoses582 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Everything but nuclear, nuclear scares me. Also you are allowed to use electronic devices to write your comment.

  • @ohnezuckerohnefett
    @ohnezuckerohnefett หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I feel this TED talk is much more about him and his artistry than about climate change.

  • @williamdillon7708
    @williamdillon7708 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I'm 58 years old and when I was born the CO2 was around 320 PPM. It's now about 426 and growing everyday. There is no denying that... Co2 acts as a blanket and traps more heat. The heat will get us first.

    • @TysonJensen
      @TysonJensen หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I wish that were true. What gets us first is food shortages since we've carefully bred our crops to be completely focused on calorie production and not on climate tolerance. We lived in a world of very gentle climate -- which is not what the planet normally does. By adding CO2 we will be pushing the planet back into its usual pattern which will crush our delicate not-very-natural crops. This is why it makes total sense for the rich to be "climate deniers" -- they'll be the last to starve and probably come out somewhat ok relative to the billions of dead poor people.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      No co2 doesn’t. The co2 in Mars is 940,000 ppm and the average temps are 84 degrees Fahrenheit. If co2 blanketed the atmosphere, why is Mars “not burning up?”

    • @prinssdgunofficial2400
      @prinssdgunofficial2400 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@dr_shrinker
      You mean a planet which is further out than ours? By a long shot aswell?
      Remember the inverse square law of light?
      Yeah and it is still 84° of whatever your units are (def not Kelvin)

    • @Neptunus9
      @Neptunus9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@dr_shrinkerBecause the atmosphere on Mars is extremely thin, only 1% of earths. That’s why it’s a cold place.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Neptunus9ah, so it’s the dense atmosphere and not the co2 that warms the atmosphere? Gotcha.

  • @KeithCooper-Albuquerque
    @KeithCooper-Albuquerque หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Excellent video, Mr. Finnigan!

  • @fray6258
    @fray6258 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It doesn't matter whether we have reached the "tipping point" in climate change. We will NEVER get to the tipping point of public opinion.

  • @martinutr
    @martinutr หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    His talk was interesting but it seemed like it ended without giving us ways to live like we believe/understand climate change. I personally am trying to lower my own and my family's carbon footprint. We bought a used electric car(2012 Nissan Leaf, with limited range) as our only vehicle, we travel by train instead plane and are eating more and more plant based meals. While each individual's contribution is small I think that it is important to try. That seems to be the message, but by saying that we all live like we are climate deniers is not true. Considering the time, money and effort it takes to try to make a difference, it is not fair to say that we are all living like climate deniers.

    • @RamonSmithMusic
      @RamonSmithMusic หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      But on a society scale? Are we preparing for mass movement of Earth's population? On water shortage?
      At certain levels: yes. We are closing boarders and companies secure rights to sell water. But that's in the shadows. And I don't think it's a good way to act/prepare.

    • @hallodidldu
      @hallodidldu หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think, he is right. Because, if we would really ‚believe‘, we’d search for the most safe places on earth where we would be able to withstand climate change effects as long as possible, buy ground there and build a bunker, start ‚prepping‘, buy weapons, teach our children how to kill and survive. There are a lot of fictional movies on such topics but I’m afraid, they are not too far from reality in future. To be honest, I do not prep like this because I somehow still do not realize it and therefore, yes he is right, I’m a climate denier.

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Incidentally I also own a Nissan Leaf, having had 24 kWh, 30 kWh and now a 40 kWh version. But I honestly don't think my consumption is important, so I don't struggle like you do. I almost live like a climate denier. I think top-down solutions are necessary, especially in expanding non-fossil energy production.

  • @Bushman9
    @Bushman9 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    “When you say you believe in something but act like you don’t, do you really believe it?”
    I believe in it but I don’t act any differently than I did 20 years ago.
    That’s because there is nothing I can do about it.
    Sorry to rain on your parade, but the fact is corporations and governments are the entities with the power to make changes.
    Quite frankly, I think it’s pretty well too late.
    Thank heavens I’m retired and live in Canada. We will be one of the last sustainable living environments when the end is near.
    I won’t live that long but I do worry about my adult children. They might see some real terrible consequences.

    • @cre8tvedge
      @cre8tvedge หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      You are both right and wrong. Corporations and governments can make change. Indeed they are making changes. Not massive or drastic but many corporations are engaging in actions to reduce their carbon footprints. I don't mean the popular purchasing of offsets popular in the 90s and 00s. I mean like Amazon rolling out the use of electric trucks for deliveries. Govts are doing similar things. South Pasadena Calif transitioned all of it's police vehicles to electric. Cathedral City Calif covered it's building and parking lot with a massive array of solar panels. Calif and nations all over the planet have created incentives and plans to transform personal transportation to zero emissions in midterm target dates.
      This points to the essential thing to address climate change - stop burning fossil fuels. It's something that all first world and much of second world do. Many individuals unlike yourself have and are stopping the use of fossil fuels. Coal is well on the way out. Solar and wind are more efficient and less costly than any fossil fuel including natural gas. That simple fact points to the end of FFs as inevitable. The means for corporations, govts and individual are now in place to affect the transition. Perhaps it's 100% out of your reach. I doubt it. Govts are helping private persons change.
      Your stance is self serving. Given what David said about not doing anything to change being indicative of not believing I say you don't believe. Pretty sad for those children you have. If everyone acts the way you do they will see terrible consequences left by you.

    • @Bushman9
      @Bushman9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@cre8tvedge You have no idea how insignificant these changes are.
      Canada exports 30 million tons of coal every year.
      Every year, globally speaking, we’ve burned more fossil fuels than the previous year. Every year! 2024 is not shaping up to break the trend.
      Maybe, had we started these green energy conversions in 1970 instead of 2020, it would’ve amounted to something today.
      Despite all your “feel good” stories, we haven’t even started to reverse our pollution levels.

    • @cre8tvedge
      @cre8tvedge หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Bushman9 Love how you just give up. Geeez. That's not true about every year. There was a drop during Covid. And now after Covid clean energy projects are growing at a rapid pace and EVs are increasing sales while ICE sales are declining. What you apparently really missed is that coal use has been declining for years now.

    • @marcelreijnen
      @marcelreijnen หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Bushman9 That is not true. We are past peak CO2 production. Even China has reached their peak. Late, and maybe too late, but change can go fast if the alternative is more expensive and less conveniënt.

    • @Bushman9
      @Bushman9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@marcelreijnen Well, one of us is wrong. If we burn more fossil fuels than the previous year, we cannot be past peak.
      I would think we are getting close to that point as more wind and solar come online each year.
      But there is still another problem. The arctic is warming faster than the rest of the planet. That methane being released from thawing permafrost is increasing every year. Methane produces something like 9 times more greenhouse gas effect than the same amount of CO2 from automobiles et al.
      Even if we peaked right now, the conversion rate (from fossil to renewable) is much too slow to even halt rising temperatures, let alone reverse them.
      I’d love to come back in a hundred years, just for a couple of hours, to see how mankind fared. lol.

  • @HarDiMonPetit
    @HarDiMonPetit หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    You got a point, undeniably, about hard vs soft deniers (I'm one of the latters). But the denier's arguments you cite : climate change is a made up excuse for 1° a huge program for "ecological" dictatorship 2° kill rural communities 3° wide open to immigration to replace natives are not only opinions, they are slogans. They are toxic memes carefully crafted by far right ideologs (french Renaud Camus for the "great replacement" for instance, but tracing back to Buchanan and even Proudhon. See Michel Feher's book "Producers and parasites")

    • @epincion
      @epincion หลายเดือนก่อน

      Your problem is that the Great Replacement theory reflects a reality in France in which due to a mix of past factors inward migration of a population of people with an alien outlook and belief system and who resolutely don’t integrate and assimilate, has occurred on a huge scale and is ongoing.

    • @HarDiMonPetit
      @HarDiMonPetit หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@epincion sorry this isn't only a french problem. US alt-right has imported those memes deliberately. They mixed with the endogenous racist memes.

    • @epincion
      @epincion หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@HarDiMonPetit I agree its not only a problem in France but it cannot be denied that the EU nation with by far the greatest Arab/North African population is France and they are mostly not assimilated but stick to their culture and community.

    • @HarDiMonPetit
      @HarDiMonPetit หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@epincion there are sharp integration problems in France and Islamists are well implanted in some towns, with their secessionist ideology. But this is by no means a ''great replacement''. It's a police and special servicesproblem. BTW where are YOU from ? What do YOU think of those 3 memes ?

    • @epincion
      @epincion หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@HarDiMonPetit personally I do not think that there is a plan for ‘replacement’ but what’s worrying is the sheer number of a people who physically live in France but who in reality inhabit a different world with them holding values diametrically opposed to those of France on many important things such as the status of women and the right to love who you like and the right to not have a faith. These communities within France are growing fast due to both natural growth from within and additions from without and increasingly they are demanding the laws of the state be changed to create fir them a real different world within France a world that is self governing by a religious leadership who are militant. You say it’s a police and social services problem and in doing so you typify the attitude of most of the French who shrug their shoulders and say ‘oh it’s them over there and not my problem’ and make zero effort to promote integration and reach them that the norms of what is the mindset of a medieval society are not acceptable in a modern western liberal democracy - thats is a stupid attitude as one day the others will be powerful enough to force changes on France.
      In the US we see the huge problems that have arisen because liberal-social-democrats did not make efforts to stop a separate fundamentalist Christian society (both Catholic and Protestant) to form - when I say separate it’s the reality - huge numbers of people the US today where born into and solely educated in a hyper- conservative world that taught them that everything else is ‘evil’ and ‘sin’ and they are now in the position of control of one of the two major parties in politics and as we see in the Project 2025 blueprint are now planning to remake America into a quasi theocracy and with the end of democracy and permanent rule by a minority.

  • @masalli
    @masalli หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The reason for people's behavior often comes from the people around them. Why should I limit flying when my neighbors and friends don't? Why would I deny myself steak when others eat steak too? Why do I ride a bike or a bus when my friends and neighbors drive their own cars?
    I'm a vegetarian myself. I don't bring it up in everyday situations. If I eat vegetarian food for lunch, I often hear from my coworkers how "real men" eat meat. Not rabbit food.

    • @owlhouse000
      @owlhouse000 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      We're all easily influenced by those around us. Personally, I couldn't live with myself if I didn't try to live ethically by limiting flying, not eating beef or pork, and using a bicycle, and I hope that will influence people around me. It's not a sacrifice because it makes me feel better and does have real health impacts - whether or not people know I'm doing it. Also, "real men" don't need to be dependent on meat.

    • @jesan733
      @jesan733 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The rich world (OECD) in total has 32% of energy-related CO2 emissions. OECD emissions has dropped approximately 1.4% annually over the last decade. Non-OECD has increased 1.9% annually.
      We can't fix it by a few people in rich countries going more hippie. We need to substitute the uses of coal, oil and natgas for other energy sources, globally. Most of all, we need more nuclear, preferably decades ago. But the greens refuse, potentially dooming the climate.

  • @roguea987
    @roguea987 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As I explored the data revolving around climate change, I too came to this realization. I think the issue isn't that people deny climate change; because, it doesn't align with their world view. They deny it because of the same reason, you want to buy a flat in your hometown.
    Most of us aren't capable of processing the grim reality that will be the catastrophic collapse of our way of life. Even if you understand that it is happening, it's easier to just accept it and keep living like you were. People never want to change what they are comfortable with.
    Its why we keep buying what were sold; because that is how it's been our whole lives. We don't want to lose that comfort even though we know, we don't need those things and that it's a means to take our wealth from us.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      I deny it because the data says co2 doesn’t warm the atmosphere

    • @roguea987
      @roguea987 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @dr_shrinker even if that were true, CO2 is only part of the issue. CH4 retains more heat than CO2 and we're aren't really sure how much of it we're leaking everyday. Thanks to zombie wells. Our transition to NG from coal to reduce CO2 is a double edged sword.
      At then end of the day, I believe as a result of the warmer climate and industrial waste. It's going to be access to usable clean fresh water that will be what does the species in. We're already seeing this crisis play our globally. Now you've got flooded coal mines in west Virginia leaching oil and other contaminates like lead, arsenic and heavy concentrations of iron, up through artesian wells into the creeks and rivers. Making them unsuitable for drinking and agriculture.
      So even in places that may have been suitable climate havens people won't be able to survive long with out diseases and cancers.
      The grim reality is that we're likely to have a large population die back from starvation. Likely in the next couple decades.

    • @dr_shrinker
      @dr_shrinker หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@roguea987that may be true. I wouldn’t dispute it because I don’t know enough about it. However, I’m only talking about co2 and the claim it causes warming.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Again, as with many climate activists, I can agree with their ultimate objective, but not with their methods.

    • @sonyphotoguy6601
      @sonyphotoguy6601 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But I can understand how desperate they are.

  • @melindaveganhiker
    @melindaveganhiker 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    "Going vegan is the single biggest way to reduce your environmental impact on the planet." - University of Oxford & U.N.

    • @oakfat5178
      @oakfat5178 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I've heard that the biggest increase to greenhouse emissions a person can make is to have a child,

    • @NeilLavitt
      @NeilLavitt 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@oakfat5178if we follow that argument, medical breakthroughs and research is the harbinger of doom.

  • @Dead_pixelz_
    @Dead_pixelz_ หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    All you can do is prepare for what is to come. There’s no turning back.

    • @sachamm
      @sachamm หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yes, let's all throw up our hands and send thoughts and prayers but do nothing to fix our problems.

    • @Dead_pixelz_
      @Dead_pixelz_ หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@sachamm I’m not convinced we can “fix” climate change. I do believe it exists, i think our pollution is a contributing factor. But nothing *is* going to change with capitalism as the dominant force on earth. We should make efforts to adapt, but that’s not even happening. So it’s on each person to adapt and plan for the chaos. This Ted talk was very grim, but I am hopeful that, some, people can do what they need to do to live.

    • @robertmarmaduke186
      @robertmarmaduke186 หลายเดือนก่อน

      _'Today is the best day of the rest of your life'_ has never been more true with a Harris-Walz plutocracy sweeping to power. They control the economy, whether you can collect your rainwater or use your renewable energy wood stove, they've even banned the rubber in your vehicle tires and condemned your children to top-down CCSS indoctrination. Despite SCOTUS ruling Chevron Accords Administrative State is unConstitutional, Plutocrats control the Media and Rate of Inflation.

    • @robertmarmaduke186
      @robertmarmaduke186 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Dead_pixelz_ I will gladly trade you two turnips tomorrow for a hamburger today,...or should we use capitalism?

    • @freeheeler09
      @freeheeler09 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We can’t prepare for the food and water shortages that are coming, or the rising seas and heatwaves. Miami can’t prepare for being completely underwater.

  • @dylannguyen1953
    @dylannguyen1953 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This hit a little close to home as I enjoy my brunch while on vacation...

  • @gritsjackson
    @gritsjackson หลายเดือนก่อน

    Beautiful realization.
    We can only control ourselves. We can not be worried about the inaction of others if we ourselves are not truly taking action.