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Greta and the aristocrat sail the high seas to save the planet.

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  • Registered Users Posts: 735 ✭✭✭Tuisceanch


    lola85 wrote: »
    Seriously who the **** was around 1 million years ago holding a thermometer in the air?

    Might have helped if you had read the posted link before replying. You obviously have no real interest in this subject because your reply is laughable.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,942 ✭✭✭topper75


    No thanks lola, I'll listen to the UN and NASA and the vast vast majority of scientists who tell us man is contributing greatly to global warming

    NASA - the shower launching all those rockets? There must be some CO2 involved there somewhere.

    Have either of them said that we can control the climate?
    Because if we can, we have nothing to fear.
    And if we can't - we may as well carry on regardless.


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,729 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    topper75 wrote: »
    NASA - the shower launching all those rockets? There must be some CO2 involved there somewhere.

    Have either of them said that we can control the climate?
    Because if we can, we have nothing to fear.
    And if we can't - we may as well carry on regardless.

    We can control our impact on the climate, that is not the same as suggesting that we are saying that we can control the climate, do you understand that?


  • Posts: 13,688 ✭✭✭✭ Jaziel Dead Stitch


    lola85 wrote: »
    All of us are contributing to climate change, it's impossible not to. I'm not lecturing to anyone.

    The climate has been changing since time began.

    Google ice ages, might help you understand how we have no control over it.

    I suggest you do slightly more robust research than a cursory Google search.

    You're evidently in a poor position to comment if you think such a topic can be understood with a quick browse on t'internet.


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,312 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    Do all you "everything is ok" people think we should carry on consuming and growing our economies the way we are at the expense of the planet? Do you not see how it cant end well?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 21,729 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    Do all you "everything is ok" people think we should carry on consuming and growing our economies the way we are at the expense of the planet? Do you not see how it cant end well?

    They're not 'everything is ok'. They're 'no one is going to tell me I need to change', 'especially not a female', 'and definitely not one who is a child'


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,610 ✭✭✭Pa ElGrande


    That's the difference between you and her. You think someone 'gave' her the spotlight. She made the world pay attention to what she was doing. Massive difference.

    Timing, they got lucky with Greta. That have been trying various kids since 2015 and none really stuck. Interesting timing she starts protesting when her mothers book is published. There was Ingmar Rentzhog who had the contacts with the Germans who had the publicity machine that they had been working on since 2015.


    Net Zero means we are paying for the destruction of our economy and society in pursuit of an unachievable and pointless policy.



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,430 ✭✭✭MrMusician18


    I think that most of us acknowledge that there is a problem, the issue is what is the solution?
    Carbon tax? Well at the levels proposed,it won't make a jot of difference, since the increase in fuel as a result would be within the perturbation of the market anyway. And when fuel rises due to external issues, like a war in the middle East, CO2 emissions are not depressed.
    Carbon tax would therefore need to rise to make carbon genuinely unaffordable for it to make a difference in terms of emissions, and the cost of this would certainly be lower economic growth.
    Others point to new technologies, but the truth is that these are not developed enough either to keep us in the lifestyle we've become accustomed to.

    So what are we campaigning for? A pointless increase in taxes that won't achieve anything? A reduction in living standards generally?


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,729 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    Timing, they got lucky with Greta. That have been trying various kids since 2015 and none really stuck. Interesting timing she starts protesting when her mothers book is published. There was Ingmar Rentzhog who had the contacts with the Germans who had the publicity machine that they had been working on since 2015.

    So we agree, Greta plays a significant level of responsibility for the success of the marches.


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,729 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    I think that most of us acknowledge that there is a problem, the issue is what is the solution?
    Carbon tax? Well at the levels proposed,it won't make a jot of difference, since the increase in fuel as a result would be within the perturbation of the market anyway. And when fuel rises due to external issues, like a war in the middle East, CO2 emissions are not depressed.
    Carbon tax would therefore need to rise to make carbon genuinely unaffordable for it to make a difference in terms of emissions, and the cost of this would certainly be lower economic growth.
    Others point to new technologies, but the truth is that these are not developed enough either to keep us in the lifestyle we've become accustomed to.

    So what are we campaigning for? A pointless increase in taxes that won't achieve anything? A reduction in living standards generally?

    So, you acknowledge that something needs to be done but immediately jump to anything which could be done is pointless.

    If you were in control for a week, if someone said to you, introduce some initiative, anything, which had a reasonable chance of positively influencing behaviour, what would it be that you would do?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 798 ✭✭✭Rockbeast2


    Just to let every one know, there are at least two paid shills/posters here.

    My sister is one of them. They can sue me. I can prove it.

    You know who I'm typing about.

    I'm not a multi-cult anymore.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,430 ✭✭✭MrMusician18


    So, you acknowledge that something needs to be done but immediately jump to anything which could be done is pointless.

    If you were in control for a week, if someone said to you, introduce some initiative, anything, which had a reasonable chance of positively influencing behaviour, what would it be that you would do?

    Of course I acknowledge that something needs to be done, I'm not a climate denier.

    What I'm questioning is the effectiveness of a carbon tax that's been touted as a solution. Diesel has gone up 5c at the forecourt over the last week, 5 times the likely increase in carbon tax at the budget, do you really think that will reduce emissions? Do you think carbon emissions in transport are 4% lower this week than last due to the price rise? Carbon is clearly not very price sensitive.
    Fuel prices have risen from 99c/l during the recession to 135c/l now and transport emissions have increased. All a carbon tax will achieve is make the poor, poorer. It's completely regressive.

    The other way to reduce emissions is to reduce people's standard of living - based on current technology. Protesters need to be honest about that, to both themselves and others.


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,729 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    Of course I acknowledge that something needs to be done, I'm not a climate denier.

    What I'm questioning is the effectiveness of a carbon tax that's been touted as a solution. Diesel has gone up 5c at the forecourt over the last week, 5 times the likely increase in carbon tax at the budget, do you really think that will reduce emissions? Do you think carbon emissions in transport are 4% lower this week than last due to the price rise? Carbon is clearly not very price sensitive.
    Fuel prices have risen from 99c/l during the recession to 135c/l now and transport emissions have increased. All a carbon tax will achieve is make the poor, poorer. It's completely regressive.

    The other way to reduce emissions is to reduce people's standard of living - based on current technology. Protesters need to be honest about that, to both themselves and others.

    Firstly, you're the one suggesting carbon tax here in this conversation, I'm not, but there is strong evidence that it takes a penalty to actually instigate change.

    Secondly, why does it have to reduce people's standard of living? If there were 50% less cars on the city centre roads with the people instead cycling or using public transport, is that a reduction in standard of living.

    Akso, let's think about the car situation. On average, repayments, tax, insurance, fuel, maintenance, tolls probably mean most people are forking out 100/week on theirs. After tax. That's say 8k a year from your gross, just for the car. If you're on 40k, that's 20% of your wage.

    Now, if you use your car one hour each morning and evening, 5 days a week and 3 hours each day sat and Sunday, that's 16 hrs/week (fairly heavy use for most I would say) or 10% of available time. So you're spending 20% of you're income on something which is idle 90% of the time. Does that seem right?

    Say 50% more urban dwellers were cycling instead if going by car, they'll generally be healthier, get their quicker and have more money for having done so. Is that a reduction in quality of life?

    Granted, in rural areas, you mostly do need a car but we should promote what we can, where we can.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,430 ✭✭✭MrMusician18


    Firstly, you're the one suggesting carbon tax here in this conversation, I'm not, but there is strong evidence that it takes a penalty to actually instigate change.

    Secondly, why does it have to reduce people's standard of living? If there were 50% less cars on the city centre roads with the people instead cycling or using public transport, is that a reduction in standard of living.

    Akso, let's think about the car situation. On average, repayments, tax, insurance, fuel, maintenance, tolls probably mean most people are forking out 100/week on theirs. After tax. That's say 8k a year from your gross, just for the car. If you're on 40k, that's 20% of your wage.

    Now, if you use your car one hour each morning and evening, 5 days a week and 3 hours each day sat and Sunday, that's 16 hrs/week (fairly heavy use for most I would say) or 10% of available time. So you're spending 20% of you're income on something which is idle 90% of the time. Does that seem right?

    Say 50% more urban dwellers were cycling instead if going by car, they'll generally be healthier, get their quicker and have more money for having done so. Is that a reduction in quality of life?

    Granted, in rural areas, you mostly do need a car but we should promote what we can, where we can.

    The protests are about getting government's to take action to halt climate change. In the Irish context, the government have signaled that carbon tax is going to be a key part of their climate policy. The protests are therefore about getting the government to implement the tax.

    Indeed let's think about the car situation. As I have already outlined, increases in the price of fuel have demonstrably little effect on both demand and emissions. The price of fuel has increased by at least 35% since it's ten year low and emissions have increased since then. Carbon is clearly not price sensitive in the range we are currently priced in. You rightly point out, driving is already expensive therefore people drive because they have to, not because they want to.

    The average car, iirc is driven some 20k km. Using the kind of efficiency I get myself a carbon tax increase of 5c/l would amount to just under €55/yr. That is simply not enough to change behaviour, but a nice little boost for the government all under the green cloak. The tax would quite frankly need to be 5 to 10x that to have the desired effect of effectively pricing people out of their cars. That would of course have consequences such as increased poverty and lower economic growth. Is this what you want? To price the poor out of their cars?

    Standard of living is about having access to services and having money to spend on the things you want and need. A tax that diverts your disposable income away from that lowers your standard of living.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,385 ✭✭✭Dave_The_Sheep


    lola85 wrote: »
    And that’s it?

    You won’t listen to any other opinions?

    This is your problem (assuming you're not being willfully ignorant and are arguing in good faith). The thing about climate change is that it's not about opinions. Everyone has an opinion, and they're entitled to that.

    Opinions, however, are not facts. Climate change doesn't give a **** about your opinion. Scientists deal in facts. The scientific consensus* is overwhelmingly (97-98%) in favoure of the fact that climate change is man-made.

    *Wikipedia link, itself not a reliable source - however, scroll to the bottom to see all the citations. Go through them.

    Climate change is scary. Terrifying. I get it. If you are genuinely arguing in good faith, that's OK. Get stuck in to the links above, try and accept that it's real and change accordingly.

    If you're not arguing in good faith, good luck in the upcoming ****storm on this planet, I won't be replying to you.


  • Registered Users Posts: 798 ✭✭✭Rockbeast2


    Ha Ha - Dave The Sheep might be D

    I know who A and B are. Who is C?

    Scientists deal in facts. The scientific consensus* is overwhelmingly (97-98%) in favoure of the fact that climate change is man-made.

    LOL

    Spoofer. That lie was sent to a shill I know very well to vomit as fact.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,244 ✭✭✭alan partridge aha


    Greta and your ilk, stop using phones, stop been brought to school, stop using planes, if not fu5k off and fu5k up.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,385 ✭✭✭Dave_The_Sheep


    Compelling.


  • Registered Users Posts: 23,770 ✭✭✭✭Kermit.de.frog


    topper75 wrote: »
    NASA - the shower launching all those rockets?

    So we need to give up our missions as a species in to space as well now?

    I'm all for cleaning up our act in as far as is practical but being stupid is not part of the solution.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,385 ✭✭✭Dave_The_Sheep


    Greta and your ilk, stop using phones, stop been brought to school, stop using planes, if not fu5k off and fu5k up.



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Compelling.

    your entire sell was "anyone of good faith has to agree to agree with me, anyone else i will ignore"

    you and the other lecturers are in zero position to tell anyone what a compelling argument is.

    anyone who disagrees with the approach of having an autistic teenager parrot chicken-licken panic headlines is a denier or a paedo or a misogynist or an idiot.

    that's fine folks. carry on with these lines or argument and keep wondering why you're in a minority and why you're getting kickback.

    anyone that actually wanted to effect change would exhibit a lot fewer symptoms of egoistic arrogance and a lot more sincere efforts to engage.

    most of the greta acolytes here wouldve been browbeating the proles about something else in 2009 and will be browbeating the proles about something else in 2029. there's always that percentage that needs to be on a soapbox wagging fingers at everyone else, god bless them.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,430 ✭✭✭MrMusician18


    So we need to give up our missions as a species in to space as well now?

    I'm all for cleaning up our act in as far as is practical but being stupid is not part of the solution.

    Anyone have any idea what the solutions are?
    The constraints are: not reduce standard of living
    Not rely on expensive technologies


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,430 ✭✭✭MrMusician18


    most of the greta acolytes here wouldve been browbeating the proles about something else in 2009 and will be browbeating the proles about something else in 2029. there's always that percentage that needs to be on a soapbox wagging fingers at everyone else, god bless them.

    The campaign feels quite similar to the drop the debt campaign of the early noughties.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,385 ✭✭✭Dave_The_Sheep


    your entire sell was "anyone of good faith has to agree to agree with me, anyone else i will ignore"

    ...

    most of the greta acolytes here wouldve been browbeating the proles about something else in 2009 and will be browbeating the proles about something else in 2029. there's always that percentage that needs to be on a soapbox wagging fingers at everyone else, god bless them.

    I didn't mention Ms. Thunberg once in my post. Nor was my post a one liner saying "anyone of good faith has to agree to agree with me, anyone else i will ignore". It contained more than that, but that would be obvious to anyone who wanted to take it on face value. So I'm not going to talk about Ms. Thunberg, because I didn't to begin with, regardless of the thread we're in.

    I will however, again mention my mention of facts. Just going to quote here, as it's easier:
    Opinions, however, are not facts. Climate change doesn't give a **** about your opinion. Scientists deal in facts. The scientific consensus* is overwhelmingly (97-98%) in favoure of the fact that climate change is man-made.

    As for good faith, I think the tone of your post seems to say a lot there. You won't accept facts for what they are, because you don't agree with them, nor will you mention them when people quote them as part of their post. And so we go back to the position of arguing in good faith.

    Onto the list you go.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,007 ✭✭✭s7ryf3925pivug


    2000_Year_Temperature_Comparison.png


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,312 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    Anyone have any idea what the solutions are?
    The constraints are: not reduce standard of living
    Not rely on expensive technologies

    The solution is lowering our standard of living. We cant continue as is, even if climate change is a hoax like you all say, the way we are living now means the earth will be depleted and polluted beyond repair sooner or later. Why is it so scary to every one that they may have to live with less choice of crap that we consume?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,349 ✭✭✭Jimmy Garlic


    The protests are about getting government's to take action to halt climate change. In the Irish context, the government have signaled that carbon tax is going to be a key part of their climate policy. The protests are therefore about getting the government to implement the tax.

    Indeed let's think about the car situation. As I have already outlined, increases in the price of fuel have demonstrably little effect on both demand and emissions. The price of fuel has increased by at least 35% since it's ten year low and emissions have increased since then. Carbon is clearly not price sensitive in the range we are currently priced in. You rightly point out, driving is already expensive therefore people drive because they have to, not because they want to.

    The average car, iirc is driven some 20k km. Using the kind of efficiency I get myself a carbon tax increase of 5c/l would amount to just under €55/yr. That is simply not enough to change behaviour, but a nice little boost for the government all under the green cloak. The tax would quite frankly need to be 5 to 10x that to have the desired effect of effectively pricing people out of their cars. That would of course have consequences such as increased poverty and lower economic growth. Is this what you want? To price the poor out of their cars?

    Standard of living is about having access to services and having money to spend on the things you want and need. A tax that diverts your disposable income away from that lowers your standard of living.

    And that's why it's the so called middle class (mostly urban) that are all for climate action (taxation and social engineering) . They have the buffer to remain in their comfort zone while they virtue signal, fill the vacuum left behind in their lives by religion, stroke their own egos and engage in faux intellectualism. What they don't realise is their buffer zone isn't all that big and won't protect them forever. Chickens inviting the Fox into the henhouse.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,602 ✭✭✭jackboy


    The solution is lowering our standard of living. We cant continue as is, even if climate change is a hoax like you all say, the way we are living now means the earth will be depleted and polluted beyond repair sooner or later. Why is it so scary to every one that they may have to live with less choice of crap that we consume?

    Whatever about us in the west reducing our standards of living who is going to tell the Chinese,Indians and Africans to stop increasing their standards of living and go backwards.

    It’s not realistic.


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,312 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    Vacuum left in our lives by religion lol. So what, all you rural folk are still devout Catholics?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 14,312 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    jackboy wrote: »
    Whatever about us in the west reducing our standards of living who is going to tell the Chinese,Indians and Africans to stop increasing their standards of living and go backwards.

    It’s not realistic.

    I dont think africa will be catching up with us any time soon. Anyway i see your point and nothing us going to change im just saying that the only way to clean our mess up is by changing the way we live and consume. We as a species would rather carry on as is until war and famine break out however.


This discussion has been closed.
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