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World to hit temperature tipping point 10 years faster than forecast
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2022-09-18 at 2:36 PM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ No autopsies done, no proper testing done, but they know for a fact it was Covid. They're like magicians or mind readers.
if someone crashes a car while coughing because of covid, its still covids fault u idiot. covid kills a lot of people in ways that aren't immediately apparent like "oooo how are u gonna say this guy who got shot to death by police died of covid" are you retarded he was experiencing brain fog and was trying to seek help but he was just confused and the cops executed him in cold blood basically for having covid in the first place. this -
2022-09-18 at 2:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by Meikai if someone crashes a car while coughing because of covid, its still covids fault u idiot. covid kills a lot of people in ways that aren't immediately apparent like "oooo how are u gonna say this guy who got shot to death by police died of covid" are you retarded he was experiencing brain fog and was trying to seek help but he was just confused and the cops executed him in cold blood basically for having covid in the first place. this
Listen to her she knows her crystal. -
2022-09-18 at 2:53 PM UTCCriticism intensifies after big oil admits ‘gaslighting’ public over green aims
Criticism in the US of the oil industry’s obfuscation over the climate crisis is intensifying after internal documents showed companies attempted to distance themselves from agreed climate goals, admitted “gaslighting” the public over purported efforts to go green, and even wished critical activists be infested by bedbugs.
The communications were unveiled as part of a congressional hearing held in Washington DC, where an investigation into the role of fossil fuels in driving the climate crisis produced documents obtained from the oil giants ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell and BP.
“First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they wish bedbugs on you, then you win,” said Varshini Prakash, executive director of Sunrise. The organization accused Shell of a “legacy of violence and of ignoring the wellbeing of communities across the globe”. -
2022-09-18 at 3:24 PM UTC
Originally posted by Obbe Oil Companies Claim They’re Going Green — But Their Investments Show Otherwise
Originally posted by Speedy Parker
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2022-09-18 at 3:26 PM UTCSunny and beautiful here today in Tybee Island. Thank you, weather.
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2022-09-18 at 3:27 PM UTCActually it's sort of partly cloudy but it's about 80 degrees and basically perfect conditions for le beach. The clouds look kewl too.
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2022-09-18 at 3:29 PM UTC
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2022-09-18 at 3:33 PM UTC
Originally posted by mmQ Sunny and beautiful here today in Tybee Island. Thank you, weather.
Tybee is a cool spot. I dared a teacher in Tampa for awhile who's sister lived there. We used to spend long weekends there in the summer.
Savanah is also a cool spot. I'm not one for cities but if I had to live in or near one Savanah would probably be my choice. The squares downtown are an awesome bit of American history. -
2022-09-18 at 3:40 PM UTC
Originally posted by Speedy Parker Tybee is a cool spot. I dared a teacher in Tampa for awhile who's sister lived there. We used to spend long weekends there in the summer.
Savanah is also a cool spot. I'm not one for cities but if I had to live in or near one Savanah would probably be my choice. The squares downtown are an awesome bit of American history.
Yeah it's a neat little NOOK of sorts. I'm not actually there but my friend is. I guess she said there's lot of dolphins just casually swimming around right near the shore.
Did you ever at THE BREAKFAST CLUB? does that ring a bell? Or THE CRAB SHACK? -
2022-09-18 at 3:41 PM UTC
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2022-09-18 at 3:51 PM UTC
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2022-09-18 at 3:57 PM UTCIt's Time to Call It What It Is—A Capitalism-Induced Ecological Crisis
One-third of Pakistan is under water. Record heat waves blanket the globe driving up temperatures beyond what humans can survive. Polar glaciers are melting much faster than scientists predicted. Droughts, fires and floods are ravaging the planet, forcing the displacement of tens of millions of people. And this is just the beginning.
We're in this terrible predicament because of an extractive economy that requires constant environmental destruction in order to fuel economic growth.
It's time to tell the truth. We can't afford to wait any longer. We can't afford to pretend that the same political-economic system that has caused the most historic levels of ecological destruction in human history is the same system that is going to fix it. Here, in the United States— the country most responsible for the highest levels of carbon emissions in Earth's atmosphere— we have a very difficult task in front of us. We have to tell the truth about the Earth's thresholds, about the laws of physics, and about what's causing our ecosystems to collapse, if we are to have any chance of a habitable future for ourselves, our children and grandchildren. We have to tell the truth, if we have any hope of human civilization at all.
But in telling this truth, we are faced with a terrible political reality that few are willing to admit. Many of us understand the science. We know that Earth's ability to host humans depends on a very delicate balance of physical and ecological conditions that have only been present for a short time during the Earth's lifespan. The Earth has been around for billions of years, but modern humans, as we know them, have only been here for some 200,000. Humanity is just a blip in our planet's lifetime. The ecosystems that support human life are now in free-fall in terms of planetary time. We're in the middle of the Sixth Mass Extinction, but this time, it's because of human activity, fossil fuel extraction, and the unsustainable abuse of land, air and water. We're in this terrible predicament because of an extractive economy that requires constant environmental destruction in order to fuel economic growth. -
2022-09-18 at 3:58 PM UTCThe author of this post has returned to nothingness
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2022-09-18 at 4:09 PM UTC
Originally posted by mmQ Yeah it's a neat little NOOK of sorts. I'm not actually there but my friend is. I guess she said there's lot of dolphins just casually swimming around right near the shore.
Did you ever at THE BREAKFAST CLUB? does that ring a bell? Or THE CRAB SHACK?
The only business I recall by name is The Pirate House. It opened in like 1750 something. There is still a pit in the middle of the dining area that used to connect to a tunnel which lead to the river docks. Guys would go to the inn, get drunk, get knocked over the head, tossed into the pit, where others were waiting to carry them to their new life as a sailor. All the staff dresses as Pirates and stay in character. It's cheese but fun.
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2022-09-18 at 4:10 PM UTC
Originally posted by lockedin 'Never this severe': Alaska residents flee from flooding as powerful storm slams state
OMG weather! -
2022-09-18 at 4:18 PM UTCThe author of this post has returned to nothingness
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2022-09-18 at 4:19 PM UTC
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2022-09-18 at 4:22 PM UTCShe's going to Savannah today for a little bit. I told her about the Pirate's House. We'll see if she goes.
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2022-09-18 at 4:24 PM UTC
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2022-09-18 at 4:31 PM UTCThe author of this post has returned to nothingness