Black People : While the media swamps us daily with news about Trump this is occurring around the world!

It can not be imagined what or where the world is going to be in a very short time as the last time the earth saw this amount of co2 humans did not exist. We're talking millions of years ago. So who knows? It's anyones guess.
Consider this (and note the post date)
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/the-last-time-co2-was-this-high-humans-didnt-exist-15938

Today the co2 levels measure average well above 400ppm and projected to be at an average of 413ppm very soon (talking a few years/ 3 or 4)
The hardest thing to wrap ones mind around is that the spike is happening so fast, nano seconds in geological time, that nothing of this life as we know it can adapt quickly enough. Within geological time record these kinds of 'instant' events come with mass/ive extinctions.
 
It can not be imagined what or where the world is going to be in a very short time as the last time the earth saw this amount of co2 humans did not exist. We're talking millions of years ago. So who knows? It's anyones guess.
Consider this (and note the post date)
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/the-last-time-co2-was-this-high-humans-didnt-exist-15938

Today the co2 levels measure average well above 400ppm and projected to be at an average of 413ppm very soon (talking a few years/ 3 or 4)
The hardest thing to wrap ones mind around is that the spike is happening so fast, nano seconds in geological time, that nothing of this life as we know it can adapt quickly enough. Within geological time record these kinds of 'instant' events come with mass/ive extinctions.
When I read this, it makes me think a lot differently about hot summer days. Most people look forward to them with excitement. Mowing lawns, picnics, family reunions, grilling, swimming and drinking cold glasses of lemonade or iced tea, oh, and beer...running around outside half naked. If you can afford to, people take vacations where the sun shines bright and the weather is warm. A lot of white people are sun worshipers forever trying to get that body tan. After reading this, I think we should be very concerned about what that heat and bright sun rays really means. Then I wonder what Trump is thinking as he tries to save coal jobs. Chasing that money...it will be the death of us all.
 
Unfortunately there is no good or even any mitigating news on this 'situation' of global warming (aah what a cozy sounding euphemism that is, no?) Global warming, doesn't it just roll smoothly off the tongue while conjuring up memories of toasty home fires while ferocious winds and cold beat at the front door?
https://www.counterpunch.org/2018/07/27/the-burning-planet/

Seems we may have set our toasty home on fire.
911 is just a busy signal so no fire department to count on.
And **** there's no fire escape out of any window and the emergency doors are blocked.
Wonder if this place is fire proof?
 
...
:facepalm:

More then a dozen large wildfires are burning in California and a heat wave continues to grip much of Europe, where temperatures are expected to reach 118 degrees Fahrenheit in parts of southern Spain by the end of the week...
0802_wildfire-1000x667.jpg

http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2018/08/02/summer-weather-climate-change
Climate Change Impacts 'No Longer Subtle,' Scientist Says
http://www.wbur.org/

gettyimages-1004430156-e1532471439263.jpg

Angelos Tzortzinis / AFP / Getty Images
UNNATURAL DISASTERS
The world is hot, on fire, and flooding. Climate change is here.
By Eric Holthaus on Jul 24, 2018
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The worst ravages of climate change are on display around the world.

Wildfires have ripped through towns in Greece, floods have submerged parts of Laos, and heat waves have overwhelmed Japan. These are striking examples of climate change playing out in its deadliest forms, and they’re making the term “natural disaster” an outdated concept.

People in Greece were jumping into the Aegean to escape advancing wildfires, according to a report in the New York Times. More than 70 are confirmed dead so far, and some scenes are horrific.

“Greece is going through an unspeakable tragedy,” said Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, in a televised address to declare three days of national mourning.

This is already Greece’s hottest year on record. Although the last few weeks have been mild and wet, it’s nearly certain that warm weather has played a role in drying out forests throughout Europe, where the number of fires this year is 43 percent above normal. Longer summers, more intense drought, and higher temperatures are all linked to greater fire risk.

We’ve known enough about meteorology to link extreme events to their increased likelihood as they are happening for years now. Recent advances in extreme weather attribution can often tell us exactly how much.

Ample evidence links worsening fires with human activity. Greece and much of the Mediterranean region is projected to turn into desert over the next several decades, and there are signs that this shift has already begun. As the region’s native trees die off and urban areas expand into neglected forests, firefighting resources are becoming woefully overmatched. Regardless of ignition source — arson or lightning or human carelessness — massive wildfires will become more common as droughts intensify and heat waves get more common. Extreme winds, like those blamed for fanning the flames this week in Greece and during megafires in Portugal last year, can make an already dire situation uncontrollable.

It’s the hottest month of one of the hottest years in the history of human civilization, and unusual wildfires are sprouting up all over the map. Sweden has called for emergency assistance from the rest of the European Union to help battle massive wildfires burning north of the Arctic Circle. Across the western United States, 50 major wildfires are burning in parts of 14 states, fueled by severe drought. The wildfires burning in Siberia earlier this month sent smoke plumes from across the Arctic all the way to New England, four thousand miles away. Last year, big wildfires burned in Greenland for the first time in recorded history.

And then there are the rains. In Laos, after days of downpours, a hydropower dam that was under construction collapsed on Tuesday. Hundreds of people have been reported missing. Higher global temperatures increase the evaporation rate, putting more water vapor in the atmosphere and making extreme downpours more common.

In recent weeks, high temperature records have been set on nearly every continent. On Monday, Japan had its hottest temperature in recorded history — 106 degrees Fahrenheit — just days after one of the worst flooding disasters the country has ever seen.

Algeria has recorded the highest reliably measured temperature in Africa, 124 degrees Fahrenheit. In late June, the temperature never dropped below 108 degrees Fahrenheit in Oman — the highest overnight low temperature anywhere in the world.

Even in normally temperate places the air has been sweltering: Temperatures approaching 100 degrees Fahrenheit hit parts of Canada, overwhelming hospitals in Montreal — where another heat wave is imminent this week.

According to calculations from climate scientist Gavin Schmidt, this year will likely be the world’s fourth warmest year on record globally, behind 2015, 2016, and 2017. With another El Niño on the way, next year could be even hotter.

All over the world, heatwaves are getting longer and more intense, the most well-documented and deadliest consequence of our failure to cut greenhouse gas emission.
 

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