Pollin (whom we admire) is better than this...but probably needs more space to balance this out. 'What is GDP?' and 'how much zero carbon energy will we be able to make by 2050, and where will it be?' are the real questions for whatever 'growth' is. vox.com/energy-and-env…
I've recently had a strange pandemic reading experience, reading back-to-back novels by mid-century male writers John Fowles and JP Donleavy, born a month apart in 1926.
Their most famous books are both about 'cads,' one in a surreal narrative, and one in a comic narrative. But the casual misogyny in both books stands out. The books couldn't be written today, not because that behavior is gone (it's around) but because that world doesn't exist.
And the world that produced those minds doesn't exist, anymore, either.
We needed to do this a f*ck of a lot faster on climate, but it will happen, and it's probably already happening. My guess is the minds that produced Facebook in 2004 will cease to be socially produced, replaced by equally capable but less isolated, solipsistic thinking.
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Gripping 6000 words on the fate of California from @lizweil. The more we normalize how rapid our transition is the better. As @steffen has been explaining for a long time. nytimes.com/2022/01/03/mag… Some extra thoughts...
@lizweil@steffen Because the legacy Mediterranean climate that indigenous people once safely managed is also disappearing, an equilibrium produced by better fire policy and careful rebuilding may not last for long. A parallel on the East Coast is coastlines.
In the meantime, the 'new norm' in high demand places is easily maladaptive...
NYC is unlikely to experience a dry heatwave.
When I want to bore myself to sleep in the middle of the day I like to open up a report sponsored by a couple of billionaires six years ago. riskybusiness.org/site/assets/up…