Author Topic: WE'RE STUFFED!!!  (Read 30894 times)

Online Michael

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2280 on: April 24, 2017, 06:24:59 PM »
Juhani's link is to a very detailed paper, which is quite interesting. I didn't know for example, that the Chinese have built hundreds of km of tunnels as a nuclear defence. Anyway, it appears NK's rockets can't yet reach the US or Aust, and they don't have nuclear weapons yet - both things that could change in short time. So if they are going to attack NK, this is the time - any later will be too late. But I certainly wouldn't want to be in Seoul, or Tokyo.

This will of course crash the stock market - good opportunity to pick up some bargains...  :(

erik

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2281 on: April 26, 2017, 01:42:54 AM »
One view of how the war with NK could look like: http://www.newsweek.com/2017/05/05/what-war-north-korea-looks-588861.html

I checked various Japanese and South Korean sources and these states are not mobilizing for war, at least currently. Japanese are preparing for a possible missile strike, but not for the full-scale war. Koreans seem to be even more optimistic.

US Pacific Command is more active than usual, but still way below the intensity characteristic of imminent war. Moreover, the US would be hard-pressed to march to a full-scale war without longer force build-up: http://dailysignal.com/2017/02/10/defense-leaders-agree-us-military-readiness-is-at-a-dangerous-low/

Online Michael

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2282 on: April 26, 2017, 09:13:28 PM »
hard to know - I have heard the supply of resources to NK from China is absolutely critical to NK, so a lever exists. The problem is, despite assurances and promises, they will keep doing what they want.

erik

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Hacking social media
« Reply #2283 on: May 24, 2017, 04:36:21 AM »
How to get stuffed through social media: http://time.com/4783932/inside-russia-social-media-war-america/?xid=tcoshare
Russians are at it on an industrial scale, already.

Online Michael

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2284 on: May 24, 2017, 09:03:07 PM »
Yes, curious situation.

Jahn

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2285 on: May 25, 2017, 06:07:22 AM »
Yes, curious situation.

This is a very interesting time, an era of mankind, that it is intriguing to follow. Where do the rabbit (Trump, Ixis) pop up next?


erik

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42 billion dollars
« Reply #2286 on: July 04, 2017, 05:09:58 PM »
There you are: The Great Barrier Reef is worth 42 billion dollars. Cool, eh?

https://www.forbes.com/sites/insideasia/2017/06/28/42b-great-barrier-reef-too-big-to-fail-whats-the-real-value-of-worlds-treasures/#1e19592c7bdf
According to a major study released on June 26 by Deloitte Access Economics for the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, the reef supports 64,000 jobs and makes an annual direct contribution to Australia’s economy of A$6.4 billion (US$4.8 billion), mainly through domestic and international tourism. Along with Uluru -- the monolith in central Australia also known as Ayers Rock -- and the Sydney Opera house, it is on the “must see” list for visitors.

They certainly add that financial measures are “inadequate … for something so important” and dub the reef “a treasure too big to fail”, but it's bollocks.
42 BILLION is the message.

Online Michael

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Re: 42 billion dollars
« Reply #2287 on: July 06, 2017, 10:44:59 PM »
Yeah - tell me all about it. Comes a time when you realise there is a great evil in the world.

There you are: The Great Barrier Reef is worth 42 billion dollars. Cool, eh?

https://www.forbes.com/sites/insideasia/2017/06/28/42b-great-barrier-reef-too-big-to-fail-whats-the-real-value-of-worlds-treasures/#1e19592c7bdf
According to a major study released on June 26 by Deloitte Access Economics for the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, the reef supports 64,000 jobs and makes an annual direct contribution to Australia’s economy of A$6.4 billion (US$4.8 billion), mainly through domestic and international tourism. Along with Uluru -- the monolith in central Australia also known as Ayers Rock -- and the Sydney Opera house, it is on the “must see” list for visitors.

They certainly add that financial measures are “inadequate … for something so important” and dub the reef “a treasure too big to fail”, but it's bollocks.
42 BILLION is the message.

erik

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Biological annihilation
« Reply #2288 on: July 12, 2017, 12:47:04 AM »
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/jul/10/earths-sixth-mass-extinction-event-already-underway-scientists-warn
A “biological annihilation” of wildlife in recent decades means a sixth mass extinction in Earth’s history is under way and is more severe than previously feared, according to research.

Scientists analysed both common and rare species and found billions of regional or local populations have been lost. They blame human overpopulation and overconsumption for the crisis and warn that it threatens the survival of human civilisation, with just a short window of time in which to act.

The study, published in the peer-reviewed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, eschews the normally sober tone of scientific papers and calls the massive loss of wildlife a “biological annihilation” that represents a “frightening assault on the foundations of human civilisation”.

Prof Gerardo Ceballos, at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, who led the work, said: “The situation has become so bad it would not be ethical not to use strong language.”

Previous studies have shown species are becoming extinct at a significantly faster rate than for millions of years before, but even so extinctions remain relatively rare giving the impression of a gradual loss of biodiversity. The new work instead takes a broader view, assessing many common species which are losing populations all over the world as their ranges shrink, but remain present elsewhere.

The scientists found that a third of the thousands of species losing populations are not currently considered endangered and that up to 50% of all individual animals have been lost in recent decades. Detailed data is available for land mammals, and almost half of these have lost 80% of their range in the last century. The scientists found billions of populations of mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians have been lost all over the planet, leading them to say a sixth mass extinction has already progressed further than was thought.

The scientists conclude: “The resulting biological annihilation obviously will have serious ecological, economic and social consequences. Humanity will eventually pay a very high price for the decimation of the only assemblage of life that we know of in the universe.”

They say, while action to halt the decline remains possible, the prospects do not look good: “All signs point to ever more powerful assaults on biodiversity in the next two decades, painting a dismal picture of the future of life, including human life.”

Wildlife is dying out due to habitat destruction, overhunting, toxic pollution, invasion by alien species and climate change. But the ultimate cause of all of these factors is “human overpopulation and continued population growth, and overconsumption, especially by the rich”, say the scientists, who include Prof Paul Ehrlich, at Stanford University in the US, whose 1968 book The Population Bomb is a seminal, if controversial, work.

“The serious warning in our paper needs to be heeded because civilisation depends utterly on the plants, animals, and microorganisms of Earth that supply it with essential ecosystem services ranging from crop pollination and protection to supplying food from the sea and maintaining a livable climate,” Ehrlich told the Guardian. Other ecosystem services include clean air and water.

“The time to act is very short,” he said. “It will, sadly, take a long time to humanely begin the population shrinkage required if civilisation is to long survive, but much could be done on the consumption front and with ‘band aids’ – wildlife reserves, diversity protection laws – in the meantime.” Ceballos said an international institution was needed to fund global wildlife conservation.

The research analysed data on 27,500 species of land vertebrates from the IUCN and found the ranges of a third have shrunk in recent decades. Many of these are common species and Ceballos gave an example from close to home: “We used to have swallows nesting every year in my home near Mexico city – but for the last 10 years there are none.”

The researchers also point to the “emblematic” case of the lion: “The lion was historically distributed over most of Africa, southern Europe, and the Middle East, all the way to northwestern India. [Now] the vast majority of lion populations are gone.”

Ke-ke wan

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2289 on: July 12, 2017, 11:44:35 AM »
Is anyone else overwhelmed by the negativity?  I know v tires to counter by posting positive uplifting stuff and I appreciate it.  What are we doing??

Online Michael

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2290 on: July 12, 2017, 09:31:30 PM »
There is a famous story about Buddhists somewhere in Asia, who believed it was best to avoid involvement or awareness of the troubles in the world around them. They were peacefully meditating in their ashram when bandits came by and slaughtered them all. Since that time, Buddhists of that region realised they had a harder task than they had previously seen. They had to open their eyes to the world, to walk within the world, even participate in the world actively, and yet remain as detached as their predecessors. Thus came about the practice of action without attachment, engagement without forgetting. Or what we would call Controlled Folly.

It is a very difficult practice, but not impossible. Yet it needs practice. The technique is to have achieved a deep level of presence, such that even though one is an activist for social change, feels powerfully the disasters unfolding around and strives to awaken others to the dangers cascading down upon humanity, one remains centred on a point beyond - this is what others subconsciously feel from such a person's presence. It is a way of reaching out to the dreamer of another, that there is a way through the maze.

erik

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The landscape of the Antarctic Peninsula changes
« Reply #2291 on: July 13, 2017, 02:24:16 AM »
https://www.sundaypost.com/fp/huge-iceberg-four-times-size-london-breaks-away-antarctic-ice-shelf/
RESEARCHERS who have been monitoring a huge crack in the Larsen C ice shelf, which had left a vast iceberg more than a quarter the size of Wales or four times the size of London “hanging by a thread”, say the rift has finally completed its path through the ice.

A 2,200 square mile (5,800 sq km) iceberg weighing more than a trillion tonnes has now calved, the team from the Swansea University-led Project Midas said. The final breakthrough happened between Monday and Wednesday and was detected in data from Nasa’s Aqua Modis satellite instrument.



The calving of the iceberg, which is likely to be named A68, reduces the size of the Larsen C ice shelf by around 12% and will change the landscape of the Antarctic Peninsula forever, the scientists said.

Professor Adrian Luckman, of Swansea University, lead investigator of Project Midas, said: “We have been anticipating this event for months, and have been surprised how long it took for the rift to break through the final few kilometres of ice. “We will continue to monitor both the impact of this calving event on the Larsen C ice shelf, and the fate of this huge iceberg.

Offline Nichi

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An interesting take on the 6th Extinction
« Reply #2292 on: July 13, 2017, 07:43:56 AM »
Quote
The sixth mass extinction may be followed by a mass genesis – the earth could host more species.
The planet has seen five 'mass extinctions' over the past half billion years, but each was followed by an explosion in biodiversity.



Animals and plants are seemingly disappearing faster than at any time since the dinosaurs died out, 66m years ago. The death knell tolls for life on Earth. Rhinos will soon be gone unless we defend them, Mexico’s final few Vaquita porpoises are drowning in fishing nets, and in America, Franklin trees survive only in parks and gardens.

Yet the survivors are taking advantage of new opportunities created by humans. Many are spreading into new parts of the world, adapting to new conditions, and even evolving into new species. In some respects, diversity is actually increasing in the human epoch, the Anthropocene. It is these biological gains that I contemplate in a new book, Inheritors of the Earth: How Nature is Thriving in and Age of Extinction, in which I argue that it is no longer credible for us to take a loss-only view of the world’s biodiversity.

The beneficiaries surround us all. Glancing out of my study window, I see poppies and camomile plants sprouting in the margins of the adjacent barley field. These plants are southern European “weeds” taking advantage of a new human-created habitat. When I visit London, I see pigeons nesting on human-built cliffs (their ancestors nested on sea cliffs) and I listen out for the cries of skyscraper-dwelling peregrine falcons which hunt them.

Climate change has brought tree bumblebees from continental Europe to my Yorkshire garden in recent years. They are joined by an influx of world travellers, moved by humans as ornamental garden plants, pets, crops, and livestock, or simply by accident, before they escaped into the wild. Neither the hares nor the rabbits in my field are “native” to Britain.

Parakeets from Asia have established themselves in cities across Britain. Image.

Many conservationists and “invasive species biologists” wring their hands at this cavalcade of “aliens”. But it is how the biological world works. Throughout the history of the Earth, species have survived by moving to new locations that permit them to flourish – today, escaped yellow-crested cockatoos are thriving in Hong Kong, while continuing to decline in their Indonesian homeland.

Nonetheless, the rate at which we are transporting species is unprecedented, converting previously separate continents and islands into one biological supercontinent. In effect, we are creating New Pangea, the greatest ecological pile-up in the Earth’s long history. A few of the imported species cause others to become extinct – rats have driven some predator-naïve island birds to extinction, for example. Ground-nesting, flightless pigeons and rails that did not recognise the danger were no match for a deadly combination of rodents and human hunters.

But despite being high-profile, these cases are fairly rare. In general, most of the newcomers fit in, with limited impacts on other species. The net result is that many more species are arriving than are dying out – in Britain alone, nearly 2,000 extra species have established populations in the past couple of thousand years.
Extinction and evolution

The processes of evolution also continue, as animals, plants and microbes adjust to the way humans are altering the world around them. Fish have evolved to breed when they are smaller and younger, increasing the chances that they will escape the fisherman’s nets, and butterflies have changed their diets to make used of human-altered habitats.

Entirely new species have even come into existence. The “apple fly” has evolved in North America, thanks to European colonials bringing fruit trees to the New World. And house sparrows mated with Mediterranean “Spanish” sparrows somewhere on an Italian farm. Their descendants represent a brand new species, the Italian sparrow. Life on Earth is no longer the same as it was before humans arrived on the scene.

Joseph Berger/Wikimedia Commons [ Licensed under CC BY 3.0]

There is no doubt that the rate at which species are dying out is very high, and we could well be in for a “Big Sixth” mass extinction. This represents a loss of biological diversity. Yet, we also know that the Big Five mass extinctions of the past half billion years ultimately led to increases in diversity. Could this happen again? It seems so, because the current rate at which new animals and plants (such as the apple fly, the Italian sparrow and Oxford ragwort) are coming into existence is unusually high – and it may be the highest ever. We are already on the verge of Genesis Number Six – a million or so years from now, the world could end up supporting more species, not fewer, as a consequence of the evolution of Homo sapiens.

The ongoing ecological and evolutionary success stories of the Anthropocene epoch require us to re-evaluate our relationship with the rest of nature. Change is ultimately the means by which species survive and turn into new species. So, perhaps we should not spend quite so much time bemoaning the losses that have already taken place, and trying to recreate some imagined past world. We cannot rewind history. It might be more effective for us to facilitate future biological gains even if, in so doing, we move further away from how the world used to be.

This does not let us off the hook – species are genuinely dying out – but it does mean that we should not regard change per se as negative. We should perhaps think of ourselves as inmates and moulders of a dynamic, changing world, rather than as despoilers of a formerly pristine land.

Chris D Thomas, Professor of Evolutionary Biology, University of York.

This article first appeared on The Conversation.
https://scroll.in/article/843305/the-sixth-mass-extinction-may-be-followed-by-a-mass-genesis-the-earth-could-host-more-species
Not here, not there, but everywhere - always right before your eyes.
~Hsin Hsin Ming

Online Michael

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Re: The landscape of the Antarctic Peninsula changes
« Reply #2293 on: July 13, 2017, 08:34:19 AM »
Interestingly enough, they are not saying this will make any difference to sea levels nor that it can be ascribed to global warming.

https://www.sundaypost.com/fp/huge-iceberg-four-times-size-london-breaks-away-antarctic-ice-shelf/
RESEARCHERS who have been monitoring a huge crack in the Larsen C ice shelf, which had left a vast iceberg more than a quarter the size of Wales or four times the size of London “hanging by a thread”, say the rift has finally completed its path through the ice.

A 2,200 square mile (5,800 sq km) iceberg weighing more than a trillion tonnes has now calved, the team from the Swansea University-led Project Midas said. The final breakthrough happened between Monday and Wednesday and was detected in data from Nasa’s Aqua Modis satellite instrument.



The calving of the iceberg, which is likely to be named A68, reduces the size of the Larsen C ice shelf by around 12% and will change the landscape of the Antarctic Peninsula forever, the scientists said.

Professor Adrian Luckman, of Swansea University, lead investigator of Project Midas, said: “We have been anticipating this event for months, and have been surprised how long it took for the rift to break through the final few kilometres of ice. “We will continue to monitor both the impact of this calving event on the Larsen C ice shelf, and the fate of this huge iceberg.

Online Michael

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Re: WE'RE STUFFED!!!
« Reply #2294 on: July 16, 2017, 07:45:23 AM »
I don't want to depress anyone, or cause anxiety, but in the interests of reality, perhaps you should read this article:
http://www.smh.com.au/good-weekend/charlie-veron-the-dire-environmental-prognosis-we-cannot-ignore-20170711-gx8tqr.html

 

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