SURVIVING CLIMATE CHANGE - PART 1
Transcript
If we turned every car and industry output off today, it seems highly unlikely that we can prevent climate change, especially as large industrial complexes, like China and the beef industry, will continue to pollute our planet for another 50 years regardless. More importantly, there are a vast number of variables that directly cause climate change, all of which we have zero control over. Earth’s natural cycles (known as the Gaia Hypothesis), interglacial cycles of our Sun, natural generation of methane from Bovine species, potential repeat of catastrophic events (such as the Middle Eocene Climate Optimum), the vast reservoir of methane currently locked beneath the Arctic and Antarctic Sheets, major volcanic eruptions (such as Eyjafjallajökul in Iceland), the rumblings of the great Yellowstone Caldera, massive solar flares, and other events we haven’t planned for all lead to a high likelihood of significant climate change over the next 50 years. There is nothing we can do to prevent this from happening, no matter how many trillions we throw at the issue or how loudly our disingenuous woke society screams; intent, virtue signalling, trillion-dollar budgets and extreme efforts will never supersede the power of nature.
Very soon we, as a species, could look like King Cnut or certainly an anagram of his name. Forget the stupid mantra ‘Save our Planet’ as it is not the planet at risk; our planet can cope with extreme atmospheres as it has done in the past. Each extreme planetary cycle in the past has extinguished many species, so we know that Earth is more than capable of extinguishing the Human race without our help. Why save polar bears if we can’t even save ourselves? Did you know Polar Bears are the only animal that actively hunts Humans?
Regardless of climate change, we need to vacate our planet in the future with the help of Mr Musk but, in the meantime, we need to make life on Earth comfortable until we finally turn the lights out. The real issue is that climate change only affects the comfort of Humans. Our first step to prevent us all from becoming Canute’s is to change the global mindset from ‘stopping climate change’ to learning to ‘live with climate change’. In industry, it is called ‘Business Continuity Planning’ or ‘Disaster Recovery Planning’ – a process that plans for the worst-case scenario. Whatever happens in the future, we should have a contingency plan for the impacts of climate change. It is both criminally insane and grossly negligent to not have a climate change contingency plan for a species as intelligent as Humans. The beauty of this sensible approach is that, if there is no climate change, we’ve lost nothing because we have prepared for it. But if we don’t adopt this approach and we fail to stop climate change, then all is lost. This approach should support the climate change advocates and the climate change deniers… it may even shut Greta up! It’s like taking insurance in blackjack – win while you can, rather than gamble because in our case, the stakes are too high to gamble or lose the game.
So, if you really think money or sheer will power can stop ALL of the following: (wording in video, not in script) then carry on with your delusion and attempt to stop climate change from happening. Otherwise, let’s learn to cope with climate change. We have been past the point of return for many years now and it’s time to realise this now before it is too late.
Now, I’m going to give you a solid plan on how to survive climate change.
Step 1: Create an international working group, similar to G20 or COP26, that will manage and fund a global project to protect Humans from the effects of climate change. For purposes of reference, let’s call this group SCC.
The Manifesto of the SCC is to support solutions for surviving climate change and NOT to fight or attempt to stop climate change from occurring. SCC will create a 20-year project plan on surviving climate change; this plan will be dynamic and will change as we gradually understand more through analysis and research. Every year, a budget will be drafted for each year of the Project Plan. The annual budget will be divided pro-rata between the member states based on their GDP. This SCC will be non-political and will not include any politicians or pioneers or magnates of industry. Each member state shall provide their best academic minds to be on the SCC. The goal is to assemble the best scientific, independent minds on the planet, totally independent from government influence, corporate lobbying and any other affiliation that can affect their decision making; they are working for mankind and no-one else.
Step 2: The complete melting of the ice caps is likely in the next 50 to 100 years, therefore we need to start planning for this now. In our ancient past, the Antarctic wasn’t covered in ice and consisted of very fertile land, measuring over 14 thousand square kilometres, which is half the size of Africa. In 100 years from now, we could reclaim this continent and significantly increase the Earth’s resources and habitable land for the growth and betterment of the human race. We have ample time to create an independent, multi-national and multi-cultural continent, however this process needs to commence now. This land should be divided into areas for each major state in the SCC. This would create around 20 states, similar to the USA model, with each state being controlled and managed by its home country. The SCC will plan an orderly population of the new Antarctica, ensuring proper division of land (to be owned by home state and not a legal entity), building of common infrastructure and fair distribution of resources and territory.
Step 3: There are large reservoirs of valuable methane gas underneath the Antarctic. The SCC will identify how these large reservoirs of methane can be extracted as the continent cannot be populated until this is done. Furthermore, said resources could be sold to global economies in aims of contributing to the budget of the SCC. Large ports should be built around the Antarctic where pipelines containing the extracted methane can be used to fill tanker ships to distribute the methane. These ports can later be used for the populating of the Antarctic.
Step 4: Each country on the planet needs to do a risk assessment regarding the impact of climate change to their country. They should run models assuming sea-level changes of 5 meters and 10 meters (or a height defined by the SCC). This will show where flooding would exist, both coastal and inland. Each country will then develop a risk profile for their country, which can be used to remediate issues and prepare for climate change. Said risk statement will identify flood plans and what businesses, properties, land and agriculture is at risk. The SCC will then devise common solutions to protect the common risks, so that one solution should support all countries, rather than many disparate solutions.
To see Step 5, check out the next video – ‘Surviving Climate Change – Part 2’!