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Brazil’s National Institute of Amazonian Research (INPA), Climate disruption, Coral Bleaching, Global warming, Great Barrier Reef, Great Barrier Reef Legacy, Melting Alaskan Glaciers, Sea level rise, The End of Ice by Dahr Jamail

The End of Ice: Bearing Witness and Finding Meaning in the Path of Climate Disruption is a work of investigative journalism by Dahr Jamail, conducted during the period April 2016 to July 2017 on the front lines of human-caused climate disruption. Having lived in Alaska for ten years (1996-2006), Jamail had witnessed the dramatic impact of global warming on the glaciers there.
Jamail’s original aim was to alert readers about “the urgency of our planetary crisis through firsthand accounts of what is happening to the glaciers, forest, wildlife, coral reefs, and oceans, alongside data provided by leading scientists who study them.” His reporting took him to climate disruption hot spots in Alaska, California, Florida, and Montana in the United States; Palau in the Western Pacific Ocean; Great Barrier Reef, Australia; and the Amazon Forest in Manaus, Brazil. His grief at what was happening to nature made him realize that “only by having this intimacy with the natural world can we fully understand how dramatically our actions are impacting it.”
Below are excerpts of assessments expressed to the author by scientists and other professionals working on the front lines.

Photo Credit: U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
The magnitude of change in Alaska is easy to miss because Alaska is such
a massive state, and largely undeveloped. That is why you’ve had no idea that
Alaska’s glaciers are losing an estimated 75 billion tons of ice every year.
~ Dr. Mike Loso, a physical scientist
with the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve, Alaska.
[The rate of melting of Montana’s glaciers]
is an explosion, a nuclear explosion of geologic change. This is unusual, it is
incredibly rapid and exceeds the ability for normal adaption. We’ve shoved it
into overdrive and taken our hands off the wheel.”
~ Dr. Dan
Farge, a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) research ecologist and director of the
Climate Change in Mountain Ecosystems Project, Montana.
This last summer [2015], the Gulf [of Alaska]
warmed up 15℃ [59℉] warmer than normal in some areas… And it is now, overall,
5℃ [41℉] above normal in both the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea, and has been
all winter long.
~ Bruce
Wright, a senior scientist with the Aleutian Pribilof Islands Association
(APIA) and former section chief for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) for eleven years.

Photo Credit: St. Paul Island Tour
We hardly eat seals anymore, or the birds,
and people now get food stamps and social handouts and welfare and shop at the
store. When I grew up, we didn’t need any of that because we always had seals
and birds and fish to eat. If the fur seals aren’t here, neither will we be.
~Jason
Bourdukofsky Sr., the president of TDX, Alaska’s native corporation on St. Paul
Island, Pribilof Islands, Bering Sea.

Photo Credit: Great Barrier Reef Legacy
The warming [of the oceans] we’re seeing now
is happening far too fast to allow for [coral] evolution…. So what we’re seeing
now is death. That’s what [coral] bleaching is…. Right now the largest
ecosystem on Earth is undergoing its death throes and no one is there to watch
it.
~ Dr. Dean
Miller, a marine scientist and director of science and media for Great Barrier
Reef Legacy, Australia.
Even if your home [in South Florida] may be
elevated, all the infrastructure and freshwater and sewage treatment and
getting rid of the sewage…all of this infrastructure is critically vulnerable
to sea level rise.
~ Dr. Ben
Kirtman, one of the leading sea level experts in the world and program director
for the Climate and Environmental Hazards program at the University of Miami’s
Center for Computational Science.
Sea level rise is going to accelerate faster
than the models, and it’s not going to stop. So the government [of the State of
Florida] has to have a plan that includes buyouts. It’s cheaper to buy this
area [Coral Gables] out than it is to maintain the infrastructure.
~ Dr.
Harold Wanless, professor and chair of the Department of Geological Science,
University of Miami, Coral Gables campus.

Photo Credit: Union of Concerned Scientists (UCSUSA)
You know what the burden is? It’s looking up
through the political hierarchy above me to the state legislature, to the
governor, U.S. Congress, U.S. Senate, the White House, and you ask, Who is
minding the shop? Who else knows what I know?… What kind of morality allows
them to ignore what is going to happen?
~ Dr.
Philip Stoddard, mayor of South Miami and a professor in the Department of
Biological Sciences, Florida International University.
We need to educate people about what is
really going on with climate disruption…. I made a personal decision to not
have kids, because I don’t have a future to offer them. I don’t think we are
going to win this battle. I think we are really done.
~ Dr. Rita
Mesquita, a biologist and researcher with Brazil’s National Institute of
Amazonian Research (INPA), Manaus, Amazonas.
The dire position we’re in now is solid
evidence of the fact that the predominant civilization does not have a handle
on all the interrelationships between humans and what we call the natural
world. If it did, we wouldn’t be facing this dire situation.
~ Stan
Rushworth, elder of Cherokee descent who has taught Native American literature
and critical thinking classes focused on Indigenous perspectives.
Jamail concludes that we are already facing mass extinction. We can’t remove the heat now stored in the oceans, yet we keep on pumping 40 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year. Our future is uncertain. Writing this book was his attempt to bear witness to what we have done to the Earth. “I am committed in my bones to being with the Earth,” he writes, “no matter what, to the end.”
DAHR JAMAIL

Dahr Jamail, a reporter for Truthout, is the author of Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq, The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan, and The Mass Destruction of Iraq: Disintegration of a Nation (co-authored with William Rivers Pitt). Over the past fifteen years, Jamail has also reported from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Turkey. An accomplished mountaineer who has worked as a volunteer rescue ranger on Denali, Alaska, he won the Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism and is a 2018 winner of the Izzy Award for excellence in independent journalism. Jamail is also the recipient of the James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism, the Joe A. Callaway Award for Civic Courage, and five Project Censored Awards.
It’s so hard to read this and not sink into despair. I am in awe of this man and these other scientists who continue trying to get the word out despite our global willful ignorance. I don’t think the planet will die however – we will do ourselves in first and then she can recover.
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Pauline, I feel the same way. While reading Jamail’s very personal reporting for the book, I cried several times at our self-destructive behavior as the most dominant species on the planet. I also believe that Mother Nature will recover, but humans may not be around.
Dr. Dan Farge, the USGS research ecologist in Montana, told Jamail that the Earth has a resilient system that has been through much worse than what we’ve caused. “So many of these things will recover,” Farge says, “but not in a time frame that includes humans.”
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Very disturbing. I now know more yet feel so helpless in SA. I do my bit, if only we could do more.
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Very disturbing, indeed, Kavitha. More of us have to become engaged and push for change.
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Yes Rosaliene.
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If the president of the world’s most advanced country says that climate change is a myth, then I’m sure he’s right and there is no need to worry.
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Dig your sarcasm!
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John, your sarcasm is not lost on me. In his position as leader of the most advanced and militarized country on Earth, our Dear Leader is causing great harm to national and global efforts to rein in carbon emissions. I plan to address this irresponsible and immoral behavior among the world’s powerful minority elite in another post.
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Quite. I dont want to be depressed about this but really its grim
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It is quite depressing, Geoff. But, as Jamail notes in his book, we can transform our depression and grief into a greater appreciation for and greater connection with our natural world.
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I went on a protest on Friday, about climate change concerns where 20,000 school children and a few crusties like me, trying not to look like a weirdy beardy, took over Parliament Square, following the lead of a Swedish young woman. It was very uplifting, not just on the subject of the planet but also to see youngsters getting political. Gave this old boy a warm glow to see youthful rebellion – ah those 1970s sit-ins: where did you go?
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Good for you, Geoff 🙂 The protests by our youngsters are, indeed, uplifting.
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Not here in SA, protestors are rude, disruptive and destructive. 😕
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Reblogged this on jpratt27 and commented:
Join #ExtinctionRebellion
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Thanks for the reblog, John, and for mentioning the Extinction Rebellion movement.
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Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
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Thanks for sharing, Cyril. Have a great week 🙂
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Wow! 75 billion tons of ice a year. That’s staggering.
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Ken, in his book, Jamail provides details of major events occurring in Alaska’s glaciers that never makes the news in mainstream media. For example, during Jamail’s reporting with Dr. Mike Loso, a physical scientist in Alaska, we learn that in 2016, a 4000-foot previously frozen mountain slope in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve collapsed, unleashing a flood of rock and mud over nearly nine square miles of glacier. So massive was the release, it was equivalent to a magnitude 5.2 earthquake. If this had happened in California, it would’ve made front-page news.
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Profound and disturbing. I’m most enlightened by the connection made here by the estrangement of people from their natural environment. I don’t doubt that some part is played by urbanization: what we don’t see isn’t there. We blinder ourselves.
As an analogue, it has been written that a different catastrophe, the Holocaust, is unimaginable without the distance its architects had from the actual act of carrying of it out. Similarly, the distance of the chemical manufacturers, the providers of materials to build the concentration camps, and those who were scheduling the trains to take the future victims to their doom were all physically distant from the monstrous events. For nearer term examples, one can remember Dow Chemical as the producer of Agent Orange and its use in Vietnam.
Dehumanization is easier with distance. Apparently, so is destruction of the physical world.
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I agree with you, Dr. Stein, “what we don’t see isn’t there.”
Dr. Rita Mesquita, the biologist and researcher working with Brazil’s INPA in the Amazon Forest, made a disturbing observation during her meeting with Jamail.
“Even here in Manaus, kids don’t understand that they live in the Amazon,” Mesquita tells Jamail. “So there is no connection at all, with anything, and that is the problem.”
What have we done to ourselves in the name of progress, I ask myself?
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Thanks for sharing, GuyFrog 🙂
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Hard work of these wonderful people are going to waste with these careless governments. Great post sweetheart ❤️
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Thanks, Laleh 🙂 Dr. Rita Mesquita, a biologist and researcher with Brazil’s INPA in Amazonas, told Jamail, “I lose sleep over wondering if I’m wasting my life. Am I wasting my life? Is this a lost cause? I keep doing it because it’s the only thing I know to do.”
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Understandable 😔😔😔❤️
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Reblogged and commented: In an insane world, the sane are considered mad. The madness expressed by US endless resource wars; expressed in Christchurch a few days ago; expressed by children having to mass-protest against the destruction for profit of a world because adults won’t do it and their representatives are by and large bought-an-paid-for by the destroyers; expressed on the streets with noise and homelessness is IMO symptomatic of a subconscious awareness that as a species we have exceeded the limits to growth and have doomed ourselves, as the following seems to indicate. How much is man made? How much a result of natural causes? Matters not. What matters is what we could do to reverse the man-made disaster. Will we?
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Sha’Tara, based on Jamail’s reporting from the front lines of human-caused climate disruption, we have gone beyond the limits of reversing the changes already in motion. We can only slow it down, gain some time, in order to prepare for devastation or possible ecological collapse ahead.
Dr. Harold Wanless, professor and chair of the Department of Geological Science at the University of Miami, best puts this into perspective. In preparing the people of Florida for the crisis ahead, Wanless believes people need to be warned of the risk of buying new homes, in that they might not be able to sell them in the not-too-distant future. He also recommends moving quickly to put things too valuable to lose or be disrupted at elevations above 150 feet. These include global institutions like national and legal archives, museums, mints, military bases, seed banks, computer data centers, national health/disease control centers, water storage facilities, garbage disposal facilities, and energy systems.
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gratitude for your bearing witness, Rosaliene!
have we stopped driving, eating meat, putting carbon into the atmosphere?
reversing the process of global warming seems very unlikely, imho.
still, we can offer each other
compassion, support & comfort 🙂
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David, we will indeed need much compassion, support, and comfort as more and more people become climate change refugees. Our current record of dealing with refugees is one of growing violence, here in the USA and across Europe. New Zealand has now joined the list.
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Goodbye, humanity. Let’s just hope we don’t kill off all life on earth as we take our leave. As long as there is life, there is hope for the future. If we kill off all life with us, there is no more hope, and that is more than sad–it is disastrous.
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It is disastrous, indeed, Rawgod. We humans have a tendency to deal with crises only when they reach critical levels. This will not work with the existential threat we now face which requires preemptive action and radical adaptation.
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Some of us will try. I live in a northern bastion of civilization,. A lot of people here are used to living off the land. They will try to survive their way. Some of them might make it. I’m an old man, already, I won’t succeed. But if I have the chance, I will tell them how humanity went wrong, and recommend that they tell the legends of what to watch for. This was all so unnecessary, yet nature had to rid the world of us somehow. We would not listen, even when the wise folk saw the end coming. We were arrogant, and prideful, and blinded ourselves on purpose. We let our inventions ruin the world, while we fought amongst ourselves, and let power run ripshod. Nations, large communities, governments, even religions all turned out to be acts of criminality against life. The worst invention ever was money, it inspired our greed past the point of no return.
The above condemnation of humanity is just a small story of what we did wrong. I hope it inspires someone to tell the whole story, and somehow save it for any generations that might follow. If there was a mistake to be made, we made it. Life is about learning from mistakes. Whether the future is a new form of human, or an old form of cockroachery, our mistakes can help point the way to successful life. I hope our history is heeded. All life, not just human life, depends on it.
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I can feel this response deep within myself. Except for arrogant claims from various beliefs life doesn’t subjugate itself to any special species. When man thought himself superior to everything and created for himself gods to sustain this hubris he signed his death warrant.
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That is what I was saying, or trying to say. Life encompasses all species, plant and animal, so I am hoping something lives on past our era. Humanity does not deserve to continue on, not without some huge change in consciousness. That can really only happen with a huge decrease in human population. And if the cause is nature, then we only have ourselves to blame for ignoring the many signs nature has given us.
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Reblogged this on The Secular Jurist and commented:
We need to educate people about what is really going on with climate disruption…. I made a personal decision to not have kids, because I don’t have a future to offer them. I don’t think we are going to win this battle. I think we are really done.
~ Dr. Rita Mesquita, a biologist and researcher with Brazil’s National Institute of Amazonian Research (INPA), Manaus, Amazonas.
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Robert, thanks for sharing my post with your readers 🙂
Dr. Mesquita’s comments are both realistic and disturbing. Yet, she has not given up on humanity. She believes that she and her colleagues are not doing their jobs with the urgency needed. She tells Jamail: “We are not telling the general public what is really going on.”
Will governments allow our scientists to publicly report on the true scope of what is going on, I ask myself?
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You’re welcome. I see Dr. Mesquita’s comment as not giving up on humanity, but as a very real and compassionate concern for children. If one acknowledges the dire consequences of climate change, then one must also consider the quality of life their offspring would have.
The problem of informing the general public about climate change goes beyond the resistance some governments employ (e.g. the Trump administration). Climatologists need to keep in mind that most people are not scientifically literate, and that they need to communicate with the public in more basic ways. That’s why I’ve tried this approach on my blog (e.g. detailing the basic science behind extreme cold weather in wintertime). Education is the key.
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I couldn’t agree more, Robert. This is what I especially liked about Jamail’s approach. He takes the reader face to face with the actual experience on being on a mountain glacier, underwater on a coral reef, or within the forest, using language that’s accessible to non-academic/scientific readers.
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Reblogged this on Frank Parker's author site and commented:
Sobering reading. And when you are done, check out my latest article at Medium: https://medium.com/@frankparker/climate-change-migration-and-inequality-are-not-problems-they-are-symptoms-bbe2d50eb7d5
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Sha’Tara, thanks for sharing my post with your readers 🙂
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Reblogged this on Declaration Of Opinion.
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Thanks for sharing this, Rosaliene. Climate-disruption deniers remind me of that old joke:
An optimist falls off a 10-story building. As he passes the sixth story, someone yells from the window, “How’s it going?” The man yells back, “So far, so good!”
So close, so bad!
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An excellent comparison, Bill.
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Well, in the end it all comes down to money and ideologies and there is a element of world’s society that are so closed minded and self-centered they refuse to accept anything that may be in conflict with their mindset… they will stop at nothing to put people in power who will fuel that mindset and tell them what they wish to here, true or otherwise… only when it directly affects them will they see the light… 🙂
“The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom”. Isaac Asimov
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Very true, Dutch. The problem is it will be too late for evasive action when a fire, flood, or mudslide engulfs our home.
Isaac Asimov sums up well humanity’s dilemma. We have the misguided idea that our technology will save us from our self-destructive behavior.
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This is beyond frightening. It does give me comfort to think of the earth recovering, even if we are not here.
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We have not been good stewards, JoAnna. Instead, we have become a plague that threatens Earth’s entire web of life.
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Yes. It’s shameful.
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Sobering statistics and keen observations from people who work and live in some of the most affected areas of the planet…so far. I appreciate the term ‘climate disruption’ and think it’s a more accurate description of humankind’s contribution to climate change and global warming. Thanks for sharing this Rosaliene!
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Glad you found my post informative, Henry. The author prefers the use of the term “anthropogenic (human-caused) climate disruption” because, without question, the human race is responsible for altering Earth’s climate systems.
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This morning I just read CNNs article on the melting of Mt.Everest. And the recovery of bodies of climbers from as far back as the 1970s.
Below is the most recent link.
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2019/03/21/asia/everest-glacier-dead-bodies-scli-intl/index.html
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Thanks for sharing the link, Myth*. Jamail didn’t mention finding dead bodies when climbing the Denali mountain glacier, but one of the mountaineering rangers in the team spoke of changes in the heights of their basecamps due to rapid ice melt. For example, their 7,800-foot camp is now 7,200 feet high. The same is true for their 9,700 and 11,200 camps.
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Oh it is all so heartbreaking Rosaliene! I live in Northern California.(Tahoe National Forest) and the Weather has changed drastically! Over a hundred inches of rain in 2017, after a 5 year draught. And record snow levels. Mother nature can’t keep up with the rapid changes. Landslides, etc.
Thank you for all that you have done to keep people informed.
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Though I believe I may well be preaching to the converted, Myth*, I keep on ringing the bell.
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There are times in our lives when we must do what we may feel is necessary. Keep ringing that Bell… Change takes time, just hopefully not too much later. Have a great weekend!
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A great weekend to you, too 🙂
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An amazing blog that you have! Very smart and informative!
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Thanks, Myth* 🙂
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Each of us can do our part. A little effort multiplied by billions could bring a hope to humanity. I have witnessed people polluting water without even a second thought. In Ireland, raw sewage is discharged straight into the rivers. Do you remember Johnny Biosphere? I attended his workshop in the 1980s. He was an extraordinary man, now almost forgotten. We can do a lot, but the climate change is inevitable anyway.
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I agree with you, Inese. Only as self-empowered individuals doing those ‘obvious’ things; making those ‘obvious’ changes can we make real and permanent change happen. The leadership, I don’t care what it leads, is no longer worthy of any trust. We must act, as individuals.
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Inese, I’ve never heard of Johnny Biosphere. In the 1980s, we didn’t have public TV in Guyana.
Yes, climate change is underway. We can’t stop the ice from melting. All we can do now is mitigate and manage the fallout.
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Reblogged this on From 1 Blogger 2 Another.
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Douglas, thanks for sharing my post with your readers 🙂
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It’s so difficult not be deeply saddened by this information. It’s painful to think that there are so many people who don’t even seem to care, at least not enough to do anything about it. I want to have hope in my heart that more people are becoming enlightened about our predicament, but I’m usually not feeling it.
Thank you trying to inform people. I wonder if the people that most need to think about their part in this even bother to read about this horrendous problem.
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Thanks for dropping by, Shift. The climate crisis is already upon us. But you would never know that with our business-as-usual attitude.
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Thank you for this blog, I think slowly we are starting to see the realisation of society that we need to address this problem now. However, I feel as if the governments are still lagging behind. I am from Australia and have just written an article calling for the increased support of the Australian government regarding the climate crisis. If you have time I would be really interested to hear your thoughts on the article, thanks 🙂
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Simeon, thanks for dropping back and sharing your concerns about our climate crisis. I’ve read and commented your article.
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