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How much if any does potential reader blow back affect your posted stories?

Torsian ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

This is a serious question. How much does potential (probable, almost guaranteed, 100% reliable?) blow back from readers affect the final versions of stories you post here or elsewhere for free? I am not talking about stuff you may sell. We all stifle ourselves at times to put a roof over our head and food on the table, or just for some extra spending money. I see author blog entries here and there about particular exasperating feed back.

"He would never do that!" - Dude it's fiction

"That is physically impossible" - Dude it's science fiction

"They would never talk like that" - Dude it is 100 years in the future, how would you know?

You all do expose yourself to criticism on stuff you work hard on all the time. I can imagine it is pretty crushing to set up a major plot twist in a 100 chapter story to have readers not care or say, 'Dude I figured that one out in chapter 3'. I personally realize it is called fiction because it is impossible to have happened, wouldn't have been done that way, only might have happened like that, or is a bloody wrong-headed interpretation of events experts doubt ever happened. You are trying to entertain us the reader and have a little fun (I hope) or at least get some mental exercise doing it. So, in short does feedback help or hurt the final creativity we read?
(I do reserve the right to correct your direction if you put 2 cities in my home state set in the current times east-west of each other instead of north-south when the travel between the two is the important part of the story.)

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

Rarely. to be honest.

I have gotten used to how sometimes people "blow up" at my stories, and always tell them that they were likely reading it wrong, or needed to wait until it is finished.

I actually have been chuckling as many readers seem to be forming "Teams", for which girl the main character ends up with. But none of that has any kind of effect, the "final girl" has been set for well over 2 years now and that will not change who it is. But I do find it interesting, especially when they try to give their reasoning for that choice.

I wish sometimes I could create and "Endless Story" here, where different authors each take a chapter and continue it. Or a "Choose Your Own Adventure" style, where the reader could decide how it ends.

Replies:   bk69  Torsian
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Or a "Choose Your Own Adventure" style,

Someone did that back in '02 or so. Story about a kink-heavy town, where you could choose which pervert you wanted to follow to the next orgy and such. Was one of those "include every style of kink" stories.
Probably archived by now.

Torsian ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

I think it might be fun to have people care enough about a story to bet on the out come. It would be a little like professional wrestling.

Replies:   bk69  Vincent Berg
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

Back in the '80s, there was a manga series (Kimegura Orange Road) involving a MC with two potential girlfriends. One was a classical 'perfect stereotypical wife', the other was much less traditional. Fans of the series were pretty strongly divided between which one they believed the MC should end up with. (Honestly, the story would've been much better if he ended up with neither. The two girls were 'BFFs' (before the term was coined) and the MC really didn't deserve either of them.)

Replies:   Torsian  Vincent Berg
Torsian ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

That sounds like someone was drawing out the story for the money, but I never read it and was too young to know about it at the time.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

It was later animated for TV. By that point, the girl he ultimately chose (the non-traditional one) was clearly about to be picked (in the manga) so the TV series played the relationship differently (the other girl made her intentions clear first, the girl he favored wouldn't 'steal' him from her BFF, and he was too gutless to tell either of them how he really felt).

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Back in the '80s, there was a manga series (Kimegura Orange Road) involving a MC with two potential girlfriends. One was a classical 'perfect stereotypical wife', the

Ah, the perfect opportunity to revise the entire story, featuring a new, off-beat ending!

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

I think it might be fun to have people care enough about a story to bet on the out come. It would be a little like professional wrestling.

Actually, I'm generally amused when readers try to 'guess' my endings, as I'll typically plot numerous red-herrings, so my foreshadowing won't spoil any surprise twists in the story. The idea of foreshadowing isn't to give anything away, but to prepare readers so when the surprise unfolds, they'll strike their foreheads and say "Of course, it's so clear why it happened now!"

But then, I typically put at least one major plot twist near the end, just when the protagonist is frustrated and prepared to slink away in defeat, until something reinvigorates his sense of idealism, causing him to come back, rededicated and ready to continue their fight. It's a fairly traditional literary technique that I've found works well, however often it's repeated (though the technique is consistent, the rational and implementation are unique each time, so it continues to work).

What does bug me, is when someone says that a particular character is not realistic or sympathetic simply because they no longer remember what young girls are like, having never had female children of their own. In those cases, I'll try to defend my position, while realizing that NOTHING I say will EVER change their minds. For those who understand younger girls, the characters seem natural and endearing, for those used to older women (who generally cater to the men in their lives), nothing they do will seem 'natural'.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Actually, I'm generally amused when readers try to 'guess' my endings, as I'll typically plot numerous red-herrings, so my foreshadowing won't spoil any surprise twists in the story. The idea of foreshadowing isn't to give anything away, but to prepare readers so when the surprise unfolds, they'll strike their foreheads and say "Of course, it's so clear why it happened now!"

I do the exact same thing. I was reading comments in one story about how this seemed like "the one" and they were getting engaged soon, not even realized that (in the words of one fan) I had already "thrown her under the bus", and simply not written that yet.

However, when I was giving it a final once-over prior to publishing later chapters, I did recognize that comment, and had the main character admit to another that he was planning on proposing to her the next month. But she ended the relationship before that happened.

And more are picking up my style I notice, as the comments now will tend to be introspective and realizing why such events happened. I drop lots of clues, but also in a way that one is never quite sure until I am ready.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

If they don't like the story, that's their problem. I'll respond to a complaint with why I've written what I write, but I don't trim it to suit anyone. The only exception to that is to meet legal requirements of where I live and the requirements of the site - both of which are mainly to do with the age of people in sexual activity.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

If they don't like the story, that's their problem. I'll respond to a complaint with why I've written what I write, but I don't trim it to suit anyone. The only exception to that is to meet legal requirements of where I live and the requirements of the site - both of which are mainly to do with the age of people in sexual activity.

I'm with Ernest on this one, though I DO take each complaint seriously, as often, the complaint's stated reason is NOT why they objected to the book. Often, something set them off, so they look for a semi-obvious rational. But, IF you engage them, it doesn't take long (once you get them talking) to isolate what is was that set them off (the real reason is emotional, while the stated reason is largely fabricated on the spot (i.e. not well thought out).

Also, informed objections often lead (at least in my case) in interesting subplots in later books, as it did in my Great Death series, when one kind fellow pointed out why it's obvious what sex wild boar is. When we talked, he noted several significant differences, beyond the visually obvious one, and that allowed me to build the animal into a significant character in the sequel when he 'attacks' one of the secondary characters. After that, I continued treating him as a regular character, including his succumbing to the plague, and the protagonist successfully treating and curing him, demonstrating that they could treat their livestock, just as they did other humans.

However, the typical 'I hated because (some patently political stance) I largely ignore. I'll respond, explaining my position, but I won't change anything, as the few times I've compromised, they reject ANY changes that don't highlight their particular political views. In which case, I typically double down, making the passage openly hostile to their stated position (hence why I have so many 1-bombers who'll read each of my stories within days of posting, yet continue 1-bombing ALL of my stories. Clearly, they wouldn't continue reading if the character's political view were that offensive!

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

So, in short does feedback help or hurt the final creativity we read?

In my case, my story is always finished before I post a single chapter so the feedback has no affect on the ending or direction.

Now if someone points out a problem like the two cities being geographically in the wrong place, I'll fix it. But that's why I usually use fictitious places.

If someone says something like, "The police don't outline bodies" and I did in my story, I basically say, "If it's good enough for Hollywood to do it then it's okay for me."

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

If someone says something like, "The police don't outline bodies" and I did in my story, I basically say, "If it's good enough for Hollywood to do it then it's okay for me."

While I've never heard of any police force around the world doing a body outline as a routine matter, I have heard of some police forces using body outline or a dummy when doing a detailed revisit or re-enactment of the scene at a later date.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

While I've never heard of any police force around the world doing a body outline as a routine matter

I've looked into this a bit. What I found was somewhat interesting. I assumed Hollywood had to get the idea from somewhere.

It comes from the early days of modern policing, before easy photography was available. It was never routine, but it was done by several different major police forces in high profile murders to keep track of where the body had been as the scene was thoroughly investigated over several days.

As readily portable cellophane film cameras became available, the practice went away.

Then in a few high profile cases, the body outline thing was done to re-stage a murder scene for reporters after the actual body had been removed. This latter is what brought the body outline to public attention and where Hollywood got the idea from.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

If someone says something like, "The police don't outline bodies" and I did in my story, I basically say, "If it's good enough for Hollywood to do it then it's okay for me."

Alas, that's also why your mystery stories also seem to be derived from established movies, rather than being imaginative fiction twists on the genre. I still like the writing, but the plots are largely easy to anticipate (i.e. the bad guy always does something stupid in the end, and the good guy protagonist exacts his often-fatal revenge on him).

There's a definite reason why movies routinely film literary works, but very few novels are based on films. Films are written for only an hour and a half, while novels often span years, decades or even generations.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Vincent Berg

that's also why your mystery stories

I think you mean thrillers, not mysteries. That's the thriller genre, like Jack Reacher, James Bond, Will Robie, etc. My Lincoln Steele character is no different.

I'd be shocked if a reader figured out the mystery in "Sexual Awakening." Actually, both mysteries.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

I see author blog entries here and there about particular exasperating feed back.

Invite them to do better.

It's not hard to write a similar story without infringing the original author's intellectual property rights, allowing them free rein to fix the issues they care so strongly about.

AJ

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

It's not hard to write a similar story without infringing the original author's intellectual property rights, allowing them free rein to fix the issues they care so strongly about.

Bad stories have started the careers of many popular SOL authors, as they all conclude "I can write a better story than this crap!" and thus feel empowered to do so. That's how I, and many others here, first got their start.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Bad stories have started the careers of many popular SOL authors, as they all conclude "I can write a better story than this crap!" and thus feel empowered to do so. That's how I, and many others here, first got their start.

That is how I started around 25 years ago. Reading old Beeline books prior to that, then the first offerings to be found online, and thinking that most of them were crap.

And since then I like to think I have improved a lot. Even I sometimes read back through my old stories, and sigh because of what crap it is now, but still think it was better than most of what was around at the time.

oyster50 ๐Ÿšซ

It happened all the time in my Smart Girls universe.

As readers got invested in the characters and the stories, I got dozens of comments and email explaining how a character should act, sometimes in detail.

I wrote 'em my way, but I became aware that people were taking the story as seriously as fiction can be taken and therefore colored my representation of established characters and story lines.

Oyster

AmigaClone ๐Ÿšซ

"He would never do that!" - Dude it's fiction

I would be more likely to look into a statement like "That action seems out of character."

"That is physically impossible" - Dude it's science fiction

Again something like "There seems to be an inconsistency between the laws of physics here and a previous location" would get more attention.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@AmigaClone

"He would never do that!" - Dude it's fiction



I would be more likely to look into a statement like "That action seems out of character."

Yeah, but some writers believe that if a character needs to act in a way that is contrary to how that character has been defined, in order to advance the plot in some way, they'll do it.

Replies:   AmigaClone
AmigaClone ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Yeah, but some writers believe that if a character needs to act in a way that is contrary to how that character has been defined, in order to advance the plot in some way, they'll do it.

Two things - First, I was talking about me specifically as an author.

Second, I would want to make sure the 'out of character' action was intentional or just accidental.

Replies:   bk69  Vincent Berg
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@AmigaClone

First, I was implying you were more reasonable and rational than some. Which may, in fact, be completely untrue and only supported by some incredibly small subset of data, but it's the data I had at hand.

Second, that sounds dangerously close to admitting the possibility that you could make a mistake. Careful...

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@AmigaClone

Second, I would want to make sure the 'out of character' action was intentional or just accidental.

Also, a common literary technique is to have a character expose a significant character flow as the 'big surprise' moment in a story, so it's a common motif. But the key is often providing sufficient foreshadowing, so the 'surprise' doesn't come as a complete shock to your readers. If you properly foreshadow the even, it'll seem natural, even IF they don't anticipate it.

Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

How much if any does potential reader blow back affect your posted stories?

Not being an author, please take my comments as from an interested reader.

In answer to the question, I'd answer "It depends". For example, I'm currently reading a story that's rated higher than 9.0 by readers. Yet I almost stopped reading because some really important situations were just plain unbelievable. Like expecting 8 and 9 year olds to act like adults. Now maybe I could reasonable accept 12 or 13 year olds, but children whose balls still haven't descended? C'mon now.

And this is far from the only example at SOL. I can offer others. So I don't think that comments that are offered in a straightforward manner about situations that are just plain unrealistic should be rejected out of hand by an author. I know that authors can be a little prickly over their creations. And I feel that they should be given a lot of leeway for creative license. And, true, science fiction has rules of it's own in this regard. But something just totally outside the realm of reasonableness in a non fantasy story that just plain strains credulity just begs for comment. Just know that some of those comments may be offered in that vein.

My two reader's centavos, FWIW.

Replies:   bk69  Vincent Berg
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

What you're approaching there is what's known as 'suspension of disbelief'. See, every story is a lie - any reader picking up a book knows this, but in exchange for being entertained, the reader willingly sets aside the evaluation of true and false. Depending on the genre, one may put up with quite a bit to suspend disbelief - SF and Fantasy both require the reader to accept as true far more which is 'known' to be untrue than a simple mystery novel. Yet the 'agreement' between the writer and reader is that the story takes place in a place where the technology or the magic is true, and follows reasonable rules that make at least as much sense as the laws of physics make here.
But regardless the genre, the reader has to keep suspending disbelief. When things happen in the story that shock the reader - because the 'universe' the reader has been introduced to doesn't behave by the rules that have been established, that is - that increases the workload on the reader, because there is now a new source of disbelief to be suspended.

Replies:   Keet  Vincent Berg
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

But regardless the genre, the reader has to keep suspending disbelief.

As a reader I must agree with Jim S. Sure, virtually all stories here on SOL are fiction but if an author places his story in a realistic world it's reasonable to expect that the reader can be unpleasantly surprised with a totally unrealistic fact. If the author expects the reader to once again believe in the realistic setting after the unrealistic fact he should not be surprised to get some backlash about it.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

if an author places his story in a realistic world it's reasonable to expect that the reader can be unpleasantly surprised with a totally unrealistic fact.

So basically, you're saying:

When things happen in the story that shock the reader - because the 'universe' the reader has been introduced to doesn't behave by the rules that have been established, that is - that increases the workload on the reader, because there is now a new source of disbelief to be suspended.

Not sure why you'd think I'd disagree.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Not sure why you'd think I'd disagree.

I didn't say I disagree, I just wanted to emphasize that as a reader I supported Jim S' take on the subject.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Keet

but if an author places his story in a realistic world it's reasonable to expect that the reader can be unpleasantly surprised with a totally unrealistic fact.

I'm reading a do-over type story, but not "do over." Unlike most where a 40-something guy wakes up in a teenage boy's body with the memory and knowledge of the 40-something man, this 9th grader wakes up 3 years later in the future.

Suspension of disbelief? Sure, why not. All fantasies require that.

The boy, now 3 years older, has grown, both height and muscles. Height, sure. Muscles, stretching my suspension of disbelief but it could happen in 3 years.

But he not only has an advanced body, but he's a baseball star where MLB scouts are interested. The boy still has the mind and knowledge of the 9th grader so he has to read a book on baseball to figure the game out. Now that's stretching it. To become a star athlete in 3 years when you don't even know the basics of the sport. Suspension of disbelief getting harder.

The 9th grader had one kiss. All of a sudden he knows how to handle himself with not only high school senior girls but older women. Come on now. Getting more difficult to suspend disbelief.

And now for the kicker. In other stories, the teenage MC has the experience and knowledge of the 40-something. This 9th-grader just skipped 3 years of high school and will ace all his classes, even challenge his teachers with his knowledge. Suspension of disbelief. Nah. Too much to suspend.

Where did all this knowledge and maturity come from?

But I'm enjoying the story immensely. I am suspending disbelief so that I can enjoy it.

Replies:   Dominions Son  bk69  Keet
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

Where did all this knowledge and maturity come from?

The three years he can't remember.

The situation you describe kind of makes sense. His body went through those three years, even if his mind skipped over them.

The knowledge at issue is in there buried even though he can't consciously access it until some external trigger makes it necessary.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

The knowledge at issue is in there buried even though he can't consciously access it until some external trigger makes it necessary.

Nope. When he turned into an athlete he turned into a jerk. As a star baseball player, the coach and principal set him up with easy courses and he only managed a C average. He didn't learn anything in those 3 years.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Switch Blayde

Well, to be fair, the MC of Stitch in Time was defined as a genius brain... who basically stopped thinking and became a jock until he'd "grown up".

He was also a pitcher - pitchers routinely learn new pitches in a short amount of time. There was a really pathetic middle reliever, one offseason he learnt to throw a cutter. Then for some reason the SOB became the fucking Yankees closer. For a couple decades.

But back to the mind - as someone who lived on autopilot, never thinking for a moment, everyone who'd dealt with him for the previous handful of years was totally prepared to underestimate him, and even his 'younger self' was able to think so much beyond their belief that that worked.

And... he really didn't understand right away. He made a lot of mistakes, but learnt quickly and rarely made the same mistake twice.

Improbable? Sure. Within the bounds of suspension of disbelief? Maybe not by a lot, but still yes.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

the MC of Stitch in Time

That's the story.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

Yeah. I recognized it as soon as you started describing it.

Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

But I'm enjoying the story immensely. I am suspending disbelief so that I can enjoy it.

And rightfully so, it's a great story. But... the whole setting is not realistic because it's a DoOver and TT story. The reader can reasonably expect other unrealistic things to happen and he can probably place them in the context of being the result of time travel or a previous life. The original problem posted was a totally unrealistic happening in an otherwise realistic setting and the question if that justified complaints to the author. I think it does although I have never uttered such a remark myself, I take what is offered and am grateful for it :)

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Sure, virtually all stories here on SOL are fiction but if an author places his story in a realistic world it's reasonable to expect that the reader can be unpleasantly surprised with a totally unrealistic fact.

As an example, I once based on 'background' location on observed details via Google Maps. Unfortunately, the Google images of a relatively significant America city ended being quite dated, when a reader informed me that the crime that occurred in a nearby mall had been closed for nearly two decades! I'd say that I've learned my lesson, but rather than spending a few months, investigating each new locale to get the feel for the city, I continue to wing-it based largely on online references. :(

I'm now more cautious, but continue taking 'educated' risks.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Unfortunately, the Google images of a relatively significant America city ended being quite dated,

Use OpenStreetMap, it's way more up-to-date and gives a visually clearer image but no streetview. It's very easy to check the history of the data so you will know how recent it is.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

But regardless the genre, the reader has to keep suspending disbelief. When things happen in the story that shock the reader - because the 'universe' the reader has been introduced to doesn't behave by the rules that have been established, that is - that increases the workload on the reader, because there is now a new source of disbelief to be suspended.

As you've observed, this 'failed suspension of disbelief' typically happens when the story's establish 'rules' are ignored, and they pull a surprise ending out of their hats. That's typically how most sci-fi/fantasy works fail, when they won't abide by the very rules they established for the story.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

Now maybe I could reasonable accept 12 or 13 year olds, but children whose balls still haven't descended?

Sounds like some of my work, since my own kids were older when I married their mother, I never really dealt with small children enough to grasp how they behave, especially how they talk. Still, when needed, I try to make it work. ;)

elevated_subways ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

I think you do have to register for an account here before you can comment, correct? I'm on another site that allows anonymous users - virtually anyone with an Internet connection - to comment, and it can get pretty hairy over there.

I don't think I've been called out yet on a factual error. If I have a story set in say, the 1970s, I will check the release dates for any movies or record albums referred to. (The story may be set in a specific month of a certain year.)

As for other critics, once in a great while they are correct. I had one guy on that site who suggested how a certain story should have gone - and he wasn't too polite about it. Months later, I tried a new version based on his comments. Now it's going to lead to a new series (or serial as it's referred to here). Yeah, he was right after all.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@elevated_subways

I think you do have to register for an account here before you can comment, correct?

Yes, but there are two levels of accounts, one is free and then there are paid premiere accounts. Free accounts can comment.

Replies:   Vincent Berg  Mushroom
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Yes, but there are two levels of accounts, one is free and then there are paid premiere accounts. Free accounts can comment.

While the 'premium' accounts can be 'earned' by posting sufficient stories on SOL. It'll take a while, in most cases, but the benefits to authors are well-worth the effort.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

While the 'premium' accounts can be 'earned' by posting sufficient stories on SOL.

I look at that the other way around.

Readers pay for premiere access with cash.
Authors pay for premiere access with stories.

:)

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Yes, but there are two levels of accounts, one is free and then there are paid premiere accounts. Free accounts can comment.

Funny thing is, I did not know this until a year or so back.

Something had been done to the accounts, and one day I discovered I could no longer do a search. And several other things were restricted also. I wrote in and asked about it,k and found out only then I had been "premium" for years. I just never knew it.

Of course, I also write for the sheer enjoyment of writing. The upgrade is nice, but not why I do it. I do it because I love telling what I hope others find are "fun yarns", and to expand my creativity.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@elevated_subways

As for other critics, once in a great while they are correct. I had one guy on that site who suggested how a certain story should have gone - and he wasn't too polite about it. Months later, I tried a new version based on his comments. Now it's going to lead to a new series (or serial as it's referred to here). Yeah, he was right after all.

Those are the critique that I LOVE, those based on factual life-experiences, which highlight details the author may never have considered. What's more, those are often easily corrected, providing you don't resist correcting them for too long.

Uther_Pendragon ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

It depends.
When people tell me objective things: "I edited a bunch of soldiers' mail from that period, and they never addressed their mother any other way than 'Mother.'"
I'll go back and clean up my copy. Same with a typo.

If you want the Brennans to cheat, write your own stories and invent your own characters.

Uther_Pendragon ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

" I personally realize it is called fiction because it is impossible to have happened, wouldn't have been done that way, only might have happened like that, or is a bloody wrong-headed interpretation of events experts doubt ever happened."

Well, most of my stories are written in the way I say they would happen in real life. OTOH, You're entitled todisagreee.

Replies:   Torsian
Torsian ๐Ÿšซ

@Uther_Pendragon

I was trying to cover my basis there. Events in any story happen for one reason and one reason only - The author wrote it that way.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

If it were just a story, would anyone believe Covid 19 and its effects on society? Or the smoke that is pretty much covering the west and the other effects of the firestorms though much of the west? Very strange things happen, authors are allowed to construct stories around really unlikely events.

Replies:   Keet  Mushroom  StarFleet Carl
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

If it were just a story, would anyone believe Covid 19 and its effects on society? Or the smoke that is pretty much covering the west and the other effects of the firestorms though much of the west? Very strange things happen, authors are allowed to construct stories around really unlikely events.

Covid-19 isn't the first pandemic and not even the worst in history. Air pollution is very real, just stick your head outside in a city and you can smell the dirty air. There are still large spaces with blooming nature where you wonder why you can breath so much easier than next to the highway. Strange things? Not so much, unfortunately, and they are realistic events that can happen in a story with a realistic setting.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Strange things? Not so much, unfortunately, and they are realistic events that can happen in a story with a realistic setting.

Though Covid-19 has ruined ALL post-apocalyptic stories for me (and I'll never again write one, for that reason), while the Trump presidency has permanently ruined ANY dystopian fantasy's, as even alien beings won't behave that irrationally. As several famous authors have noted, fiction can create all sorts of evens, but unlike reality, they all HAVE to make sense! Neither Covid-19, or the Republican party abandoning all it's ideals at the drop of a collective hat, just won't fly in fiction (while talking flys, often do!)

Replies:   Keet  Mushroom
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Though Covid-19 has ruined ALL post-apocalyptic stories for me (and I'll never again write one, for that reason), while the Trump presidency has permanently ruined ANY dystopian fantasy's, as even alien beings won't behave that irrationally. As several famous authors have noted, fiction can create all sorts of evens, but unlike reality, they all HAVE to make sense! Neither Covid-19, or the Republican party abandoning all it's ideals at the drop of a collective hat, just won't fly in fiction (while talking flys, often do!)

Why has is ruined all post-apocalyptic stories for you? Covid-19 is hardly an apocalyptic event and the stupidity with the way Trump handles it is unfortunately happening as it is, thus realistic. There's no limit to human stupidity. Besides that, it's current so not post-apocalyptic and will never be, the death rate is way to low to cause an apocalypse.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

the stupidity with the way Trump handles it

Trump is a lousy leader. He says and does stupid things. But although the media and the Democrats are blaming him, he really doesn't have that much power like most leaders in other countries have. Like the governor of NY told Trump, "You can't do that in NY. You're not a king."

The USA is a republic. Much of the power is in the states and in the hands of the governors, not the president. Biden says he'll enact a federal mandate on wearing masks. The president doesn't have that authority.

Even the governors don't have all the authority. Take the opening of schools. In Arizona we have an elected Superintendent of Education for the state. But she can only recommend. The schools are broken into districts each with their own governing body that makes decisions.

Another oddity. I bet COVID is transmitted through the NY public transportation system (e.g., subway). But the Mayor of NYC doesn't have the authority to shut it down. For some reason, the NYC transit system is under the control of the governor of NY (who is quick to let the mayor know that just as he made the president know he wasn't king).

And then you have the cultural aspect. The asian people have always thought of others and wore masks when they were sick (way before COVID). It's part of their culture. In the U.S., it's everyone out for themselves. Some idiot bar owner recently said if you wear a mask in his bar you will have to leave. When the virus seemed to be under control, people started gathering at beaches and pools and bars. That was disaster.

The Mayor of Scottsdale yesterday said masks were no longer mandatory. I'm not sure how he can do that because I believe Maricopa County, which Scottsdale is in, still has it. But he did. Why? My guess is the Scottsdale economy.

And speaking of the economy, one of Biden's campaign attacks on Trump is, "To fix the economy you first have to fix the virus." Yeah right. Wait until the virus is gone before opening the economy and you won't have an economy to open. My governor uses a slogan I thought he made up until I heard other governors use it. All 50 governors have phone meetings so it probably came up there. It's something like: "We need to take care of lives AND livelihoods." There's no sense beating the virus if you cant put food on the table or a roof over your head because you can't make a living.

So Trump handled the pandemic poorly as a leader. But he's not the blame for the 200,000 deaths.

Replies:   Dominions Son  Keet  bk69
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

So Trump handled the pandemic poorly as a leader. But he's not the blame for the 200,000 deaths.

Around 40 percent of US COVID deaths are from nursing homes, and that is largely concentrated in the 3 or 4 states (including New York) where governors ordered nursing homes to take COVID patients to keep hospital beds open. A move that turned out to be unnecessary in the first place.

So what is probably the single largest chunk of blame for the US death toll falls on Cuomo and the governors of 2 or 3 other states.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Around 40 percent of US COVID deaths are from nursing homes,

I wonder if it's still 40% or was 40% early on.

Another thing I hate about the media is they pick and choose. They report how many people got the virus after attending a political rally, that annual motorcycle gathering recently, fraternity/sorority parties, pool parties during a holiday weekend, a large church service, large weddings, etc. But I never once heard them tracking how many people got the virus at a Black Lives Matter demonstration. And there sure were a lot of them.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

I wonder if it's still 40% or was 40% early on.

If it's gone down, it's because the states that had those policies rescinded them quietly.

In fact, from what's been reported, Cuomo in NY tried to keep the policy secret in the first place. Several nursing home directors in NY have claimed that not only were they ordered to take COVID patients (on threat of being permanently shut down if they refused), but they were ordered to not tell anyone about it.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

In fact, from what's been reported, Cuomo in NY tried to keep the policy secret in the first place. Several nursing home directors in NY have claimed that not only were they ordered to take COVID patients (on threat of being permanently shut down if they refused), but they were ordered to not tell anyone about it.

If that can be proven it will cause a whole slew of wrongful death claims.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

I can practically guarantee that all such orders would have been verbal only. By the time anyone reaches that level of office, they've learned the importance of CYA. Written orders would never be issued, particularly if those orders would only be followed under duress.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

I can practically guarantee that all such orders would have been verbal only. By the time anyone reaches that level of office, they've learned the importance of CYA. Written orders would never be issued, particularly if those orders would only be followed under duress.

Doesn't matter in a civil case. Unlike a criminal case it doesn't need 100% proven evidence. And I bet there's some memo's and emails to be found.

Replies:   bk69  Switch Blayde
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Political underling falls on sword to protect boss. Claims sovereign immunity defense at trial. Case over.

Alternatively, the administrators that caved in to the verbal orders take the fall. Their businesses take the blame (the liability for the actions of an employee belong to the employer unless the employer can prove otherwise, which is really limited, usually to criminal actions taken by the employee which the employer had no knowledge of) so again... no individual involved is on the hook. But the cost of old folks homes will increase twenty to thirty percent to cover the losses due to litigation.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

I wonder if it's more meaningful to compare the U.S. to the EU rather than individual countries. Can you imagine the person heading up the EU dictating to the Netherlands, Germany, France, etc., that they must close their restaurants, everyone must wear masks, no one canโ€ฆ

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

I wonder if it's more meaningful to compare the U.S. to the EU rather than individual countries. Can you imagine the person heading up the EU dictating to the Netherlands, Germany, France, etc., that they must close their restaurants, everyone must wear masks, no one canโ€ฆ

There are to many protests against invasive rules. That corrupt bunch is afraid to touch it so they leave it to the individual countries.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

That corrupt bunch is afraid to touch it so they leave it to the individual countries.

Except our Constitution gives the states those rights.

Which makes sense. The loyalties of the writers of the Constitution was to their states. They wanted the federal government to have limited powers.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

The loyalties of the writers of the Constitution was to their states. They wanted the federal government to have limited powers.

This is not strictly true.

There were two major factions at the constitutional convention.

The Federalists wanted a much stronger central government than what they immediately got out of the constitution and several members of this faction actually proposed reducing the states to mere corporations fully subject to the authority of the national government.

The Anti-Federalists wanted a very limited national government that was only marginally stronger than the national government was under the Articles of Confederation.

These two sides were evenly matched and neither had the votes to outright win, so what we ended up with was a muddled compromise between these two positions.

Today's Federalist Society are defenders of the muddled compromise.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

If that can be proven it will cause a whole slew of wrongful death claims.

IIRC: several have already been filed in NY. However the courts are slow walking everything because of the pandemic.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Similar situations have occurred in the UK and are being investigated with a view to prosecution.

And yet here we are again with publicly unaccountable hospital trusts reaffirming their right to discharge patients to care homes with 2 hrs notice whether or not they have covid, and the government decreeing that hospital patients (unless in hospital for covid) and care home patients have a low priority for covid testing, although hospital staff and care workers are high priority. Tossing live hand grenades into care homes again :-(

AJ

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

And yet here we are again with publicly unaccountable hospital trusts reaffirming their right to discharge patients to care homes with 2 hrs notice whether or not they have covid, and the government decreeing that hospital patients (unless in hospital for covid) and care home patients have a low priority for covid testing, although hospital staff and care workers are high priority. Tossing live hand grenades into care homes again :-(

Wait until election time, you can bet one or the other will be thrown under the bus over this. Hopefully it happens to the correct ones.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Wait until election time, you can bet one or the other will be thrown under the bus over this. Hopefully it happens to the correct ones.

They should all be thrown under the bus, preferably while the bus is stuck on train tracks with a train approaching.

Replies:   Keet  bk69
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

They should all be thrown under the bus, preferably while the bus is stuck on train tracks with a train approaching.

You do draw an interesting picture :D

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Only if it's a freight train mostly consisting of caustic soda, concentrated nitric acid, and anhydrous ammonia. Otherwise, the bus may accidentally shield some of them.

Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

Trump is a lousy leader. He says and does stupid things. But although the media and the Democrats are blaming him, he really doesn't have that much power like most leaders in other countries have.

Nowhere I put a blame on anyone, you can't put any blame on any single person. Trump's problem is he talks before thinking and then has to back paddle if a statement he made is proven wrong or plain stupid. His other problem is that he mainly cares about money, people... not so much.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Trump's problem is he talks before thinking and then has to back paddle if a statement he made is proven wrong or plain stupid.

I'm half convinced that half the stuff he says, he says just to watch the Twitteratie's heads explode.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

A major problem with the response to the virus, as I see it, is that while in previous eras the old Stalin quote ("If only one man dies...that's a tragedy. If millions die, that's only statistics.") was true enough, social media individualizes all those deaths.
So 'acceptable' casualties today are far lower than they were during earlier pandemics, and politicians are afraid of the body count being blamed on their (in)actions, while also realizing that crippling the economy will kill their careers just as quickly. Mostly, politicians who aren't in power are luckiest right now, as all they have to do is criticize, since anyone in power is in a damned if you do, damned if you don't situation.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

So 'acceptable' casualties today are far lower than they were during earlier pandemics, and politicians are afraid of the body count being blamed on their (in)actions

So instead they take stupid actions that make things worse and in the end people will blame the body count on their actions.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Though Covid-19 has ruined ALL post-apocalyptic stories for me (and I'll never again write one, for that reason)

COVID is more "bark than bite", and as many have died, it is nothing compared to bad things could have been if say a slower burning strain of Ebola had spread instead.

But keep in mind, this has been a "weak plague", no matter what the fearmongers have tried to spread. One only has to go back to the Dark Ages to see what a really catastrophic plague could have done. Or even the effects on the natives when Europeans hit the Americas. Often times wiping out entire tribes because of something as simple as Chicken Pox.

It has just been over 100 years since any kind of serious plague has faced the planet, and we forgot how to deal with it. But it will happen again, maybe in 5 years, maybe in 50 or more. But eventually, something we can not handle will pop out of the rainforests and jungles and we will go through it again.

Just hope it is another COVID, and not an Ebola when it does.

Replies:   PotomacBob
PotomacBob ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

But keep in mind, this has been a "weak plague", no matter what the fearmongers have tried to spread.

Asserted with such confidence! I doubt that the viewpoint is universal.

Replies:   John Demille  Mushroom
John Demille ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

Asserted with such confidence! I doubt that the viewpoint is universal.

No viewpoint is ever universal.

A pandemic with an IFR of less than 0.005 for anybody under 70 and .04 for those over 70 with co-morbidities, as per the CDC can be realistically described as weak regardless of who disagrees.

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/planning-scenarios.html

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

Asserted with such confidence! I doubt that the viewpoint is universal.

*laughs*

Actually, it is a fact. Simply look at the death rates, when compared to even a modest one like the Spanish Flu.

It's a fact, at this point we are somewhere around 1 million deaths to COVID in right around a year since it spread into the human population.

In the 2 years that the Spanish Flue swept the world, it killed over 50 million people. And even that is a piker when compared to the Black Death, which killed from 75-200 million in Europe alone.

Compare 1 million globally to 75-200 million on a single continent, then try to tell me this is anything but "minor". Oh, and don't forget to adjust for the population levels. That was over half the population of the continent.

Let me know when COVID wipes out half the population of any continent. Or even 10%.

Anybody that does not recognize that this really is a "minor plague" is literally a moron. And I have also been laughing, because I have been predicting this for over a decade, and warning people that a global pandemic was coming. We were way overdue for one, and we are still overdue for one. This barely even counts, other than the hype and fear generated.

Replies:   karactr  StarFleetCarl
karactr ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Mushroom

other than the hype and fear generated

I agree. I recommend reading "The Coming Plague" (I can't remember the author) to anyone who questions this. What I fear is that our present politically motivated over reaction will have a severe negative impact on people's response if we do happen to encounter a slow burn Ebola, a deadly Marburg mutation, a wide spread Hanta or Dengue. The possible list is endless.

Imagine an aerosol or air borne HIV.

Replies:   Mushroom  richardshagrin
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@karactr

I agree. I recommend reading "The Coming Plague" (I can't remember the author) to anyone who questions this. What I fear is that our present politically motivated over reaction will have a severe negative impact on people's response if we do happen to encounter a slow burn Ebola, a deadly Marburg mutation, a wide spread Hanta or Dengue.

My interest in this actually goes all the way back to 1994, when I heard 2 radio hosts do a 2 hour interview with Richard Preston right after "The Hot Zone" was first released. Then the very next year reading a book by Dr. William Close about his battling the Ebola when an outbreak happened in the Congo in 1976.

While not paranoid, I do recognize that nature has an amazing way to eliminate excess population of almost any species. If not through introducing more predators or starvation, it is normally disease. And with our growing population expanding more into jungles and rainforests (the natural incubators and reservoirs of such diseases), it is only a matter of time until more and more affect us.

We have already seen a strain of Ebola breakout in the US, and a strain cross over to pigs and dogs. That strain is thankfully asymptomatic to all three species (even though it kills other primates). But it shows how easily it can jump species, and it is only a mutation away from not longer being asymptomatic. Or even worse, a strain that does kill humans can jump to an asymptomatic carrier that is more expansive than the bat.

Replies:   bk69  richardshagrin
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Or even worse, a strain that does kill humans can jump to an asymptomatic carrier that is more expansive than the bat.

Worst-case scenario: long-incubation ebola transmittable through mosquito bites. Yes, a quick public health response involving widespread use of DDT would probably avert the problem... but would such a move be contemplated, let alone used without some lobby group trying to get it blocked in the courts?

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Worst-case scenario: long-incubation ebola transmittable through mosquito bites.

Never-ever going to happen.

One of the biggest factors in a virus is having a vector that is asymptomatic. And there is 0 evidence that Ebola can be spread in that way.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

My bad for being lazy typing.

Imagine some highly-lethal form of West Nile, with death rates as high as some of the nastier hemmoragic fevers. Give it a two-week incubation period (the second week of which has a viral load high enough that the mosquito transmission vector applies) and voila... world-ending plague. Unless the entire world is sprayed with DDT in the first week. (Hiding in cold climates would probably work, unless there was a secondary transmission vector, but that wouldn't help much if it occurred during spring (which would be fall in the bottom half of the world))

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

And with our growing population expanding more into jungles and rainforests (the natural incubators and reservoirs of such diseases), it is only a matter of time until more and more affect us.

Not sure about your conclusion. By expanding we tend to cut jungles and rainforests down and reduce their ability to support unpleasant diseases.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

I believe his point was that people are being exposed to fauna that civilized humans have not been exposed to in the past, and thus any diseases that may have developed in isolation would be exceptionally lethal due to complete lack of immunities.

Now, if we burnt all the jungles and rainforests down, after dumping tons of sarin or some such on them to ensure nothing came out of the fire... yeah, we'd be safer. Until some particularly nasty bird flu jumped to pigs and then humans.

Replies:   Switch Blayde  Mushroom
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Now, if we burnt all the jungles and rainforests down, after dumping tons of sarin or some such on them to ensure nothing came out of the fire... yeah, we'd be safer. Until some particularly nasty bird flu jumped to pigs and then humans.

We'd never live long enough to find out. We need oxygen to breathe.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

We'd never live long enough to find out. We need oxygen to breathe.

Most of which comes from the oceans.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Most of which comes from the oceans.

I never knew that. I just googled it and the article said at least 50% of our oxygen comes from the oceans.

As there's more global warming and more ice melts into the oceans, the oceans should get bigger thus produce more oxygen. Ha!

Replies:   bk69  karactr
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

Actually, if we seed certain areas of the oceans with various iron compounds, we'd produce a lot more oxygen. Large portions of the ocean have little vegetation (usually areas that are deep) but... areas that get regular ship traffic (and thus get iron oxide and such from the ships, as well as likely some waste products) tend to have algae even while areas a mile away don't.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Large portions of the ocean have little vegetation (usually areas that are deep) but... areas that get regular ship traffic

Most of the oxygen produced in the oceans comes from phytoplankton in the first few meters of water, so the total depth to sea bed is largely irrelevant.

Iron seeding could help because it acts like fertilizer for the phytoplankton.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Most of the oxygen produced in the oceans comes from phytoplankton in the first few meters of water, so the total depth to sea bed is largely irrelevant.

The deeper areas of the ocean tend to be where the barren areas are located. That's all that referred to. I wasn't referring to oxygen production compared to volume.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

The deeper areas of the ocean tend to be where the barren areas are located.

Barren areas at the sea floor, not necessarily barren in the top few meters of water.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

No, I was referring to the areas in the ocean where the top layer is barren. Which is usually in deep water areas, with exceptions being in common shipping lanes and areas close to shore.

karactr ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

As there's more global warming and more ice melts into the oceans, the oceans should get bigger thus produce more oxygen. Ha!

Except you miss the pollution killing the marine fauna that provide the oxygen. CO2 and heat may, and I say, may be climate problems (personally, I doubt it at this point) but deforestation, biome encroachment, and death of marine fauna are definitely issues directly resulting from man's activities.

Replies:   richardshagrin
richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@karactr

marine fauna

I am reasonably sure you want marine flora (plants) like algae and seaweed as the providers of oxygen. Fauna are animals and turn oxygen into carbon dioxide, like the animals on land. Most of the flora and fauna are relatively close to the continents where the ocean is fairly shallow and they can enjoy sunlight to drive the oxygen/carbon dioxide cycle. Flora also need minerals which tend to be less available in the middle of oceans. It isn't clear to me if having deeper seas will affect the generation oxygen or not.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

I believe his point was that people are being exposed to fauna that civilized humans have not been exposed to in the past, and thus any diseases that may have developed in isolation would be exceptionally lethal due to complete lack of immunities.

Bingo, "virgin field" susceptibility.

There is already research into both Swine Flu and COVID, because both are closely related to Spanish Flu, and SARS and other diseases we have seen spring out of Asia for the last 20 years.

Specifically, because whole those others appear on the surface to be almost as deadly, that the survivors of that first pandemic in 1919 passed down to their followers at least some immunity. 1919 was "virgin field", like Chicken Pox to the Indians. And even though we have seen millions infected since 1976 by Swine Flu (especially in 2009), the death rates never appeared, even though a great many were infected.

This is farther from Spanish Flu, so we have less immunity. But imagine the next pathogen is even further removed than COVID is. Then we will get death rates akin to 1919, as the entire planet will be a "virgin field" once again.

People have to realize, I look at this entire apolitically, and simply as a "Biological Warfare" exercise, where the enemy is simply nature. And there is really nothing we can do. The only hope is that next time, the country does not sit on the evidence for so long that it breaks out internationally.

But by the time the first people were getting sick in Europe and the Americas, it was just to late. In the era of modern air travel, even an immediate lockdown would only slow the spread most likely. With incubation periods so long, the hope is minimal at best of ever containing and kind of flu variant.

Now as for the variants of SHF, a completely different kettle of fish. Do not even bother, because those are so fast moving and deadly that they tend to burn themselves out long before they can spread very far. And most of those kinds of diseases which plagued humans in the past were bacteriological in nature, not viral.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

. And most of those kinds of diseases which plagued humans in the past were bacteriological in nature, not viral.

True enough. And if we don't start getting more antibiotics soon, we're going to have too many resistant bacteria to deal with. Although smallpox was fairly bad. At least twice as deadly - among healthy individuals - as this recent piker of a virus is among high-risk individuals... And Spanish Flu was just nasty (and the reverse of c19).

Like I said, if we found something with high lethality (like ebola levels) with a multi-day incubation period during which it was easily transmitted - which there is no reason to be certain something like this could not exist - our time on this planet is really limited.

And any flu variant that can freely jump from birds to swine to humans would be nasty for another reason. Migratory birds could become infected and carry it even if there was a global lockdown.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@karactr

Let me know when COVID wipes out half the population of any continent.

Maybe Antarctica? Depending on how you count the population there, as far as I know there are no native humans living there. If there are any, the loss of one might be half or more. If any of the women living there for a few years on a scientific mission get pregnant, maybe their baby counts as a native Antartican. (Is that a word? Maybe antarticle?) If born in Antarctica probably the baby is a native of the continent. I suspect there is a significant level of effort to keep Covid 19 away from Antarctica.

StarFleetCarl ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

It's a fact, at this point we are somewhere around 1 million deaths to COVID in right around a year since it spread into the human population.

Not quite. There are (as of my post) about 978,000 deaths worldwide of people WITH Covid, but not due TO Covid. Here in the US, we're at just over 200,000 deaths, but only about 15,000 of them are due to Covid. The rest are deaths where person who died HAD Covid. It may have exacerbated one (or more) existing co-morbidity that they had (high blood pressure, heart disease, cancer, pneumonia, etc.), but in and of itself, it's ... well, effectively a non-event, like you said, other than the hype.

Replies:   awnlee jawking  BarBar
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@StarFleetCarl

It may have exacerbated one (or more) existing co-morbidity that they had (high blood pressure, heart disease, cancer

That would be ironic because, basically, people don't die from cancer. So in the UK at least, deaths are medically attributed to, say, heart failure or pneumonia when cancer was the root cause. But if, as happens all too frequently in the UK, the patient is old and frail and the doctors don't want to put them through a punishing regime of treatment, they may deliberately not test for cancer so it can't appear on the death certificate anyway.

AJ

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

s/punishing/expensive

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

s/punishing/expensive

Because of the dysfunction NHS internal market system, clinical commissioning groups are more likely to gripe about the costs of testing rather than the costs of treatment, overriding GPs' medical opinions about the necessity of a referral.

Expense of treatment does play a part though, when a patient's 'Hail Mary' hope is one of the new range of expensive cancer drugs that buy a few extra weeks of life.

AJ

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

If chemo is going to be expensive (it usually is) and ultimately pointless (because the patient is liable to die no matter what) then the expense of testing is rather pointless as well.
Unless the patient is paying for all of it, and wants every possible second of survival, that is.

BarBar ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@StarFleetCarl

I agree that this pandemic is a relatively mild one compared to what could happen - and I for one hope I never have to live through a serious pandemic. However, I guess it is predictable that the conspiracy theorists are going wild with all their usual nonsense.

There are (as of my post) about 978,000 deaths worldwide of people WITH Covid, but not due TO Covid. Here in the US, we're at just over 200,000 deaths, but only about 15,000 of them are due to Covid. The rest are deaths where person who died HAD Covid.

I would be fascinated to know where you are pulling this statistic from. It is clearly false simply because of the difficulty of classifying the difference between due to Covid and other causes but with infection and then whether the comorbidity exacerbated or hastened the death but ultimately the death was due to that other condition. Not to mention other deaths that were due to overwhelmed hospitals due to the pandemic.

In the end, the only way to genuinely understand the effects of the pandemic (in terms of death rate) will be to examine the excess deaths

See for example the article here: link

To summarise the article, it looks a measuring the impact of the pandemic by comparing the excess deaths above the mean number of deaths for that particular country/region. Then it digs a bit further into the data because clearly not all excess deaths will be due to the pandemic. But the data they present also clearly shows a remarkable excess of deaths that haven't been attributed to Covid, which raises the question of whether some proportion of those were Covid related but not attributed due to not having been tested etc.

I heard a stat (but haven't been able to verify it) that so far this year, more law enforcement officers in USA have died due to covid than have died due to shootings/accidents/etc.

Ultimately, the pandemic is not as bad as it could have been. It is not as bad as some people have been claiming. But it is also a heck of a lot more than a "non-event" and trying to claim it to be so is as unhelpful as the people who are running around screaming that the sky is falling.
(edited to fix the link)

Replies:   joyR  bk69  Dominions Son  Keet
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

I heard a stat (but haven't been able to verify it) that so far this year, more law enforcement officers in USA have died due to covid than have died due to shootings/accidents/etc.

Maybe those shooting at the police had their aim adversely affected by the need to wear a mask?

More to the point, are you seriously suggesting that the deadliness of a virus can be judged by how many more police officers it kills compared to how many are fatally shot?

Replies:   BarBar
BarBar ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@joyR

More to the point, are you seriously suggesting that the deadliness of a virus can be judged by how many more police officers it kills compared to how many are fatally shot?

No, I'm not

Edited to add: I supply that as support for my argument that covid is something more than a "non-event"

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

more law enforcement officers in USA have died due to covid

Apparently, high mean donut consumption is another covid risk factor...

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

In the end, the only way to genuinely understand the effects of the pandemic (in terms of death rate) will be to examine the excess deaths

Except there are other sources of excess deaths not related to the pandemic(riots, suicides from the lockdowns, people not getting medical care for other issues due to the lockdowns) and there is no way to separate out "excess" deaths caused by covid, so that isn't one bit better.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Except there are other sources of excess deaths not related to the pandemic

As an example, in the UK it was reported on the BBC website that the figures for COVID deaths included anyone who died within two weeks of testing positive. That suggests that anyone testing positive and being hit by a bus and dying, is logged as a COVID statistic.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

As an example, in the UK it was reported on the BBC website that the figures for COVID deaths included anyone who died within two weeks of testing positive.

There was a report early on from someone claiming to be a nurse in Italy that the Italian government was counting every death in a hospital with at least one COVID patient as a COVID death.

This was the claim: you could have a hospital with one COVID patient, and if that patient lived, but 10 other patients at that hospital died of heart failure, they counted 10 COVID deaths at that hospital.

BarBar ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

That suggests that anyone testing positive and being hit by a bus and dying, is logged as a COVID statistic.

Trying to read between the lines like that can support your beliefs if that is what you want them to do. Numbers get adjusted as the death certificates come in. And those sorts of incidents get removed, and others get added. That's why we should be taking all the statistics with a grain of salt. But that doesn't stop the overall effect from being measurable (with a margin of errror).

Then D.S:

Except there are other sources of excess deaths not related to the pandemic ... and there is no way to separate out "excess" deaths caused by covid, so that isn't one bit better.

I love the way you took a quote from my post and ignored the sentence after that where I said:

Then it digs a bit further into the data because clearly not all excess deaths will be due to the pandemic

And the changes go both ways, for example deaths due to car-accidents have dropped during lockdowns. Deaths due to annual flu season have dropped due to lockdowns and increased hygene measures etc. Those changes can be catered for statistically but ultimately the "excess death rate not attributable to other causes" still turns out to be a more reliable measure than headline numbers.

StarFleet Carl ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

That suggests that anyone testing positive and being hit by a bus and dying, is logged as a COVID statistic.

That's not a suggestion - that really happens.

The Assisted Living facility my wife works at had the perfect example of that today. One of their residents had tested positive two weeks ago, but was fine and completely asymptomatic. She fell yesterday (which old folks do WAY too frequently) and broke her arm. They took her to the hospital, where she then had a stroke and died. Since she HAD tested positive, her death is considered a Covid related death.

Replies:   BarBar
BarBar ๐Ÿšซ

@StarFleet Carl

Based on your description, I would assume the doctor would have written a death certificate which would have included the medical jargon equivalent of death due to stroke resulting from complications from the broken arm.

But then you added your own assumption:

Since she HAD tested positive, her death is considered a Covid related death.

I wonder how you come by the knowledge that when that death certificate gets sent in for processing that the death gets attributed to Covid? You may be about to tell me that there was some part of the form filling out where they had to tick whether she was positive for Covid along with a dozen other possible comorbidities, but its a big jump to go from there to the CDC or equivalent organisation attributing the death to Covid.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

but its a big jump to go from there to the CDC or equivalent organisation attributing the death to Covid.

Not particularly. The CDC has incentives to inflate the death toll from COVID, there by exaggerating the threat and the importance of the CDC.

StarFleet Carl ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

I wonder how you come by the knowledge that when that death certificate gets sent in for processing that the death gets attributed to Covid? You may be about to tell me that there was some part of the form filling out where they had to tick whether she was positive for Covid along with a dozen other possible comorbidities, but its a big jump to go from there to the CDC or equivalent organisation attributing the death to Covid.

Because the CDC told them that.

The organization that my wife works for currently owns about 50 rather high end assisted living facilities in 14 states. As Director of Nursing, she's in charge of all health care decisions and procedures at her facility. That means she's involved in the corporate calls regarding the nationwide response and CDC rules, she's also involved with the state department of health as well.

If you look at their corporate chain of command, they have one national director, 4 regional directors, and then all the facility directors (her actual title is Wellness Director). They have to follow CDC guidelines for all of their paperwork, as well as their procedures.

That's one of the things that's been difficult during Covid, is that when they went on lockdown, that was it. There have been residents in the facility who, other than via phone or computer, haven't seen anyone other than staff for six months or more.

Anyway, under CDC guidelines, which are also what the state department of health follows with our appropriate state modifications, any death where the deceased tested positive, regardless of whether it was a contributing factor in the death or not, is classified as a Covid-related death, and is thus included in the national death numbers. It's simply check the boxes on the death certificate.

I'm simply trying to figure out why we're in month six of two weeks to flatten the curve so health care isn't overwhelmed, which never happened, and why isn't everyone else simply getting on with their lives like we pretty much are doing here? (Mask up if the store requires it due to their national policy, and otherwise help protect the elderly and the higher at risk population, and carry on with your lives.)

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

As an example, in the UK it was reported on the BBC website that the figures for COVID deaths included anyone who died within two weeks of testing positive.

I believe that applied only to hospital deaths.

I read a covid update article recently that claimed the UK covid death toll was currently just over 41,000. It then listed a breakdown of deaths by age using the Office of National Statistics figures and the total came to over 51,000 deaths because the ONS counts excess deaths.

Lies, damned lies and statistics :-(

AJ

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

Lies, damned lies and statistics :-(

I prefer "statistics will supply many results, but not the truth."

Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

In the end, the only way to genuinely understand the effects of the pandemic (in terms of death rate) will be to examine the excess deaths

That is the only number we should accept as reliable, or at as close to reliable as any other could be.
Just as many deaths are counted as being from Covid as there are not listed form Covid but actually are. Mostly for political reasons.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

If it were just a story, would anyone believe Covid 19 and its effects on society?

Anybody who has studied history and seen the affects of the Spanish Flu would. It just has been so long that nobody remembers it.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Anybody who has studied history and seen the affects of the Spanish Flu would. It just has been so long that nobody remembers it.

If you compare death tolls between the Spanish Flu and Covid19, the effect that Covid is having on society/civilization as a whole, is way out of proportion.

Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If you compare death tolls between the Spanish Flu and Covid19, the effect that Covid is having on society/civilization as a whole, is way out of proportion.

Different time, different economics, different society, different traveling, different population numbers. You could compare death totals but it's a number that says exactly nothing.

Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

When I get a "He would never do that" - usually it's someone passionate enough to love my stories. My character is as real or as iconic to them as Captain Kirk or Mister Spock is to me.

If I get "Didn't quite do it for me" that throws me off. Random "I hate BDSM, why do you write BDSM" and trolls downvoting intentionally.

Recently, on my long story I posted a duplicate chapter. Ch. 11 and Ch. 12 had somehow gotten duplicated. I've since corrected it. However, it wasn't until chapter 22 someone let me know.

First of all, I blame myself. I should have gone back and found that long ago. No worries there - I know that's my fault for missing it. I probably posted it, and forgot to re-read and mistook it for the proper chapter because I hadn't read the chapter before and after to realize it was out of synch.

But what it tells me is that either my story is hella-dull and no one noticed, or that no one cares enough/thinks my work is so shoddy that it doesn't matter.

Which was a tremendous blow to my desire to write today.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

But what it tells me is that either my story is hella-dull and no one noticed, or that no one cares enough/thinks my work is so shoddy that it doesn't matter.

I've had those moments, most notably when I posted a story with the wrong html setting, as the entire chapter was filled with non-understandable characters, especially the dialogue (as each smart-quote was viewed as a non-printable character). It took readers months to report the problem, and when they did I quickly fixed it (it was an easy one-line patch), but it bothered me that no one cared enough to report it, though they continued reading and enjoying the story, since the rating remained relatively high.

Sometimes, at least for authors, suspension of disbelief applies to your own sense of fallibility.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Everyone now is just terrified of death for some reason. Spanish Flu followed a mass die-off in Europe, and people then were much more accepting that death is part of the natural order.
Now, politicians fear having deaths blamed on them, which would happen no matter what. Those who are out of power will always blame those in power for anything that goes wrong.

Replies:   PotomacBob
PotomacBob ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Those who are out of power will always blame those in power for anything that goes wrong.

And would those in power claim credit for everything that goes well?

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

Typically. But nobody in their right mind would ever believe that anything done by a politician would be good for anyone not a(or that) politician, so it doesn't matter much.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If you compare death tolls between the Spanish Flu and Covid19, the effect that Covid is having on society/civilization as a whole, is way out of proportion.

Because this is the first true pandemic we have seen in 100 years. Nobody knows how to handle it, and they panic, do stupid buying that causes stores to run out of things, and do stupid things like wear cloths over their faces with does no good at all.

And politicians just feed into it, wanting to be seen to "do something", even if what they order makes absolutely no sense. I work in a medical unit in the military, and my wife has been a nurse for over 20 years. The masks almost everybody is wearing does absolutely no good against a virus, yet we are ordered to wear them anyways.

Replies:   Crosley
Crosley ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Agreed.

Simply apply the Raid test. Go into a room. Put on your mask. Spray some Raid. You'll smell it and a virus is many times less load than Raid.

irvmull ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

There was a prosperous town in a valley near me. It had a post office, gen'l store, etc. and was surrounded by productive farms. After the Spanish Flu, one (1) person was left alive in the valley. It never recovered, stores and post office rotted away, and only began to be re-populated in the 1960's.

Do you know of any towns which have been affected like that by Covid19?

Replies:   Keet  Dominions Son
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@irvmull

Do you know of any towns which have been affected like that by Covid19?

I don't know of such towns or villages but something opposite has happened in Italy: the village Ferrara Erbognone had ZERO infected villagers while the small village is in the middle of the region Lombard with very high rates of infected and death. So far it's a mystery.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@irvmull

Do you know of any towns which have been affected like that by Covid19?

No, and that was my point. Compared to the Spanish Flu, Covid19 is hardly anything yet the government's reaction has been far more severe than was the reaction to the Spanish Flu.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

the government's reaction has been far more severe than was the reaction to the Spanish Flu

Because of social media, the Twitterverse demands the government MUST be seen to be doing something and doing it NOW!

Whether it's the right thing is controversial. In the UK, the prevailing public opinion seems to be that the measures weren't severe enough and weren't introduced quickly enough. However that same public seems to expect the country to be running as normal with no inconveniences to their own lives.

AJ

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

However that same public seems to expect

I've said it before. We are a society of dimwits. Anger replaced intelligence.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If you compare death tolls between the Spanish Flu and Covid19, the effect that Covid is having on society/civilization as a whole, is way out of proportion.

Except the 1912 flu deaths took years to reach their fatality records, whereas most of the world quickly adapted to Covid-19, significantly reducing fatality rates, while a small handful of authoritarian or authoritarian wanna-be countries refused to take adequate safeguards, and suffered easily predictable results. Canceling healthcare via appointed supreme court judges favorable to your POV, does not make anyone, other than your most-dedicated fans, trust your judgement!

Still, the fights over mast wearing remain the same, except they weren't as common, since the president didn't encourage open revolt against the established safety guidelines.

StarFleet Carl ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

the other effects of the firestorms though much of the west

Anyone who knows that if you don't clear the underbrush, because it's 'not natural' ... even though it is ... knows that all you're doing is creating a situation for a firestorm.

Replies:   Jim S  Vincent Berg
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@StarFleet Carl

Anyone who knows that if you don't clear the underbrush, because it's 'not natural' ... even though it is ...

If we assume an action isn't natural because man performed it, who or what performed the natural action of brush clearance before man arrived in Kalifornia? This question puzzles me so I hope you or someone can shed light on it.

Another question that has puzzled me ever since I first saw it posed. Why aren't man's actions considered part of the natural order? I mean, why is man building a damn for man's purposes considered 'unnatural' yet a beaver building a dam for the beaver's purposes 'natural' (hat tip to Robert Heinlein for that one). And please don't say scale because that dog just doesn't hunt.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

If we assume an action isn't natural because man performed it, who or what performed the natural action of brush clearance before man arrived in Kalifornia? This question puzzles me so I hope you or someone can shed light on it.

In much of the world brush fires are a natural and regular occurrence - many local plants rely on it to clear away the brush to allow their seeds to germinate.

Mankind, in its infinite stupidity, took measures to eradicate brush fires without eradicating the brush, allowing the brush to build up with cataclysm consequences.

Some of my friends look forward to barbecue season - they 'smoke' seeds, along with their burgers, to imitate a brush fire which encourages them to germinate.

AJ

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

If we assume an action isn't natural because man performed it, who or what performed the natural action of brush clearance before man arrived in Kalifornia?

1. There is evidence that the Native Americans in the area were doing this. Aside from clearing brush and dead falls, they would go through the woods with long poles and knock low hanging dead branches off of trees.

2. A ground fire won't kill mature trees, only a canopy fire will do that.

Without people obsessively preventing ground fires, you will get ground fires from lightning strikes and other natural ignition sources frequently enough to prevent a build up of fuel on the ground sufficient for a fire to spread to the canopy.

Replies:   Jim S
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If we assume an action isn't natural because man performed it, who or what performed the natural action of brush clearance before man arrived in Kalifornia?

1. There is evidence that the Native Americans in the area were doing this. Aside from clearing brush and dead falls, they would go through the woods with long poles and knock low hanging dead branches off of trees.

Guess I should've said before Indians. Which was really my question there.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

Guess I should've said before Indians. Which was really my question there.

Frequent ground level fires from natural ignition sources (such as lightning) would prevent the build up of fuel at ground level that is needed before fires can spread to the canopy.

As I said, ground fires can't kill mature trees.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

man building a damn

He doesn't give a damn.

Replies:   Jim S
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

man building a damn

He doesn't give a damn.

Damn. Can't believe I missed that. Old age is hell.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

I mean, why is man building a damn for man's purposes considered 'unnatural' yet a beaver building a dam for the beaver's purposes 'natural' (hat tip to Robert Heinlein for that one).

I would say awareness of consequences or, to be inclusive of millennials and zeroes, potential awareness of consequences. A beaver can't game the result of a dam failing. It can't worry about fault lines and the possibility of earthquakes.

AJ

Replies:   Jim S
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

I would say awareness of consequences or, to be inclusive of millennials and zeroes, potential awareness of consequences. A beaver can't game the result of a dam failing. It can't worry about fault lines and the possibility of earthquakes.

That implies that the ability to reason and analyze is unnatural. Don't know if I can accept that. After all, isn't man's progression along the evolutionary path part of nature? So isn't man's place atop the evolutionary pyramid part of the natural order of things and, therefore, man's works regarding nature part of the, well, natural order?

ETA: And, no, I'm not trolling. It's a serious question.

Replies:   karactr  awnlee jawking  joyR
karactr ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

So isn't man's place atop the evolutionary pyramid part of the natural order of things and, therefore, man's works regarding nature part of the, well, natural order?

Personally, I would say, "Yes." But many of us have forgotten our responsiblities to our planet, or failed to achieve them. Gaia will correct us eventually if we don't remember. It will take a while. Her time scale is nothing like our brief flash. But it will be devastating to us. She will survive.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

I was thinking specifically of beaver versus man. There's a spectrum of intelligence and, while it would be a cruel turn of fate if man were the peak of evolution in our universe, there are few earthly species that possess enough self-awareness for reasoning ability. (And even then, the Japanese kill the best for their dinner tables.)

AJ

Replies:   bk69  richardshagrin
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

Man Vs Beaver

Seems appropriate type of conflict for SOL, actually.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

beaver versus man

There are schools whose students are Beavers. There is a University in Oregon like that, but I went to Ballard High School in Seattle and we were Beavers. (They discouraged the girls from showing off their beavers.)

I also was a Hampton (Virginia) crab, and University of Washington Husky (missed being a Sundodger by about 50 years), and a College of Insurance Turtle.

joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

ETA: And, no, I'm not trolling. It's a serious question.

I ought to know better, but some days I just can't see a can of worms without reaching for a can opener, so...

Ok, lets presume 'nature' includes mankind, that like beavers building a dam, our reservoirs are a natural response to a need. If that is the case, then when karactr suggests we have responsibilities to our planet, one of those is a false statement.

The only life form on this planet that can conceive a responsibility to the planet, is humankind. It is generally accepted that we can damage the planet through industry, war, over population, deforestation, etc. It is also true that only humankind has the ego to presume that the planet can be controlled by us.

Apparently the way to control the planet is to pay special taxes whilst paying extra for products deemed organic etc.

Regardless of which 'side' you are on, regardless of how difficult and/or stressful your convictions make you feel, stop for a moment and consider how much more difficult and stressful it will be in the future when our sun begins to wither and die.

There are those who believe that before our sun dies we will have the ability to travel to other planets. Many of those people would call the police if gang-bangers moved into their garden/park/golf club. Yet they never seem to consider that if there is intelligent life out there in space, their most logical response to our voyaging into space is to shoot the shit out of us. After all, why allow those who trashed their own home to move into yours?

The concept of 'Gaia' is inventive nonsense. A typically human response to fulfilling a need. "We are not helpless, 'Gaia' will look after us, will correct the imbalance, etc."

The biggest threat to mankind isn't the sun dying or the ice caps melting, or even a global virus. We are our biggest threat and no amount of taxation or political spin is going to stop the inevitable.

So isn't man's place atop the evolutionary pyramid part of the natural order of things and, therefore, man's works regarding nature part of the, well, natural order?

It depends upon how you define "the natural order". If you mean the inevitable rise and fall of various species over time, then yes. If however you mean the human construct of how we can control the natural order, then no.

If every single person on earth decided tomorrow to commit to every measure that would stop 'global warming' AND they all accepted that their lives would change drastically, that many would suffer and die, but that that was worth it, necessary. So tomorrow we stop pumping, processing and using oil, coal, gas, pesticides, plastics in any form. No more chemicals, pollution, etc. Would that stop global warming? Would it be worth the suffering and death that resulted?

By all means call 911 for an ambulance, they'll send the next horse and cart available. An electric ambulance? Oh no sir, we scrapped those because battery manufacture and disposal poisons the earth, never mind all that illegal plastic those cars were made with... No more plastic oxygen masks, no more surgical steel implements. No way to melt or forge metal without those nasty fossil fuels...

Thanks to all that suffering and all those deaths, the ice caps are growing, the seas are no longer rising. Oh and it is now possible to walk from England to France. No, not because the sea level has dropped that much, but because the ocean currents have deposited millions of tons of plastic debris in the bottleneck...

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

it is now possible to walk from England to France.

They dug a tunnel but they don't let you walk through it, they load people in vehicles on railway trains.

"The Chunnel Trains, sometimes called Euro Shuttle Trains, or just Le Shuttle, are built to carry cars, motorbikes, and a range of other road vehicles. The Chunnel trains are the fastest way to make a Channel crossing. Eurotunnel journey times are only 35 minutes (a ferry typically takes around 90 minutes)."

"You can use the tunnel as a 'foot passenger' but you can't just turn up and walk on so to speak as there is no specific provision on board the vehicle carrying trains for foot passengers. However, you can travel through the tunnel as a 'foot passenger' using public transport." (A Bus)

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

They dug a tunnel but they don't let you walk through it, they load people in vehicles on railway trains.

Didn't 'asylum seekers' manage to walk through a service tunnel some years back?

AJ

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

Didn't 'asylum seekers' manage to walk through a service tunnel some years back?

They would not have to.

Under the EU, once somebody got to one member of the EU, they could travel freely to any member of the EU. So that would be like somebody in the US having to sneak to get from California to Nevada.

And this was one of the issues that sparked Brexit in the first place.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Under the EU, once somebody got to one member of the EU, they could travel freely to any member of the EU

I believe they have to have EU citizenship to qualify for that right, and there are several states below that entitling migrants to live in a particular EU country provisionally.

AJ

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

I believe they have to have EU citizenship to qualify for that right, and there are several states below that entitling migrants to live in a particular EU country provisionally.

No, just legal residence. That is nowhere near the same as being a citizen. And there is a reason why the seekers go to countries like Greece and Italy to apply for such. They simply have to get there, get asylum, then they are free to go to any country in the EU.

And the UK has never really been seen as a haven to go to in order to get that status.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

They simply have to get there, get asylum, then they are free to go to any country in the EU.

It's not that simple. They MUST apply for asylum in the country where they enter the EU. Greece and Italy are just convenient because they are the nearest and have large coast lines. It's the EU itself that tries to spread out these people because there just to many for Greece and Italy to handle. They thought up quota for each of the members. Yep, sad, but it's a numbers game.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

If every single person on earth decided tomorrow to commit to every measure that would stop 'global warming' AND they all accepted that their lives would change drastically, that many would suffer and die, but that that was worth it, necessary. So tomorrow we stop pumping, processing and using oil, coal, gas, pesticides, plastics in any form. No more chemicals, pollution, etc. Would that stop global warming? Would it be worth the suffering and death that resulted?

Honestly, I don't think so. And I often get people mad at me when I say that "Environmentalists are so lockjawed conservative that they make cats look like liberals".

Quite literally, they picked a point in time that was known as the "Little Ice Age" for a reason, then pointed there and said it was the actual temperature the planet should be. Ignoring previous events like the Medieval Warm Period, and multiple other warming and cooling trends in the last 6,000 years.

And as I have studied geology, I look even further. During most of the history of our planet, there were no polar ice caps at all. Entire species evolved on the continent of Antarctica with unique adaptations to almost 6 months of day, then 6 months of night. Plants were what you would expect now in say the US-Canada border.

And prior to the most recent series of ice ages, there were palm forests growing around where Anchorage is today (an area known as Northern Alaska now, continental drift).

If anything studying the planet has shown me, it always changes. Always has, always will. Animals became extinct, having never been seen by humans. And this self-flagellation generally pisses me off because of it's arrogance.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

If anything studying the planet has shown me, it always changes. Always has, always will. Animals became extinct, having never been seen by humans. And this self-flagellation generally pisses me off because of it's arrogance.

You are right, the planet is always in a state of changing but there's no denying that we are very fast killing of an environment that is livable for us humans. If corona has proven one thing than it is that we humans do make a huge difference on the current environment. Just a few months with virtually no air travel caused the air pollution to almost totally disappear in some places. Do you have any idea how important clean air is for our survival? Not only medically but also economically. Air pollution is one of the largest cost factors in health care. It's incredible that the earth can recover that fast but arrogant humans like you think that we can just start polluting again without consequences because 'that's how nature works'. So you are right, but at same same time you are so wrong I can't find the words to describe it.

Replies:   joyR  Mushroom
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

It's incredible that the earth can recover that fast but arrogant humans like you think that we can just start polluting again without consequences because 'that's how nature works'.

Maybe Mushroom is that arrogant, then again perhaps that attitude is actually more about honesty. I doubt anyone outside of a political spin contest would claim that air travel isn't a source of pollution, or that pollution does not have consequences.

The simply (inconvenient) truth is that air travel isn't going to stop. Period. Anyone who thinks it will cease is lying, to themselves as much as to others. So a more truthful approach is to accept that it causes pollution and that there are consequences whilst also accepting the alternatives are unacceptable and impractical.

It is a pointless exercise to try to tax the world into utopia. There are very few if any sources of pollution that have been eradicated by any government. Reduced, yes, but of course with a special license etc it is allowed, that isn't eradication. Nor is it effective if one part of the world reduces pollution whilst another part continues or even increases that same pollution.

Perhaps it is more arrogant to believe that the entire world will willingly accept the measures necessary to stop pollution, let alone clean up the mess. Even more arrogant to believe that doing so will stop climate change and freeze it (pun intended) in a state that is considered "natural" because that state was cherry picked from all of the variations that have already occurred, and will continue to occur, despite mankind and long after we become extinct.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Perhaps it is more arrogant to believe that the entire world will willingly accept the measures necessary to stop pollution, let alone clean up the mess.

Overall I agree with your statements but it's not arrogance, it's blindness and ignorance. I see it happening all around me and in the rest of the world. Everybody talks about all that we have to do to clean up the environment and at the same time they DO nothing. So no, very, very few are willing to accept the consequences to stop or even lessen pollution, even worse, with each new generation they are becoming worse polluters. Probably because they start of in an already heavily polluted world which they see as normal and thus don't see the little increases that happen every year.
The reality is that some people get rich from making up all kinds of useless actions to 'clean up, stop climate change'. Here in the Netherlands they are forcing towards getting away from natural gas because we have to lower CO2 output. 100 kilometers to the east in Germany they are building completely new gas networks... because natural gas has a lower CO2 output than other resources. Totally insane. You can't stop natural climate change but you can stop excessive pollution which in turn does have a partial impact on climate change.
You know what happened/is happening to the tobacco industry: every once in while a new lawsuit. I wonder when the first lawsuit is initiated against one of the biggest polluters like air line companies because they cause a very substantial part of air pollution.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

e air line companies because they cause a very substantial part of air pollution.

Actually, they don't.

Chinese coal-fired power plants produce far more 'air pollution' than airlines. Even if you count something as meaningless as CO2 production. Hell, the population of India produces a shitload more CO2 than any airline, just by breathing. And CO2 can be quite easily removed from the air... vast swathes of the oceans don't contribute at all to CO2 capture, even though the oceans are the single greatest supplier of photosynthesizers. If the 'barren' portions of the oceans were seeded with the right micronutrients (iron, mostly, with traces of copper and phosphorus, IIRC) they could remove at least as much more CO2 from the atmosphere as the rain forests do. (And there's a bunch of gasses that are more 'harmful' to the atmosphere than CO2. Methane, for example. Which should really be being captured and used to fire more energy production, which would release the far less 'harmful' CO2. Which could also be captured in rooftop algae farms, etc.)

The thing is, a lot of the technology exists today. It just isn't economically viable. R&D to make it viable will continue until it's implemented, once it's more cost-effective.

The fact is, if we're capable of accidentally changing the environment, we really should have no challenges in completely terraforming planets that we could expand to. If we can't figure out how to effectively change the environment when we're actively trying, it's a safe bet we're not actually the root cause of environmental change.

Replies:   Keet  joyR
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

Chinese coal-fired power plants produce far more 'air pollution' than airlines.

China is very busy in replacing those power plants and is actually very progressive in trying to lower pollution levels, they have to, they are almost choking themselves in the industrial regions. Of course they are still by far the biggest polluter but set of against pollution per capita the US for example is twice as big a polluter, mainly because of industry and cattle farms.
And of course air travel is only part of the overall air pollution but in the transport section of the polluters it's a big one. Cattle is one of the reasons why Australia is one of the large polluters. India is a big coal burner, also very bad for our air quality.
The way I see it there are several possibilities to lower air pollution in a relatively short time but as said before, it will take sacrifices from the people and I don't see many giving up their far away holiday or their daily chunk of meat.

joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

The fact is, if we're capable of accidentally changing the environment, we really should have no challenges in completely terraforming planets that we could expand to.

Please read what you've written again, because it sounds like your opinion is that trashing an environment is all the qualification needed to construct an entirely man made environment on another planet. Really?

Exactly how do you propose to power the machines necessary to terraform an entire planet, WITHOUT using a source that creates pollution? Have you ever seen a solar powered excavator? (That does not need metal, plastic etc to construct it or fossil fuel byproducts to lubricate it.)

Replies:   Dominions Son  bk69  Jim S
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Have you ever seen a solar powered excavator? (That does not need metal, plastic etc to construct it or fossil fuel byproducts to lubricate it.)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_(animal)

Replies:   joyR  richardshagrin
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_(animal)

Cute, but not actually solar powered. Also highly unlikely to be useful in terraforming an entire planet as they currently don't even terraform an entire lawn...

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Cute, but not actually solar powered.

The eat plants, plants grow on solar energy.

Also highly unlikely to be useful in terraforming an entire planet

Genetic engineering. We just need to make them bigger.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

And there, we now have the backstory behind the movie Tremors.

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Mole

"When wildlife biologists talk about moles, they're usually referring to the tiny, gray rodents that dig underground to find delicious earthworms. But when chemists talk about moles, they're usually referring to a scientific term. The term 'mole' represents a number, in the same way the word 'dozen' represents 12 of something. In this case, one mole represents the enormous (and slightly strange) number, 6.02 x 10 to the 23rd power.

This is a huge number! To help you and any wildlife biologists reading this module get a sense of just how many things are in one mole, we can use an analogy with another small, gray rodent: the gray squirrel (Figure 1). One gray squirrel weighs roughly 500 grams, or as much as a hardback book. One dozen gray squirrels weigh about 6,000 grams, or a little more than a medium-sized bowling ball. And one mole of gray squirrels weighs 301,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 gramsโ€”more than four times the mass of the moon!"

So moles (and avogadro's number which is related) probably will have some influence in at least getting to other planets to terraform. If the idea is frightening, then it may be terrorforming.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

What I said was:
IF mankind is capable of vastly changing the environment WHEN NOT INTENDING TO, then it stands to reason the IF mankind INTENDED TO CHANGE AN ENVIRONMENT, we'd be able to make even bigger changes, hence terraforming Venus or Mars should be quite doable.

The climate always changes. Claiming that this time is completely because of mankind's actions is arrogant as hell, and if you're going to be that arrogant, be consistent enough to accept we could change the environment of Mars or Venus even more. (And that we could likely change Earth's environment whatever way we wanted if we really tried.)

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@bk69

terraforming Venus or Mars

There is a fairly popular game about terraforming Mars. There is an extension of that game to include terraforming Venus. "Terraforming Mars: Venus Next (2017)
The second expansion brings players to terraform Venus as well."

People use their time for strange entertainments. Like reading stories on SOL.

If you want to know more about the game, look it up on "boardgamegeek terraforming mars".

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

IF mankind is capable of vastly changing the environment WHEN NOT INTENDING TO, then it stands to reason the IF mankind INTENDED TO CHANGE AN ENVIRONMENT, we'd be able to make even bigger changes, hence terraforming Venus or Mars should be quite doable.

That argument bothers me. It sounds too much like:
If mankind is capable of vastly increasing entropy when not intending to, then it stands to reason that mankind should be able to make even bigger decreases in entropy if it intended to.

AJ

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

No.
Your argument:
If A can unintentionally do B, A should be able to intentionally do NOT B to a greater extent.
My argument:
If A can unintentionally do B to C, A should be able to intentionally do B to D or E to a greater extent.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

AJ and BK are talking past each other.

AJ sees B=Damage the climate, so terraforming in a positive way would be not B. Also AJ thinks that B increases entropy, where as terraforming decreases entropy.

BK sees B=Change the Climate, with no value judgement about the nature of the change.

B[BK] makes for a very different argument than B[AJ]

I would tend towards agreeing with BK on this.

Replies:   awnlee jawking  bk69
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

It's the natural order of things for entropy to increase. Damage to the environment has to represent an increase in entropy.

Mars and Venus both allegedly had climates closer to Earth in the past. An increase in entropy accompanied their move away from an Earth-like environment. A move back towards an Earth-like environment would therefore represent a local decrease in entropy. I suspect it's theoretically possible but impossibly expensive.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

It's the natural order of things for entropy to increase.

True.

Damage to the environment has to represent an increase in entropy.

1. No, it doesn't
2. Climate change, even climate change unintentionally caused by human action, is not equal to damage to the environment.

BK was talking about climate change, not damage to the environment.

Replies:   awnlee_jawking
awnlee_jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

BK was talking about climate change, not damage to the environment.

I'll remind you of BK's words that prompted this discussion:

IF mankind is capable of vastly changing the environment WHEN NOT INTENDING TO, then it stands to reason the IF mankind INTENDED TO CHANGE AN ENVIRONMENT, we'd be able to make even bigger changes, hence terraforming Venus or Mars should be quite doable

AJ

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

BK sees B=Change the Climate, with no value judgement about the nature of the change.

Exactly.

Value judgments are by nature subjective. I wanted to treat the subject logically and scientifically.

joyR ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@bk69

The climate always changes. Claiming that this time is completely because of mankind's actions is arrogant as hell,

I agree.

and if you're going to be that arrogant, be consistent enough to accept we could change the environment of Mars or Venus even more.

No. Whilst we have changed earth in many ways, it wasn't on purpose to achieve an agreed objective. Vandalism isn't a qualification for construction ability.

Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Exactly how do you propose to power the machines necessary to terraform an entire planet, WITHOUT using a source that creates pollution?

And how do you define pollution on a planet being terraformed? Remember that oxygen was originally a pollutant and responsible for the first mass extinction of life on the planet.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

You are right, the planet is always in a state of changing but there's no denying that we are very fast killing of an environment that is livable for us humans. If corona has proven one thing than it is that we humans do make a huge difference on the current environment. Just a few months with virtually no air travel caused the air pollution to almost totally disappear in some places.

Yea, I do doubt that humans are "killing the planet". Affect, yes. Change, no doubt. But if anything, the planet has shown it is amazingly robust, and able to bounce back from incredible blows and carry on just fine.

Our planet has been struck by at least 7 asteroids as large or larger than the one that wiped out the dinosaurs. We have also gone from "snowball earth" to "hothouse earth" at least twice. The placement of continents has resulted in most of the oceans becoming massive death zones and the ocean currents largely stopping. Yet, life continued on.

And sorry, but that claim about aircraft I find really hard to believe. An area that had so much air traffic that such was the cause of the majority of their pollution?

It's incredible that the earth can recover that fast but arrogant humans like you think that we can just start polluting again without consequences because 'that's how nature works'.

But this is something I love whenever I see it. Somebody then pretty much makes something up and projects it onto me. That is not something I ever said, and is not anything I would have said because I do not believe it. Yet here you are, trying to project onto me some kind of statement. If all you can do is give histrionics and make up things for me to believe, then we really do not have anything to discuss here.

Am I arrogant, no. However, what I am is confident in the ability of the planet to recover from almost anything. And that nothing is as "first time ever" that is so often presented as so.

And that is borne out in the geologic record. This is a science fact and can not be denied, unless you are a "young earth creationist", and think fossils were placed there by a mischievous god. Like large palm forests and crocodiles living in Alaska. Or a large, diverse, and thriving ecosystem on Antarctica, which had actually evolved there so had been in place for millions of years.

And we know that the current "Ice Ages" are an aberration in the climate of the planet, only stretching back around 2.5 million years. Prior to that, the North Polar region was a vast ice free ocean. And as each Ice Age has occurred, the effects were less and the interglacial between them was longer and warmer than the one before.

Me, I just put my bets on science that this will continue. And we have yet to see the effects like that of the last interglacial. With tropical rainforests in North Africa, and areas like the Gobi turning into grasslands.

Replies:   Jim S
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

And we know that the current "Ice Ages" are an aberration in the climate of the planet, only stretching back around 2.5 million years.

Sure you don't mean 2.5 billion (with a b)? Quick research shows six and possibly seven major glaciations have been identified extending back that far. Granted, though, earth has been relatively ice free with periods of non glaciation far exceeding periods of ice age.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

Sure you don't mean 2.5 billion (with a b)?

Yes, I do mean the current one. Most commonly known as the Quaternary Ice Age, it started roughly 2.58 mya if you want to be accurate.

You are thinking of the Huronian, which was roughly 2.4 gya. (G, not B). And there were 3 other ice ages between that one and our current one. Those are the 5 major glaciations, but there have been smaller ones also. Our current cycle has had at least 8 known major glaciations, separated by interglacials. And we know that after each instance of glaciation, the interglacials have been longer each time. Originally around 41 ky, but the last one was almost 100 ky. If this trend follows, it will just keep getting warmer and warmer, and will likely last so long that Homo Sapiens Sapiens is replaced by the next hominid.

In other words, expect the North Pole ice cap to vanish, most of the ice along Greenland to vanish, and the coastline of Antarctica to start supporting other forms of wildlife, as it was at the end of the last interglacial.

This is just a fact, the geological record says that is what will happen. The Permafrost line will likely move to to around the Arctic Circle, and wetlands will start to push against the Sahara, just like last time.

But here is the good news. In about 10-15 ky, once the oceans have swelled from more runoff, the air will also start to become more humid. Plant life will start to grow rampant, as CO2 is natural plant food. We are still in an intermediary stage, as the planet has yet to adapt to the increased water and decreased salinity of the oceans. Eventually the atmosphere will start to retain more water, and drop it into more areas.

karactr ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

The concept of 'Gaia' is inventive nonsense. A typically human response to fulfilling a need. "We are not helpless, 'Gaia' will look after us, will correct the imbalance, etc."

joy, I think you misunderstand the Gaia concept. Or at least my interpretation of it. Gaia won't look after us, Gaia looks after Gaia. Do you care about a termite? Or even a colony of them living in your corner window?

Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

It depends upon how you define "the natural order". If you mean the inevitable rise and fall of various species over time, then yes. If however you mean the human construct of how we can control the natural order, then no.

The question isn't whether or not we can control nature (we can't, only affect it) but whether we're part of it or not.

A lot of what you're saying describes the hubris prevalent in the educated that think that man is the difference maker in the natural order. I'll acknowledge that we may some minor effect but then think about the Siberian Traps or Chixulub and realize that nature can swat us like we do mosquitoes any time it wants. Any control the climate change proponents maintain that we have is illusory especially in light of those events.

In any case, I worry about the pollution also. It seems we still haven't learned yet not to foul our own nests. That bothers me.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

The question isn't whether or not we can control nature (we can't, only affect it) but whether we're part of it or not.

Simple. We are part of nature. Nature isn't something we can choose to opt out of. The possible exception would be if the human race didn't evolve her on earth but arrived here from another place. Except that since we have been here so long, and any original culture has been obliterated, we would still be part of nature.

No, I don't believe we are remnants of an alien culture.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

No, I don't believe we are remnants of an alien culture.

Of course not. That would be ridiculous. Our ancestors didn't come from another planet, they came from another dimension. :)

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

...and they were sent here to be a reality TV show for the denizens of yet another dimension? Yeah, heard that theory before.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

...and they were sent here to be a reality TV show for the denizens of yet another dimension? Yeah, heard that theory before.

No, no, that's all wrong. They came here running away from the reality TV show that was their home dimension.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@StarFleet Carl

Anyone who knows that if you don't clear the underbrush, because it's 'not natural' ... even though it is ... knows that all you're doing is creating a situation for a firestorm.

Is that part of the 'raking the forests' defense?

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

He would never do that!

In a way that's a compliment. It means the author has made the reader care about the character.

AJ

Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ

Can we not do politics?

Got a one vote in my 22 chapter story today. 1 is for "you call this a story".

That was disheartening

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

Got a one vote in my 22 chapter story today. 1 is for "you call this a story".

That was disheartening

You always need to follow-up with readers, even obvious haters, to put their critiques in context. Are their critiques political in nature, or based solely on racial or sexist stereotypes? Then you can easily ignore them, they're ONLY that readers personal opinion on the current state of national politics.

But, if they have a valid point, it's worth hearing them out. As I've stated before, rather the verdict is as simple or clear cut as they first claim, but when you get them talking, their true rational quickly becomes obvious (mainly by reading between the lines). In that case, you can quantify the reason and deal with it as you will. But, if it's entirely political, don't expect a 'compromise' will help, and the only thing they'll accept is a complete capitulation, and your 'coming over' to their side in ALL matters (i.e. there's no way you can correct anything in the story to suite them).

karactr ๐Ÿšซ

Especially in areas that are historically and biologically prone to fire storms. People really need to realize and accept the geological/biological/geographical risks of living in certain places.
Volcanic flow areas and natural flood plains make GREAT farm land, but, oh yeah, they can kill you or destroy anything you build. Any area has it's own natural issues--hurricanes, tornados, earthguakes, wild fires, draught, flooding, to name a few--that can NOT be avoided. They are going to happen. Trying to suppress it just makes it worse when it DOES happen.
You chose to live there. Quit bitching about it.

The masks almost everybody is wearing does absolutely no good against a virus, yet we are ordered to wear them anyways.

I've been, reluctantly, following mandated precautions and just acquired Strep Throat. How can such measures stop a million times smaller virus when they don't prevent a huge ol' bacteria?

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@karactr

I've been, reluctantly, following mandated precautions and just acquired Strep Throat. How can such measures stop a million times smaller virus when they don't prevent a huge ol' bacteria?

The masks aren't supposed to stop the virus from getting to you, they are meant to stop the virus from spreading to far away from you. It's a misconception that you wear a mask to protect yourself, you are wearing it to protect others. In other words: others are wearing a mask to protect YOU.
The masks don't have to be so good to stop the virus from getting through the material, that's impossible without large masks with expensive filters. The masks limit the virus from spreading to far out in the air. That is the reason why social distancing works. With a mask the virus can't get beyond that reach, and being outside makes it even more effective. Just think about what happens if you sneeze with or without a mask and what difference that makes in spreading the particles. It doesn't even need scientific tests, it's plain simple application of logic we learned in school.

Replies:   Eddie Davidson
Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Is there some place in America that is not prone to natural disasters?

Wildfires in California and Oregon, Inland Hurricanes in Iowa, Floording, Hurricane in Louisina, Earthquakes, tornados, etc.

It's pretty much not fair to tell people "You chose to live there - so just deal with it"

We should be above punishing the victims of natural disasters.

When did we as a society become so rotten?

Replies:   Keet  karactr
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

When did we as a society become so rotten?

I suspect your post was meant to be a reply to karactr
?

karactr ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

When did we as a society become so rotten?

Thank you, Keet, I knew it was meant for me.

I am neither "rotten" (as you put it) nor callous. I just expect something of everyone that today's society tends to want to ignore.

Every individual needs to accept responsibility for the consequences of their own choices and actions. If you act or choose poorly then learn from the consequences when they occur.

Since the answer to the question of why the wildfires in our western states are worse now then they were 100 years ago is a political one, I am not going to get into it here. I am not punishing them. The fires themselves, among other things out there, are the punishment for poor choices going back multiple decades.

So, yes. "Youse pays your money. Youse takes your chances."

Replies:   Eddie Davidson
Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ

@karactr

100 years ago that is what we did.

If you lived through an earthquake and could claw your way out, you could rebuild.

They still do it in third world countries.

I'd rather live in a society that protects it's people and gives them the benefit of their tax dollars. Natural disasters should not be the end for people simply because nature took everything away.

You most certainly are callous, and when karma finally gives you a natural disaster or sits you in a wheelchair because of something outside of your control, you'll certainly feel quite differently.

no place is safe from natural disasters in the US and as I see it - it's only getting more intense.

Replies:   Dominions Son  karactr
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Eddie Davidson

no place is safe from natural disasters in the US and as I see it - it's only getting more intense.

This is true, however, there are areas where certain kinds of natural disasters occur on a semi-regular basis.

Some kinds of natural disasters are unpredictable and can strike almost anywhere, but some are very predictable.

People who move into areas with predictable recurring disasters either need to take appropriate precautions and/or do so mostly at their own risk

and when karma finally gives you a natural disaster or sits you in a wheelchair because of something outside of your control

Living near a known fault line or in a known flood plain is not something that is outside of your control.

I won't go so far as saying no aid should be available to people hit by such predictable recurring disasters, but any aid should mostly be predicated on relocation.

karactr ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

You most certainly are callous, and when karma finally gives you a natural disaster or sits you in a wheelchair because of something outside of your control, you'll certainly feel quite differently.

Surely, you jest? I've lived in hurricane, tornado, flood country most of my life. Sometimes rebuild, sometimes make do, sometimes relocate and start over from scratch. Sometimes just be glad it missed you by a state. The COPD is my own fool fault, but I don't whine about it. My late wife's brain tumor and subsequent 3.5 year stay in nursing homes before passing, while Medicaid insisted on us using everything we had built up before they would help was karma? Really, whose dog did I kill? My fibromyalgia? Is that karma, too? Or a result of serving my country in the Gulf War like the VA says?

Do I need to continue? I just want to be left alone to live my life. You want someone to hold your hand. And, everyone else's apparently. Do you need help wiping your ass too?

I do not wonder now why I can not appreciate you work.

Fin.

karactr ๐Ÿšซ

Yes. The tree huggers are causing worse wildfires. Lmao.

Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@karactr

So if we just cross-cut all our forests down, no fires?

what about the inevitable flooding from removing trees that absorb that rain water?

and you say this never happeend before, because for 100s of years California and Oregon raked all OF their forests?

Trump agrees with you. He also believes Bleach, Light, Hydroxyclholoriquine, Oleander and coagulated blood will somehow cure the coronavirus. So I am going to file this in the appropriate expert level file cabinent I keep nearby my desk.

I thought this thread had something to do with reader feedback?

Replies:   karactr  Torsian
karactr ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

So if we just cross-cut all our forests down, no fires?

No, that is idiotic. You allow moderate old growth lumber operations and have them clear underbrush and manage young growth while they are at it. Yes, that would probably mean controlled burns and relearning how to properly use resources. It's called land and resource management. Instead you get vast "protected" areas where timber operations are totally off limits that are left to go fallow and eventually havoc is wrecked.

Moderation is a dying quality these days apparently.

And your comment about Trump just tells me you are not a critical thinker. Nor have you figured out how he likes to tweak people to keep them off balanced.

I've read your posts. I'm giving feed back.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@karactr

Moderation is a dying quality these days apparently.

It died long ago. And the funny thing is, far to many people tend to twist things that have not a damned thing to do with politics into a political issue.

And yes, I have my own issue with "tree huggers". Not a surprise to many who have read my stories, I am from Idaho. And I consider myself an "old school Conservationist". Which means I recognize the importance of preserving and maintaining our natural resources, and at the same time using and harvesting them in a safe and responsible manner.

Not "clear cutting" huge areas of land, but also not trying to pretend it is a vast museum to never be entered, then whining and crying when after being largely left alone for decades it all burns to the ground because it was not maintained.

And also, not swallowing the hogwash many seem to believe about the "Wise and spiritual caretakers of the natural world" that were my ancestors. Palentologists track the wanderings of the Indians largely by their garbage dumps. They would move into an area, hunt it all out, then move on when there was no game left, and their homes were overflowing with garbage.

They performed "slash and burn" agriculture, which also had a benefit of creating meadows that the deer like. And there were so few of them that they could do this for thousands of years, living locked into a neolithic lifestyle that Asia and Europe had left 10,000 years earlier.

But far to many still live with the Disneyfied version, they were all so wise and did things to take care of nature. Nope, there were just not enough of them to do any lasting damage because very few groups ever learned how to make much more than a stick tied to a rock for a weapon, and making a crude hut out of a bunch of twigs.

They really were around 7,000 years behind the rest of the world.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Mushroom

but also not trying to pretend it is a vast museum to never be entered, then whining and crying when after being largely left alone for decades it all burns to the ground because it was not maintained.

I used to live in the middle of the desert in Scottsdale, AZ. Not a forest, but a lot of dead stuff that dries out in our arid climate. Between the back of my yard and the golf course was an NAOS (Natural Area Open Space) which was on my property that couldn't be touched. The City of Scottsdale said I couldn't even pick up a twig because some bird may want to use it for a nest.

I ignored them and kept it clean.

And then there was a fire in Cave Creek which borders Scottsdale on the north and was very close to where I lived. It was heading our way, but the great firemen put it out.

All of a sudden the City of Scottsdale had a change of heart and allowed us to clear out the brush so-many feet from our houses. In fact, the fire department said if my neighbor had theirs cleared and I didn't, they would put my neighbor's fire out first.

You do have to maintain protected areas if you're worried about fire.

I used to have a summer home in the White Mountains in eastern (and somewhat northern AZ) where there were forests (pine and aspen trees). We often had forest fires except one area. A beautiful stretch of forest on the Indian reservation. The Indians did forest maintenance there.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

I used to have a summer home in the White Mountains in eastern (and somewhat northern AZ) where there were forests (pine and aspen trees). We often had forest fires except one area. A beautiful stretch of forest on the Indian reservation. The Indians did forest maintenance there.

Because it is good for tourists, and they can largely tell the BLM and state to "go piss on a rope". Unlike their ancestors, they now live in a single area, and can not just move on if the place they are in now become unlivable.

California and more recently Oregon have been suffering from increasingly severe wildfires, and more and more real forestry experts are blaming the severity of this on the lack of maintenance. Other states like Idaho and Wyoming also suffer from fires, but nowhere near as large in area because they do maintain their forests. For the 2nd time in 3 years I have seen entire cities destroyed, and people scream at everything but this as the problem.

It was ironic last week when I had a friend contact me to make sure I was safe from the massive fire outside of Oroville (again), only to tell them I had already left there, but was dealing with the same issue in Oregon now.

Fire is good for the environment, and is the way nature managed forests since trees evolved. Many trees even require fire, as without it no new trees can grow. And unless you replace the massive efforts to stop all fires with proper maintenance and clearing, when a fire does happen it leaves nothing behind.

Torsian ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

My question is pretty well answered seeing the writer feedback. Feel free to continue ....

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@karactr

Yes. The tree huggers are causing worse wildfires. Lmao.

Simplistic people look for simplistic solutions to complex problems and expect them to work.

AJ

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

Sounds like humans will want to move north if they live in the northern hemisphere and south if they live in the southern hemisphere. Siberia, Alaska, Northern Canada and Southern South America would be better places to live, if I understand what you indicate will happen. Don't know about Australia. Is it far enough south to improve in the new world order?

Replies:   bk69  Keet
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

Not really. Maybe Tasmania.

Although there's also one possibility you've overlooked - living at altitude.

Of course, the simpler approach is the opposite - underground. It's only the insistence on living just at or above ground level that makes ambient temperature uncomfortable.

Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

Norway will become an even better place than it already is. They have a northern top that is very sparsely populated because of the cold. Give it time and it will become paradise. Alaska! The new Bahama's!

BarBar ๐Ÿšซ

Of course, it needs to be remembered that talk of the next ice age and intermediary periods etc are all in geologic time where 1,000 years or even 10,000 years is considered sudden.

Right now, the issue is a very sudden case of warming where serious effects will be felt within 100 years. It has already started having noticeable effects across the world.

What will the effects be? Hard to answer precisely but it will have an effect on our current megacities and our current crop producing lands and there are a range of predictions out there depending on the severity of the change.

Can we mitigate the effects? Yes. There are some simple changes we can make and many countries have started making that will have some effect on the severity of the changes.

Mushroom makes the point that the Earth will recover and go on. Of course it will. After the previous great die-offs in geologic time, it took a while (geologically speaking) but life came back and replaced everything that had been lost.

In the meantime, for us and our children and our grandchildren, life won't be quite as comfortable as it has been for a while.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

Right now, the issue is a very sudden case of warming where serious effects will be felt within 100 years. It has already started having noticeable effects across the world.

And this has happened before as well.

The Medieval Warm Period along with the Roman Warm Period are both some of the hottest temperatures in the last 2,000+ years.

And the MWP ended in around 1250 CE, and we then sank immediately 50 years later into the Little Ice Age. From an era of high temperatures, to where glaciers were suddenly advancing across Europe and North America again.
Once again, cycles that have always happened on our planet, and I have yet to hear people running around screaming that Paleolithic humans caused the end of the last Ice Age.

Replies:   BarBar  BarBar  Keet  Jim S
BarBar ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

The Medieval Warm Period along with the Roman Warm Period are both some of the hottest temperatures in the last 2,000+ years.

The Medieval Warm Period has been shown to have been localised to Europe. It wasn't a global warm period

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

The Medieval Warm Period has been shown to have been localised to Europe. It wasn't a global warm period

Wrong. It went much farther than that. The Vikings found a warm habitat when they arrived in North America and founded their Vineland colony. A colony that ended shortly afterwards when the climate turned cold again.

Also warmer and dryer weather as far south as Florida and California. And the record of it can be found in Antarctic ice cores as well. And sediment cores from lakes in Asia, Japan, and South America.

It was a global event, where you get the idea it is only in Europe, I have no idea.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

A number of the 'destroy the economy to save the planet' types (and some of the scientists whose research they've directed through controlling pretty much all the grants in the field) started making that one of their talking points a few years back.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@bk69

They have to erase the Medieval Warm Period and the Roman Warm Period to make current warming look unprecedented and catastrophic.

The truth is far from global warming being catastrophic, warmer=better.

The lesson of all of human history is that we thrive when it's warmest and suffer when it's coldest.

Replies:   madnige  Mushroom
madnige ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

The lesson of all of human history is that we thrive when it's warmest and suffer when it's coldest.

I'd much rather spend an hour in a freezer than in an oven.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@madnige

I'd much rather spend an hour in a freezer than in an oven.

Not a good or fair analogy to realistic climate conditions even given a worst case scenario for global warming.

Assuming you are naked, (to eliminate differences due to protective clothing) you wouldn't survive for a hour in either, but you'd probably last longer in the oven (at 300F/148C).

Absent special protective gear, just normal every day clothes, which do you think you would survive in the longest: Antarctica in September (-71F/-52C), or Death Vally, California (134F/56.6C)?

Replies:   bk69  Mushroom
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Easily Antarctica. Dehydration would be the main threat (actually in both cases) but at least in Antarctica, you have a water supply.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@bk69

Easily Antarctica. Dehydration would be the main threat (actually in both cases) but at least in Antarctica, you have a water supply.

Sorry, note: I specified no special protective clothing, so no warm winter jacket. Under the conditions I specified in Antarctica in the coldest month (September) you would freeze to death long before dehydration was an issue.

With no protection from the elements beyond what you can cobble together on the fly, you could survive at least a day in Death valley, you wouldn't even survive an hour in Antarctica.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@bk69

Easily Antarctica. Dehydration would be the main threat (actually in both cases) but at least in Antarctica, you have a water supply.

Let me clarify the scenario I intended. With only the clothes you are wearing as you read this, you will be dropped in Antarctica or Death Valley.

No shelter unless you can find natural shelter or build it from materials available in the environment.

No fire, unless you can create it from materials in the environment and what's in your pockets right now.

Do you really think you would survive long enough in Antarctica for dehydration to become an issue?

Replies:   bk69  Jim S
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Hands would likely be lost to frostbite. But easily after using them to prepare a slit trench in the snow. You'd be amazed at the protection from the elements that would provide.
And at that point? Yes, dehydration would be a major concern. Humidity approaching 0%, every breath reduces water reserves. Now, while I would have the advantage of knowing that it'd be a problem to deal with (many dehydration victims never realize winter will dehydrate them) there's still the issue of melting snow to produce water. Attempting to eat snow would be counterproductive, as it would lower core temps and offset any gains in delaying dehydration.

However, let's extend your challenge: which environment could you find more comfortable with the lowest level of technology?
Hint: antarctica requires: warm clothing, igloo, fire
death valley requires: A/C, generator, insulation

Replies:   Dominions Son  Mushroom
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@bk69

You'd be amazed at the protection from the elements that would provide.

Enough to keep from freezing to death within hours at an ambient temp without wind chill of -71F? I don't think so.

However, let's extend your challenge: which environment could you find more comfortable with the lowest level of technology?

Hint: antarctica requires: warm clothing, igloo, fire

death valley requires: A/C, generator, insulation

Response:

You posited the lowest level of technology, so no modern industrially produced arctic clothing. Warm clothing means fur from something you killed yourself.

Antarctica has nothing you can kill to get fur to make warm clothing and nothing to burn absent modern technology. Without modern technology, Antarctica is uninhabitable.

Death valley does not require A/C, people have lived there since before electricity. It requires shelter from the sun and a sufficient source of drinkable water, and that's it. Is it an easy, comfortable existence, no, but it's possible.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

However, let's extend your challenge: which environment could you find more comfortable with the lowest level of technology?
Hint: antarctica requires: warm clothing, igloo, fire
death valley requires: A/C, generator, insulation

Antarctica: Almost no fuel for a fire, no ability to grow food, limited ability for wild game. Result, no matter what death by malnutrition if not starvation.
Death Valley, none of those you listed. But I also recognize that most people are highly pampered, and can not comprehend living with discomfort. But all you would need is a shovel so you can dig a hole in the ground (or better still in the side of a cliff or hill).

Of course, I have also been trained to survive at the most basic of levels. With Desert, Arctic, and Jungle conditions included. Arctic, is actually fairly survivable. But Antarctic? Nope, forget that. Best you can hope is that some future expedition can recover your body.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Mushroom

Antarctica: Almost no fuel for a fire, no ability to grow food, limited ability for wild game. Result, no matter what death by malnutrition if not starvation.

Without fire you won't live long enough to starve.

Without modern weaponry (guns), What wild game you might find in Antarctica is more likely to end up eating you, assuming you manage to find it before you freeze to death.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Without modern weaponry (guns), What wild game you might find in Antarctica is more likely to end up eating you, assuming you manage to find it before you freeze to death.

Really? Have some strange form of giant mutated penguin evolved there that I have not heard of before?

And caves and ice shelters can actually keep a human alive for quite a long period of time. Even without a fire.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Mushroom

Have some strange form of giant mutated penguin evolved there that I have not heard of before?

No, but given the posited lowest possible tech (stone age), the most pressing need for Antarctic survival isn't food, it's hides with fur to make warm clothing.

You can't make warm enough clothes from penguins. You would have to go hunting for what marine mammals might come up on the shore.

Though it might be amusing to watch someone try to hunt penguins in Antarctia with only stone age weapons they made by hand from materials available on Antarctia.

And caves and ice shelters can actually keep a human alive for quite a long period of time. Even without a fire.

At an ambient temp of -71F(this is the average September temp for Antarctica) without wind chill? Not buying it.

Replies:   bk69  Mushroom
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

No, but given the posited lowest possible tech

Actually, I never went there..
I was merely pointing out that it is far more possible to adapt to become comfortable in a cold environment, while with a hot environment the only real option is to change the environment in order to make it comfortable. (It's always possible to layer on more clothing. It's not possible to remove layers beyond naked.)

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

At an ambient temp of -71F(this is the average September temp for Antarctica) without wind chill? Not buying it.

Oh, so many mistakes.

The average temperature in the coastal area is only 14F. Deep winter, around 0F. You are giving the temperature for the deep interior, where nothing would live long as there is no food. And September is like early spring there.

Basically you are giving the temperature for Barrow, Alaska and trying to imply that is normal in the US.

Come summer, the coastal temperatures will be around 40F and higher. And ice and natural caves are amazing for survival. The outside temperature does not matter at all. I have stayed in man made ice caves, your own body heat makes them rather comfortable in a fairly short amount of time. Snow and rock is an amazing insulator.

Oh, and no hunting marine mammals, just get seals when they come on shore. And it's not exactly like seals are a major threat. For thousands of years our ancestors needed nothing more than a stick as they are not particularly large or vicious. Clubs are still commonly used to this very day, when on a land a person can just run up and thump them with it. The only worry are the male elephant seals.

Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Let me clarify the scenario I intended. With only the clothes you are wearing as you read this, you will be dropped in Antarctica or Death Valley.

No shelter unless you can find natural shelter or build it from materials available in the environment.

No fire, unless you can create it from materials in the environment and what's in your pockets right now.

Do you really think you would survive long enough in Antarctica for dehydration to become an issue?

If you're dropped in both locations at the extremes of their conditions, you will desiccate far sooner in Death Valley than you will in Antarctica. Bodies of animals, and even humans, are found out there completely dried out like Egyptian mummies. And it happens quickly.

Replies:   Dominions Son  Mushroom
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

you will desiccate far sooner in Death Valley than you will in Antarctica.

You won't desiccate normally at all in Antarctia. Under the posited conditions you would freeze to death in well under an hour. After you are dead, your body would eventually freeze dry.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

If you're dropped in both locations at the extremes of their conditions, you will desiccate far sooner in Death Valley than you will in Antarctica. Bodies of animals, and even humans, are found out there completely dried out like Egyptian mummies. And it happens quickly.

Antarctica is the driest continent on the planet. Not so Death Valley, which ranges from around 32 percent humidity in the day, to 55 at night.

The average humidity in most of Antarctica? 0%. That is why "freeze drying" is a thing.

I have to wonder, how many in here have actually been trained to survive in extreme conditions? Have any of you ever actually had survival training, and are familiar with the conditions you all are trying to describe?

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Absent special protective gear, just normal every day clothes, which do you think you would survive in the longest: Antarctica in September (-71F/-52C), or Death Vally, California (134F/56.6C)?

Well, I have not been to Antarctica, but I have had to live in areas that got to -30F, and it was not fun. Even breathing hurt.

But I lived for a year in an area where the running joke when asked how hot it was outside was "135F". That is because the thermometers we used at our base maxed out at 135, and they were almost always maxed out.

When I returned for a few weeks of R&R in El Paso, we were having a heat wave of around 100. And everybody thought I was insane for wearing a jacket. But for my body, it was a drop of over 30 degrees. It would me like taking somebody that is used to 80, and suddenly throwing them outside when it was 45. And I have had the reverse, moving from Idaho where it was -10, and moving to LA where it was 65. I would walk around in a light t-shirt, as everybody else wore jackets.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

The truth is far from global warming being catastrophic, warmer=better.

And geologically speaking, that is dead on accurate.

During the warmest periods on our planet, life thrived the most. Quite specifically, in times of high CO2 and temperatures 10+ degrees F than it is now. Even more so when the continent of Antarctica became ice free, and plants and animals covered all 7 Continents.

But we are in a transition period. Somebody who knows geology and paleontology will know that. Yes, a lot of animals will go extinct and continue to go extinct, unable to adapt to the warmer climate. But guess what, wait a few dozen thousand years. More animals will evolve that love the warmer climate. Dawinism in action.

I laugh whenever people point at the death of all the megafauna, and try to scream that "humans did it". Fact is, it died out planet wide. With only a handful now remaining. Being big and slow when being a beast having to push through snow and lean cold winters made sense. Being big and slow when the climate warmed and favored the small and fast was a detriment. And in 120k years or so when we slip into another ice age, all the small and fast animals will be dying off in droves, as the big and lumbering beasts with massive fat reserves once again start to dominate.

And to be honest, what I find much more disturbing than the CO2 emissions is the massive deforestation that is happening. CO2 is literally "plant food", and rainforests are a major part of how the planet deals with it. In the past geological record, increasing CO2 caused the size of rainforests to explode. Which caused more humidity, and encouraged even more forest growth.

But we are destroying this system, cutting and burning the rainforests, the very system nature uses to sequester CO2 and expand. I could not care less about CO2, this is what I see as the real problem. But nobody seems to give a damn about that, they can't tax the poor dirt farmers in Brazil.

It's like trying to put ice on somebody with a fever, and not even trying to cure the infection making them sick in the first place. And even if we cut CO2 emissions to 0, it will continue to rise because we keep killing the main way to remove it in the first place.

BarBar ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Once again, cycles that have always happened on our planet, and I have yet to hear people running around screaming that Paleolithic humans caused the end of the last Ice Age.

Of course you haven't, and you won't hear it from me either. None of the scientists who are studying this period of warming have every claimed that previous cases of warming didn't happen for other reasons.
It is simply that a significant portion of this cycle is clearly laid at the feet of people and their efforts to clothe, feed, warm, cool, entertain, travel, etc etc.

I'm not arguing that we should shut our civilisation down or whatever other straw-man arguments you want to throw out there. I'm simply saying we can mitigate the risks by some sensible restraint.

Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

And this has happened before as well.

Yes, and I dare say it's a minor problem. The politicians made climate change and CO2 the (heavily simplified) 'problem'. Climate change is not the problem, pollution of our environment is. But they don't talk about that because, Oh dear, don't touch the luxuries, it will cost votes!

Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Once again, cycles that have always happened on our planet, and I have yet to hear people running around screaming that Paleolithic humans caused the end of the last Ice Age.

I think it was the methane from the Mastodon flatulence that did it.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Jim S

I think it was the methane from the Mastodon flatulence that did it.

I'm not going to challenge you on methane effects or production. But I must defend the Mastodons, after all, their name cums from their continual self pleasuring...

So their major emissions were not methane...

:)

Replies:   Jim S
Jim S ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

So their major emissions were not methane...

But their emissions were mammoth....

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

Right now, the issue is a very sudden case of warming where serious effects will be felt within 100 years. It has already started having noticeable effects across the world.

Here's an 8 year old discussion on climate by a scientist that you should watch. It's nearly an hour long, but the first 30 minutes is setting the background by explaining the backgrounds of paleo climatology. What bis interesting is the information about events 10,000 to 5,000 years ago and what the trends recorded mean into the future. Oddly enough back then they had some technology that showed past trends and have very accurately predicted climate activity into the future for a some years ; but you rarely hear about it because it isn't the doom and gloom show the political scientists push.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yze1YAz_LYM

Replies:   BarBar
BarBar ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

ere's an 8 year old discussion on climate by a scientist that you should watch.

I prefer to learn science in places where it has been checked and scrutinized rather than watching a youtube video of someone. I will watch it but am always slightly sceptical. The IPCC report is a worthy thing to read as it is a summary of all the science that has been done in the field. You should definitely read that.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@BarBar

I prefer to learn science in places where it has been checked and scrutinized rather than watching a youtube video of someone.

Personally, I prefer to watch the YouTube videos of talks by qualified scientists than the sound bites of political scientists and activists seeking their 15 minutes of fame.

typo edit.

John Demille ๐Ÿšซ

@BarBar

In the meantime, for us and our children and our grandchildren, life won't be quite as comfortable as it has been for a while.

Considering that we seem to be going into a solar minimum for a while (the next cycle is predicted to be weak and the one after that even weaker if trend persists https://www.weather.gov/news/201509-solar-cycle ), then our kids might be in for a bit cooler weather.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

For you guys talking about Death Valley, please remember while it often goes up to 120 degrees F or higher during the day it usually drops 50 to 65 degrees F at night because there is no cloud cover keeping the heat in. Thus you need to either have some damn warm clothes or a shovel to dig a hole and bury yourself in to keep warm at night.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

talking about Death Valley, please remember while it often goes up to 120 degrees F or higher during the day it usually drops 50 to 65 degrees F at night because there is no cloud cover keeping the heat in.

More than cloud cover. I live in the Phoenix area which no longer drops in temperature so much at night (we set a record this year of the number of days with a low of 90F or higher). Not because of cloud cover. It's the concrete, tar, swimming pools, golf courses, etc.

So humans affected climate again. I guess we shouldn't have built cities.

tarebear422 ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

I'm fairly new here, and what feedback and DM's i have gotten have always been positive or asking when the next chapter is going to be released. Frankly though, I do find myself craving feedback because I want to make sure that my intentions are being properly conveyed to the reader. Only thing Ive been able to do reliably thus far is depend on votes, and i get kinda sad when I see someone vote a 6 or a 5. I wish those people would leave feedback for me so I can know what it is they didnt like.

Should i have clarified something? Given more background? Did my intentions not come across clearly and get misunderstood?

It would be cool if, after voting, you were prompted with the option to leave feedback based on your vote.

heck, maybe there is a way to do that and i just havent figured it out yet. To be honest I havent spent much time trying to figure out the site :(

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@tarebear422

It would be cool if, after voting, you were prompted with the option to leave feedback based on your vote.

I've always said there should be a pull-down menu to send one of several prewritten messages (like "More. NOW" or "Nice story, but you need a editor" or "Great characters, not such a great story" or "Too unbelieveable" or whatever) because I truly believe most readers are too damn lazy and apathetic to even type five words of feedback, but maybe a quarter of them might, if it was only click-select-send, be willing to send feedback.

Honey_Moon ๐Ÿšซ

You haven't experienced anything until you get death threats (not on this site, thankfully!) from a story! I have, because I wrote about princess Twilight Sparkle growing a penis and having NC sex with Rainbow Dash. Bronies are sure touchy! Some acted like they were real living beings, and I myself personally raped one!
Yikes!

lichtyd ๐Ÿšซ

@Torsian

A few readers don't understand or they dislike my POV shifts. Those readers will sometimes complain. I imagine a few stopped reading a story because of it. My style isn't going to change. Inter-chapter POV changed are common enough in some of the books I read.

One person in my writers group critiqued me on it. There's always someone who will dislike something about your work. It's not a big deal.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@lichtyd

Inter-chapter POV changed are common enough in some of the books I read.

Just make a scene change when POV changes.

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