Compare the Cold War:
Starting in the late fifties, early sixties, we faced a clear existential threat from nuclear weapons; if a nuclear war occurred, the combined arsenals of the U.S., U.S.S.R. and sundry allies would wipe out most life in the civilized world, if not the world period. There was essentially no doubt about that, as no fool would ever believe life could go on after a thermonuclear blast. Global Warming/Climate Change would cause a change in global weather patterns, a rise in ocean levels, but nobody can say for certain how much or how fast. Not even the most extreme predictions cite death for 90% of the human race and an end to civilization. And the evidence is too complex for the layperson to readily grasp.
The Cold War was between the world's two greatest powers, with all others largely accessories. It could have been ended at any time by achieving something resembling normal human relations with Moscow, at a cost of pride and ideology but not a whole lot else. In the long run it would have saved a considerable amount of money on the construction and maintenance of nuclear arsenals, and manning the hair-triggers all the time. The solution to Global Warming will need to involve the separate governments of the entire industrialized (and industrializing) world working together towards one solution. It will require a massive overhaul of infrastructure all over the world at spectacular expense, and we won't see results for some time.
The Cold War gradually warmed up in a series of disarmament talks that reduced the number of nukes on each side to just enough to kill the whole world fifty million times over, as opposed to the previous fifty bajillion. It only actually ended, after about forty years of playing apocalyptic chicken, when one of the two superpowers collapsed under the weight of its dysfunctional and retarded 19th-century economy. With Russia a pseudo-capitalist kleptocracy, we get along much better. There are continuing worries about terrorists getting their hands on ill-guarded nukes over there, however, and the remaining U.S. stockpile alone is enough to kill us five hundred or so times over, at least according to that dude on the Colbert Report the other night. Whatever, it's a ****load. The greatest and plainest threat the human race ever faced went away by a kind of default (also, Reagan made a stirring speech of some kind, on the advice of his astrologer).
Do we actually think any number of summits will get us a meaningful solution to climate change? Especially with a very stark time limit?
Starting in the late fifties, early sixties, we faced a clear existential threat from nuclear weapons; if a nuclear war occurred, the combined arsenals of the U.S., U.S.S.R. and sundry allies would wipe out most life in the civilized world, if not the world period. There was essentially no doubt about that, as no fool would ever believe life could go on after a thermonuclear blast. Global Warming/Climate Change would cause a change in global weather patterns, a rise in ocean levels, but nobody can say for certain how much or how fast. Not even the most extreme predictions cite death for 90% of the human race and an end to civilization. And the evidence is too complex for the layperson to readily grasp.
The Cold War was between the world's two greatest powers, with all others largely accessories. It could have been ended at any time by achieving something resembling normal human relations with Moscow, at a cost of pride and ideology but not a whole lot else. In the long run it would have saved a considerable amount of money on the construction and maintenance of nuclear arsenals, and manning the hair-triggers all the time. The solution to Global Warming will need to involve the separate governments of the entire industrialized (and industrializing) world working together towards one solution. It will require a massive overhaul of infrastructure all over the world at spectacular expense, and we won't see results for some time.
The Cold War gradually warmed up in a series of disarmament talks that reduced the number of nukes on each side to just enough to kill the whole world fifty million times over, as opposed to the previous fifty bajillion. It only actually ended, after about forty years of playing apocalyptic chicken, when one of the two superpowers collapsed under the weight of its dysfunctional and retarded 19th-century economy. With Russia a pseudo-capitalist kleptocracy, we get along much better. There are continuing worries about terrorists getting their hands on ill-guarded nukes over there, however, and the remaining U.S. stockpile alone is enough to kill us five hundred or so times over, at least according to that dude on the Colbert Report the other night. Whatever, it's a ****load. The greatest and plainest threat the human race ever faced went away by a kind of default (also, Reagan made a stirring speech of some kind, on the advice of his astrologer).
Do we actually think any number of summits will get us a meaningful solution to climate change? Especially with a very stark time limit?
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