Page added on November 5, 2020
Modern elections—despite their social and political importance—have become more like sporting events than referendums around ideas. We so intensely identify with our partisan tribe, that we focus on the slogans, the rooting against the ‘other guy’ and other us-vs-them dynamics, and often lose sight of the issues, the context, and how ‘winning’ for our country (and world) might actually be influenced by our choices.
We are inherently tribal, after all. Of all of our inherited ancestral heuristics, defending our (historically small) tribe and ostracizing/rooting against the other tribe is one of the strongest human universals. In fact, perhaps humans’ best quality – cooperation and collaboration – was a byproduct of the strong unity born out of common threats, accessing surplus, and tribal warfare. We cooperate – for the good of our group – and for tens/hundreds of thousands of years, this meant survival.
Fast forward to November 2020, USA and the four year inflection point where half the country is rooting for Joe Biden and the other half (roughly) for Donald Trump – in our minds we know this is an important guidepost for our collective future, but we approach this week with similar temperament and behavior as a Packer/Viking pre-game tailgate.
We are now in the liminal space between our nation’s long history and future. Facts and expertise matter less by the day. Emotions and tribal affiliations focus our attention on the ‘cars’ instead of looking at the road ahead of us. Later this week 50% of our population will be elated and the other 50% will be angry. And most of both camps will be variously: righteous, anxious and uncertain, and perhaps violent. This, along with the various trivia of Democrat and Republican victories and defeats will be the hyper-focus of our media. But below, in no particular order, is a look at some of the critical guideposts in the next 4 years along the winding road of our collective future that – as colleagues, citizens and neighbors in the United States of America, we’ll have to navigate with each other – no matter who wins the election.
As I wrote in March, the ‘cure’ (lockdowns) for COVID would be worse than the disease in aggregate impact. Though death rates were perhaps overblown, the virulence -and ‘long COVID complications’ were not. Various vaccines and treatments and protocols will be developed but the worst months may still be ahead of us. This virus may or may not ultimately have a cure, but either way COVID has permanently damaged the vascular system of the human superorganism, explained below. No matter who wins the election, the Coronavirus will still be with us.
Economies tanked in the 2nd quarter and – on the backs of stimulus and central bank support – roared back in Q3. Through July 31, 2020 -when direct stimulus ran out – the US government was responsible for fully 25% of our national wages. While the professional class (and tech companies) are experiencing a sharp V recovery, many hourly workers, small businesses, retail, leisure, transportation, restaurants are seriously struggling. Many people are hanging on via donations and loans from friends and family and ‘food insecurity’ is becoming widespread. The conventional thinking is that in either a Democratic or Republican ‘sweep’, considerably more stimulus (aka borrowing from future to consume today) will arrive. If, there is e.g. a Biden win and the Senate stays Republican, continued government stabilization of the economic patient will be in jeopardy, and many systemic risks ensue.
But headline GDP statistics aside, the pandemic has widened already large disparities between the haves and have nots. The COVID recession is the most unequal one in US history. As we recover – or don’t – distribution of resources within our population is going to be a critical issue – (more on this below). At some point if the have nots have nothing, they may be forced to take from the haves – or do without. No matter who wins the election we are going to have to find ways to support the weak, the vulnerable and the unemployed. And I expect these will number in the 10s of millions.
If you haven’t been asleep, traveling or drugged these past few years, you are aware there is a growing movement pointing out the racial, social and economic injustices of our current system. This is in large part because there are considerable racial, social and economic injustices in our current system. But fairness was never the objective built into our cultural goals or institutions – we optimize for (economic) efficiency, not fairness, nor resilience. The situation is this: various demographics now quite vocally (and reasonably) want a larger share of the economic pie, but the pie itself is about to shrink, which is something few are aware of – and don’t like to hear/think about.
Let’s unpack this using an overused analogy – the Titanic. On the Titanic were 3 classes of passengers – First Class, Second Class and Steerage (or 3rd Class). You can imagine the conversations, hopes, dreams and concerns of the various people on that ship over a century ago. And, history tells us that the tragedy did not befall each class equally – 39% of 1st class passengers perished, 58% of 2nd class and 76% of steerage passengers drowned. The same demographics exist today and are probably having similar conversations within and between groups, focused on maintaining status, moving up in class, or demanding better conditions.
And then there is someone like me – shouting (to all 3 classes) that we just hit an iceberg and need to use science, discourse, reason and planning to find the best solution to navigating what’s ahead. You can imagine the reaction – indeed you see it in the news and in your town hall meetings. The ‘first class passengers’ publicly decry that there is no iceberg that technology would never allow the ship to hit an iceberg let alone sink (but privately they are looking to ‘lifeboats’ aka gated communities and the like). The second class passengers are scrambling like mad to ingratiate themselves to the first class passengers to get crumbs of surplus lest they slip into steerage. And the steerage passengers – a full 50%+ of American society today have 2 common responses: 1) “Ok sure there may be an iceberg, but we need to solve our more immediate concerns like our current unacceptable living/working conditions, because we’ll drown from those before any freaking iceberg” (they are mostly right) or 2) “Ya right, an iceberg -that is just another story by elites and governments telling us what we have to do and taking away our rights and freedoms”. The difference now (vs on the actual Titanic) is that the steerage class (economically) houses both the far left and the far right, effectively creating an additional ‘iceberg’ within the ship. The people in ‘steerage’ can’t really conceive that in addition to their current troubles, society ALSO has hit an iceberg (see below).
The point here is that the narratives (and religions) that make people feel good are often not based on reality. Which makes discussing, planning and responding to ‘the iceberg of the 2020s’ a very difficult task. The key will be to acknowledge the moral failings of our economic and cultural past while simultaneously acknowledging and planning the lifeboat situation. That’s a difficult thing for a human mind to do.
No matter who wins the election we will be faced with multiple non-overlapping memes and explanations for the upheaval that is coming. Our plight is biophysical (biology and physics) in nature but will be blamed on class, race, politics, and ideology. Navigating this is going to be exceedingly difficult. A new captain can change the morale and surround himself by great minds to make the best civic decisions, but he/she cannot change the fact that our economy and culture has hit an iceberg.
The central bank purchases and guarantees of various offerings of debt has turned the financial system into a digital Rube Goldberg machine. One of the externalities is that -while economy was suffering from an exogenous shock from COVID – companies used the FED guarantee to raise cheap debt. For instance, Boeing – a company who arguably will come out of the COVID crisis with worse business prospects due to less demand for planes – nearly doubled its long term debt because it could do so at low rates (the bonds being guaranteed by the FED). This means Boeing – and many other companies – will emerge from this crisis with both lower revenues and higher debt, putting them at risk of becoming ‘zombies’. Zombie companies are those whose profits are not enough to pay their interest payments – and they need to take on even more debt (or get direct aid from governments) to stay solvent.
Yes – it’s true stock markets are near all time highs. But this too is a distribution (and expectation) problem. Going into Q3 earnings, the five largest S&P 500 stocks (AAPL, MSFT, AMZN, GOOGL, FB) were expected to grow 3Q sales and EPS by +13% and +1% while the other 495 stocks in SP500 are expected to have a -5% revenue drop and a -24% drop in EPS.
Some great companies. Lots of zombies. No matter who wins this election, we (and the rest of developed world) are going to face a large and growing number of bankrupt and insolvent companies. Stimulus will help – and is critically necessary – but isn’t a long-term solution. And, as the government takes on more and more of this burden, it too risks zombification.
At year end 2019 we were still recovering from the Great Recession in 2008 -the ‘temporary’ measures initiated in 2008 – artificially low interest rates, too big to fail guarantees, Quantitative Easing, explosion of government debt, expansion of central bank balance sheets, etc were still in effect a dozen years later. Even with all this, productivity gains have been tiny – and a fraction of earlier decades.
Now, in addition to all this, governments are adding fiscal stimulus – because they must. The little green man behind the curtain – (currently Jerome Powell) is a very capable and good person but he is not superman. The institution he oversees -the Federal Reserve is using an invisible giant magic wand to move what we might’ve consumed in 2030 or 2040 forward to 2020 (in the process leaving less available in 2030 and 2040). Modern Monetary Theory tells us deficits don’t matter – but they do – when we create money, we do not create the energy and materials needed to pay it back, so adding more and more debt becomes less productive over time – and has limits.
What happens when either government decides to stop stimulus (hard to imagine) or the bond market says ‘no mas’ via higher rates? What is the plan by either the Left or the Right (or anyone) for when QE and stimulus combined cannot plug the economic hole for people and businesses? My opinion is that question will be answered in the next administration – and the answer will be a drop in GDP akin to the 1930s. Yes, more debt and creative stimulus/infrastructure spending will forestall this – for a while but we will soon face a situation when we can no longer kick the can of growing GDP again to the future. Money isn’t reality – it’s a marker for the things that matter: built, social, natural and human capital. No matter who wins the election we have a decades old physical/financial bill that’s coming due.
Increasingly I think it’s not oil nor finance, nor social disruption that is our core risk but declining returns to complexity. Historian Joseph Tainter famously studied how ancient civilizations collapsed due to the inability of resources/productivity to keep pace with complexity. In today’s world, this can be seen in myriad ways, from the unemployment software in US States being written in COBOL and FORTRAN, to APIs for majority of our medicines made in India and China.
It’s not something we think about, but we all are part of a complex global supply chain. On the way up, using the concept of ‘comparative advantage’ we outsourced various manufacturing to their lowest cost production – which in many cases meant locations in Asia with cheap labor. COVID allowed us to see the soft-underbelly of those decades old decisions as we have endangered our own security: almost 200 drugs currently listed as in short supply by FDA, 6 month wait for bicycles, heavy equipment delays etc. This is a separate issue from ammunition, canned goods, toilet paper etc having short term kinks in the supply chain – this issue goes to the embedded brittleness of a global system based on growth to further rely on import substitution models of production.
No matter who wins the election, with the geopolitical context that is COVID 19 on financial steroids, making sure that important things are made domestically (or regionally) may become an important question.


(Charts from Labyrinth Consulting. Assumptions: EIA & Enverus data through August 2020. Sept and Oct guided by EIA tight oil estimates plus Labyrinth estimates for OCS & conventional. Nov 2020 thru Nov 2021 calibrated speculation using to-date tight oil rig count and production correlation extrapolating 2020 ratio average for deep water & conventional production.)
If you took a poll and asked people what the single biggest casualty was from the pandemic, very few people would respond with ‘oil’. But no matter who wins the election, US oil production, including shale oil, is about to fall off a cliff, with massive consequences for society. For the setup of our modern way of life, oil is effectively our hemoglobin – and the COVID arrow hit at the heart of the industry as market prices are far below what it costs to extract oil from the ground. Yet this is all invisible to most people as the media (and economics departments) still conflate price with cost and cost with value. We were in bad shape BEFORE Covid-19 and now the Red Queen (drilling faster and faster just to maintain static production) has stepped off the treadmill for 6+months – meaning the large underlying decline rates of existing fields are not being offset much by new drilling. Worse, most of the recent decline in production is because wells have been shut in. Many of these will never be brought back on line because they cannot meet basic operating expenses and production taxes at current oil prices. In aggregate, US production is so far down -2.28 mmbpd from a 2019 monthly average high of of 12.86 mmbpd. Assuming rig counts and prices stay roughly where they are (and with no stimulus they may get worse), this implies a level of about 7 mmbpd by late summer 2021 – nearly a 50% drop. Globally, the reduction in travel, leisure and transport due to COVID effectively squeezed upstream investment- we are down to 72.8 mb of crude and condensate from 84.6 in November 2018, -which date is highly likely to be the all time peak in global production. Note: this will likely never be recognized as such because there will always be a non-biophysical reason articulated as to why we aren’t getting more oil. E.g. ‘the chinese’ or ‘the environmentalists’ or ‘the war’.)
To label this geologic phenomenon as ‘peak demand for oil’ is the economic equivalent of saying the reindeer on St Matthew Island faced ‘peak demand for lichen’. Oil is the lifeblood of our (current) economy -peak demand for oil also likely means peak growth for economies (unless massive efficiencies and fuel switching occur very fast). We probably won’t notice any lack of oil for many years because affordability by citizens will likely decline faster than oil itself (unless massive stimulus and central bank bazookas arrive). Regardless an accelerated retiring of the fossil armies that do most of our work, and create and deliver our modern smorgasbord of goods and services is now on the horizon.
Note: I think the graph from my friend Art may be a bit pessimistic, but maybe not. We face a biophysical gauntlet where the price citizens can afford is getting lower and lower and the price energy companies need is higher and higher. If governments guarantee high prices to oil companies, or there are other incentives, production might be higher than indicated here – but here is a glaring statistic – if we were to stop drilling in USA entirely we would lose around 40% of our entire oil production in 1 year – we have to keep investing/drilling in more difficult and costly spots to avoid such a decline. (the 1 year decline rates are: Texas 40%, ND is 52%, Oklahoma 50%, GOM/deepwater 32% New Mexico 45% – these 5 regions are 80% of US production).
This is not remotely being discussed in our culture.
No matter who wins the election, US oil production has peaked – again -and this time including the tight oil provinces – from the ‘source rock’. This will have….large long term consequences, whether one is left, right or libertarian.

Humans – during periods of growth – and contraction – self-organize around energy. Oil is central but our entire energy balance sheet is going to be a critical issue in the coming decade. Under a Biden win, various Green New Deal schemes will massively scale renewable energy. In many ways this is good news, because it will be good for GDP, it will create jobs, and grow our supply of low carbon energy. But there are many problems with this because it won’t be approached systemically. Briefly: 1) renewable energy isn’t renewable, it’s rebuildable, 2) only 20% of (current) energy mix is electricity which is the type of energy produced from most renewables 3) the higher % of RE in our mix the more important back up (NG and coal) become – and the US is facing an impending gas shortage as US drilling has plummeted. (the largest growth component of supply was the associated gas from tight oil production), 4) the full system cost of integrating RE into the grid is higher than consumers currently pay, weighing on the economy 5) all RE plans expect a LARGER economy in the future when (see above) most realistic scenarios using systemic inputs point to a smaller economy.
Still, renewables are our only hope – they are mature, robust and inexpensive vis-à-vis even a decade ago. The problem will be how to ‘add renewables to a smaller and more complex system’. No matter who wins the election, we will have to face a more complex and less certain energy future.
One of the silver linings (if you will) of the pandemic is that now a great number of people personally are aware US GDP/ 330 million does not represent how well we are doing as individuals or as a nation. The constant media reminders that the SP500 and Dow Jones just made all-time highs is incongruous with most peoples real lived experience (and most of whom have zero money in the stock market). Whether one understands or agrees with the risks of climate change, energy depletion or limits to growth, tens of millions of people are now hungry for living a decent life with access to basic needs, while doing something good. The coming decades – by definition but also by desire – are going to be more about well-being than they are about growing our consumption of stuff.
No matter who wins the election, our nation needs to embark on a deep conversation about what our cultural goal is – we are going to need complementary metrics to the econometric measures quantifying how much energy we burned. What is all this energy for is a question that should be part of our national discourse.
Lost in the discussions of Republicans vs Democrats, stimulus, PPP, COVID statistics, stock market gyrations and geopolitics is perhaps the most important story of all – the state of Earth’s ecosystems and the ~10 million species we share the planet with. They are ‘downstream’ of our elections and financial/economic systems, but none of them have a vote.
I have concluded that natural systems and species futures – for better or worse – are linked to human futures – we have to ‘bend not break’ to have the best outcome for (most) Earth Systems (other than perhaps oceans and very remote species). I believe humans are not any better or worse than we were 100 years, 1000 years or 100,000 years ago – there are just more of us so our impact is (much) larger and each and every one of us consuming much more resources than our ancestors did. Humans are good at heart but we are biological organisms following cultural goals that have expiry dates. We have arrived at a ‘species level’ juncture and need to use systems science, reason, discourse, and leadership to navigate a glide path to intact futures.
No matter who wins the election, the state of the natural world needs to be included in our plans and discussions. Unfortunately, it first needs to be included in our values.
The Great Depression, unless you lived in a big city, mostly happened in slow motion. Similarly, unless we’re very unlucky, the events of the coming decade will unfold gradually. We have to take it upon ourselves to civically engage, but also find time to enjoy and appreciate our lives – being alive at this amazing and perilous time.
We all have ‘conditional’ goals, those which rely on something external to us to change in order to succeed. Many of those goals will not get met because external conditions prevent them – perhaps the ‘guy who we didn’t vote for’ winning the election. The key is to also find “unconditional” goals – those which we ourselves can be 100% responsible for. That way we can feel more empowered to reach those goals, which many times can influence the conditional goals in positive ways. Growing food, spending time with your neighbors, learning a new (useful to the future) skill, mutual aid, etc. The key for all of us – is to meet the future halfway.
No matter who wins the election, life, and the opportunity for joy, impact, and meaning will exist, perhaps even more so.
So, dear reader and fellow countrymen/women, go vote. But voting is merely the beginning of our civic duty. Our country will be shaped by how we citizens respond to the challenges ahead of us as much (or more) than it will by which party wins the election. What am I rooting for? Rationality, science, civility, discourse, which opens up other potential pathways. Our culture is capable of much more than guns germs and steel or being an energy dissipating superorganism.
People who practice common decency and respect are by far the majority in our (and other) countries. When matched with perseverance, common goals and prioritizing social capital and relationships, we might just happen upon the glide path to decent futures. There are 10s of millions of Americans craving having their basic needs met and just doing some good with their lives – they just don’t yet have a roadmap and convening place. Could such a thing be the emergent result of the 2020 election?
Society right now is dancing – and fighting on the roof of an A-frame with the winds blowing hard and a storm shooting lightning at our heads. We need to keep dancing (less fighting) while we climb down to more stable ground.
No matter who wins the election this week we are on the cusp of major change which will require both top-down and bottom up interventions and cultural emergence. I hope you can play a role.

180 Comments on "No Matter Who Wins"
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:19 pm
Severe forest fires have increased eightfold in western US since 1985, study finds
Exclusive: The amount of land burning at ‘high severity’ is also accelerating due to climate change, researchers say
“The rise in area burned by high-severity fires is linked to hotter and drier weather across the region, said scientists.
Researchers expect the frequency of blazes will continue to increase as such conditions are becoming more likely and more extreme as a result of the climate crisis.”
https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/forest-fires-wildfires-climate-crisis-california-b1591680.html
https://youtu.be/ZQMJHZ3y8A8
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:23 pm
No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fucked.
200 days without rain? It’s in the cards for Las Vegas
“AS VEGAS — They say what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas but what has certainly NOT been happening there is any kind of rainfall.
For months. Nay, it’s over half a year now.
Thursday marked 199 straight days without any measurable rainfall in Sin City according to the National Weather Service office there, and the forecast is dry for Friday too, making a 200-day dry streak all but certain.
If that streak sounds impressive, it is — even for a city locked in the heart of a desert. Vegas’ previous all-time dry record dry streak was a paltry 150 days set in 1959. The last time they had rain was on April 20.”
https://komonews.com/weather/scotts-weather-blog/200-days-without-rain-its-in-the-cards-for-las-vegas
zero juan on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:29 pm
Ppee, fuck, you are not famous, you are stupid!
FamousDrScanlon said No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fuck…
FamousDrScanlon said Severe forest fires have increased eightfold in we…
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:31 pm
No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fucked. Anyone 60 or younger will see major human suffering. It’s inescapable.
Biodiversity Loss Is as Big a Crisis as Climate Change
The release of a major report looking at the state of nature presents a grim forecast for the future of humanity and the planet. Gitika Bhardwaj speaks to Sandra Diaz, co-chair of the report, about what’s driving this biodiversity crisis and how we can stop it before it’s too late.
“Our actions over the past 50 years have been the cause of record losses in species – tens to hundreds of times faster than the natural rate of extinction over the past 10 million years. Since 1970 alone, vertebrate populations have fallen by 40 per cent for land-based species, 84 per cent for freshwater species and 35 per cent for marine species.
This is happening due to a number of human activities: accelerating land-use change such as through farming and logging, overusing our seas and oceans such as through fishing, polluting our air, soil and water systems, hunting and also – voluntarily or involuntarily – transporting invasive species across distant regions. And this is happening on an unprecedented, worldwide scale.”
https://www.chathamhouse.org/2019/05/biodiversity-loss-big-crisis-climate-change
Abraham van Helsing on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:31 pm
Seattle love fest of reconciliation:
https://twitter.com/disclosetv/status/1325193385544740864
dratrepus tak the beauty of master race chinks Sep 26, 2020The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has allegedly torn down around 16,000 mosques in China's northwestern region of Xinjiang, an Australian think tank said in a report published on Thursda on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:34 pm
Sep 26, 2020The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has allegedly torn down around 16,000 mosques in China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang, an Australian think tank said in a report published on Thursday
3gd gona croak soon water 174.51m max is 175m
dratrepus tak the radiant beauty of master race chinks on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:38 pm
Bangladesh: Catholic bishop says that Muhammad cartoons are ‘an unforgivable injustice’
Submission and surrender in response to violent threats only encourages more violent threats. “Leave them; they are blind guides. And if a blind man leads a blind man, both will fall into a pit.” (Matthew 15:14)
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:39 pm
No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fucked.
Look upon ye mighty works cancer chimps and despair.
The state of global biodiversity — it’s worse than you probably think
I often find myself in a position explaining to non-professionals just how bad the state of global biodiversity really is. It turns out too that even quite a few ecologists seem to lack an appreciation of the sheer magnitude of damage we’ve done to the planet.
The biomass of terrestrial vegetation worldwide has halved over human history3, with a corresponding loss of more than 20% of this realm’s original biodiversity1.
More than 70% of the Earth’s land surface has been altered by humans1.
There have been over 700 vertebrate1, and nearly 600 plant4, extinctions recorded since the 16th Century, and many more species have likely gone extinct unnoticed5.
Massive population declines that are the precursors to extinction have also occurred worldwide; since only 1970, more than 60% of all terrestrial vertebrate individuals have disappeared6, such that there are now at least one million species threatened with extinction6 out of an estimated 7.3– 10.0 million eukaryotic species on the planet7.
The total global biomass of wild animals today is < 25% of what it was during the Late Pleistocene8, and even insect species appear to be in rapid decline in many parts of the world9-13.
There is now less than 15% of the original wetland area that was present during the 18th Century14, and over three-quarters of rivers more than 1000 km long no longer flow freely along their entire course15.
Over two-thirds of ocean area has been compromised to some extent by human endeavour
Live coral cover on reefs has halved since the mid-19th Century17, seagrass extent has been decreasing by 10% per decade over the last century1, kelp forests have declined by nearly 40%18, and the biomass of large predatory fishes is now less than a third of what it was last century19.
Of the estimated 0.17 Gt of biomass of terrestrial vertebrates on Earth today, most of this is represented by livestock (59%) and living human beings (36%) — only about 5% of this total biomass is taken up by wild mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians8.
Even our domesticated species are in decline — some 10% of domesticated breeds of mammals have become extinct in human history, with more than 1000 others threatened with extinction20
Even cultivated plants are becoming threatened, with about 200 cultivated species threatened with extinction21, and a global homogenisation of food crop species used to feed the world over the last 50 years22.
All this means that we are now without a doubt well within a sixth mass extinction event.
https://conservationbytes.com/2020/01/24/the-state-of-global-biodiversity-its-worse-than-you-probably-think/
dratrepus tak the radiant beauty of master race chinks Poll: 57% of Young Muslims Support Sharia over French Law… on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:49 pm
Sep 26, 2020The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has allegedly torn down around 16,000 mosques in China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang, an Australian think tank said in a report published on Thursday
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 4:54 pm
No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fucked…..and clog will remain a genocidal zealot (watching only).
Earth barreling toward ‘Hothouse’ state not seen in 50 million years, epic new climate record shows
Record goes back to the dinosaur extinction.
“For decades, scientists have studied those shells, finding clues about the ancient Earth’s ocean temperatures, its carbon budget and the composition of minerals spilling through the air and seas. Now, in a new study published today (Sept. 10) in the journal Science, researchers have analyzed the chemical elements in thousands of foram samples to build the most detailed climate record of Earth ever — and it reveals just how dire our current climate situation is.”
https://www.livescience.com/oldest-climate-record-ever-cenozoic-era.html
zero juan on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:01 pm
widdle juana Ppee, Fuck, you are not famous. You are an idiot with a low IQ. Please leave this forum, Troll
FamousDrScanlon said No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fuck…
dratrepus tak the radiant beauty of master race chinks Poll: 57% of Young Muslims Support Sharia over French Law… said Sep 26, 2020The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has…
FamousDrScanlon said No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fuck…
dratrepus tak the radiant beauty of master race chinks said Bangladesh: Catholic bishop says that Muhammad car…
dratrepus tak the beauty of master race chinks Sep 26, 2020The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has allegedly torn down around 16,000 mosques in China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang, an Australian think tank said in a report published on Thursda said Sep 26, 2020The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has…
FamousDrScanlon said No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fuck…
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:03 pm
“Rumor has it that Cheeto will be secretly choppered out of the country from his Virginia golf course by Russian operatives and granted asylum in Moscow in exchange for state department intel. If offered, (and I were a morally bankrupt, failed criminal dictator) I’d go for it!”
Abraham van Helsing on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:05 pm
Ramzpaul and guest discussing the elections:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ik_lOHwdFpA
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:08 pm
Ocean Acidification Is Much More Harmful Than Previously Thought
“What Pines and his team have demonstrated is ocean acidification studies and projections have failed to factor in a key element that can speed up the process much faster than anticipated. The large amounts of carbon dioxide dissolved in the oceans causes a huge increase in oceanic carbonic acid.
Pines goes on to explain that the problem is when carbon dioxide (CO2) molecules in the sea react with water molecules (H2O), they form carbonic acid (H2CO3).”
https://www.intelligentliving.co/ocean-acidification-more-harmful-than-previously-thought/
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:10 pm
Ocean Acidification and Human Health
Abstract
The ocean provides resources key to human health and well-being, including food, oxygen, livelihoods, blue spaces, and medicines. The global threat to these resources posed by accelerating ocean acidification is becoming increasingly evident as the world’s oceans absorb carbon dioxide emissions. While ocean acidification was initially perceived as a threat only to the marine realm, here we argue that it is also an emerging human health issue. Specifically, we explore how ocean acidification affects the quantity and quality of resources key to human health and well-being in the context of: (1) malnutrition and poisoning, (2) respiratory issues, (3) mental health impacts, and (4) development of medical resources. We explore mitigation and adaptation management strategies that can be implemented to strengthen the capacity of acidifying oceans to continue providing human health benefits. Importantly, we emphasize that the cost of such actions will be dependent upon the socioeconomic context; specifically, costs will likely be greater for socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, exacerbating the current inequitable distribution of environmental and human health challenges. Given the scale of ocean acidification impacts on human health and well-being, recognizing and researching these complexities may allow the adaptation of management such that not only are the harms to human health reduced but the benefits enhanced.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7344635/
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:12 pm
“Anybody who’s like “we’ll that was a pretty good showing for Trump!” should consider how Hillary Clinton was treated as the World’s Biggest Loser after an election with the same Electoral College margin as this one*.
(But where she won the popular vote instead of losing it by 5)”
Note: I could never vote for Clinton–
The Resistance on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:15 pm
Trump does not matter now. What matters now is fighting high crimes that occurred by the Democrats during the Trump presidency and now before our eyes during this fraudulent election. Trump needs to take this to the bitter end and expose all he can. He won’t win but he can do a lot in the next days to right a huge wrong. Biden is a criminal and should not be president. He won’t last long and then we will be saying madam president Harris.
“Meet The New Resistance” – Mark Levin Rages At Democrats’ “Cloward-Piven” Chaos Plan”
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/meet-new-resistance-mark-levin-rages-democrats-cloward-piven-chaos-plan
“Richard Andrew Cloward and Francis Fox Piven are two names that are largely unfamiliar to the average American, but, as Mark Levin raged last night during an appearance on Fox’s Hannity show, their historical relevance is being seen all over the country today. Outspoken conservative Mark Levin fumed at the violation of the Constitution in various states’ ballot collection procedures, blasting that “there’s more evidence of voter fraud than there was ever evidence of Russia collusion… so those that keep saying, let’s see the evidence, where the hell were you for the last four years?” The Democrats “believed in flooding the system, create chaos, grab power, and accuse your opponent of misbehavior… this is the ideology of two marxist professors – Cloward and Piven.” And now Democrats are calling for unity? Levin adds…”I’m part of the new resistance, God forbid if our president doesn’t win.” “I am not uniting around [Biden] anymore than they united around our man.”
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:16 pm
Dear Wisconsin: If Trump wants a recount, make him pay up front
(I agree, Make the Fat Boy pay)
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:18 pm
Why capitalism was destined to come out on top in the 2020 election
https://www.salon.com/2020/11/07/why-capitalism-was-destined-to-come-out-on-top-in-the-2020-election_partner/
(Pro-capitalist parties publicly deny but privately fear that their political dominance is threatened)
zero juan on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:22 pm
widdle juana, you are not famous, stupid. Your drSock is a dumbass
FamousDrScanlon said Ocean Acidification and Human Health Abstract The…
FamousDrScanlon said Ocean Acidification Is Much More Harmful Than Prev…
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:23 pm
“Now that Trump has lost, it’s time for those of us who have suffered under his “leadership” to ask for a refund on all the money squandered, wasted, and pissed away. Remember how he had to make restitution to all those people he ripped off with his Trump University scam? Well, the American people have been scammed royally, and now that it looks like we may be on the way to being rid of the son of a bitch, we want our money back”
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:29 pm
–that little Nazi Stephen Miller
What should we do with him?
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:32 pm
Progressives Made Trump’s Defeat Possible. Now It’s Time to Challenge Biden and Other Corporate Democrats.
http://www.smirkingchimp.com/thread/norman-solomon/93753/progressives-made-trumps-defeat-possible-now-its-time-to-challenge-biden-and-other-corporate-democra
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:39 pm
No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fucked…and so is at least 75% of all life on this planet. There’s your ‘reset’.
Catastrophic Trigger That Led to Earth’s Largest Mass Extinction Revealed in Fossils
“The shells record seawater pH levels which are affected by atmospheric CO2 concentrations, and it looks as though roughly 252 million years ago there was a sudden, intense injection of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
It was most likely from a gigantic series of volcanic eruptions in Siberia, the researchers say. The increased warming and ocean acidification would have killed off certain species very quickly, while increasingly nutrient-rich waters would then have depleted oxygen levels in the ocean over a longer time period, causing further extinctions.
“This domino-like collapse of the inter-connected life-sustaining cycles and processes ultimately led to the observed catastrophic extent of mass extinction at the Permian-Triassic boundary,” says marine biogeochemist Hana Jurikova who is now at the University of St Andrews in the UK.”
https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-find-the-geochemical-trigger-for-the-world-s-largest-ever-mass-extinction
Volcanic traps vs a rapacious fire ape digging up the carbon & burning it – what’s the diff?
The fire apes have set a pace of emissions orders of magnitude faster than any volcanic traps have at puking out greenhouse gasses.
In under 300 years, the megacancer has puked out the same amount of greenhouse gasses that would take volcanic traps many thousands to tens & hundreds of thousands of years to puke out.
Truly the fire ape is mighty.
FamousDrScanlon on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:48 pm
No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fucked
Climate feedback loops could put human civilization on the road to extinction
“The public (apart from delusional deniers) tends to think of climate change as a steady upward increase in average global temperatures that will have greater consequences on future generations.
The planet has an average temperature of about 1° C above the period just before the Industrial Revolution. It has risen about 0.17 ° C per decade since 1970.
But cascading dominos of feedback loops could sharply raise the likelihood that children born today will experience horrific effects under “Hothouse Earth” conditions.”
https://www.straight.com/news/1284161/climate-feedback-loops-could-put-human-civilization-road-extinction
zero juan on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:49 pm
widdle juana, you are losing it, stupid
FamousDrScanlon said No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fuck…
FamousDrScanlon said No matter who wins the grand kids are totally fuck…
Davy on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 5:57 pm
In my case it’s my kids that are totally fucked. I’m old enough to be there grampa.
zero juan on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 6:02 pm
LMFAO, Ppee, Davy does not comment here anymore. Everyone knows it is you, fuck!
Davy said In my case it’s my kids that are totally fucked. I..
Duncan Idaho on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 6:02 pm
‘Welcome back America’
https://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/World-leaders-react-to-Joe-Biden-victory-15709740.php
Davy on Sat, 7th Nov 2020 6:10 pm
Please fuck off zero juan. You stupid fucking lunatic.