• @cecirdr
    link
    43
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    I used to live in Florida 20 years ago. I also went scuba diving off the keys. Back then it was already worrisome that water temps were getting in the upper 80s and there was some occasional bleaching. Algae move in on the dead coral skeletons.

    It breaks my heart to see what’s happening now. It’s so much worse than it already was when I lived there.

    • 1chemistdown
      link
      fedilink
      171 year ago

      It’s so much worse than it already was when I lived there.

      That’s what happens when we do nothing to stop the problem. Sure the house is on fire, but everything will be fine. Twenty minutes later…. This is so much worse than it was 20 minutes ago.

      • @cecirdr
        link
        5
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Yep. We rang the alarm bells 20 years ago. No one listened. I left the state, but the fact that this was going to happen was as plain as the nose on your face. People just didn’t want to see.

        People don’t want to do the hard work that it will take to live by a new paradigm. It will break the economy for years, but it’ll likely take that to change things. Eventually, we could build back something more in tune with our ecosystem.

        • 1chemistdown
          link
          fedilink
          11 year ago

          I don’t believe it would break the economy. I think it would open up the world to new economic opportunities. But, people like the Koch’s want to keep a stranglehold on what they got and they’re willing to pump money into propaganda along with idiots like Murdoch. Why convince the dumb population to change when you can make them angry and rob them blind.