Pope Francis made his strongest statements yet about climate change Wednesday, rebuking fossil fuel companies and urging countries to make an immediate transition to renewable energy.

In a new document titled “Laudate Deum,” or “Praise God,” the pope criticizes oil and gas companies for greenwashing new fossil fuel projects and calls for more ambitious efforts in the West to tackle the climate crisis. In the landmark apostolic exhortation, a form of papal writing, Francis says that “avoiding an increase of a tenth of a degree in the global temperature would already suffice to alleviate some suffering for many people.”

“Laudate Deum” is a follow-up to the pope’s 2015 encyclical on climate change, known as “Laudato Si’,” which lamented the exploitation of the planet and cast the protection of the environment as a moral imperative. When it was released, “Laudato Si’” was viewed as an extraordinary move by the head of the Catholic Church to address global warming and its consequences.

Nearly a decade later, the pope’s message has taken on new urgency.

  • @angrystego
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    1 year ago

    News about what the head of the Catholic church does is as important as news about what the head of USA, China or Russia does. It’s hugely influencial even when it comes to lives of non-catholics, non-americans, non-chinese… because of the massive number of people that belong to the religion or state and the power that religion or state has. It’s a good thing the pope talks against fossil fuel companies, because his influence is big.

    • @killeronthecorner
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      1 year ago

      Can you name a few things that a pope has influenced politically in the last, say, three decades?

      Because I call complete bullshit on this. Catholicism is big in its own domain (oversized Jesus-based pyramid schemes) but is irrelevant to the vast majority of the world, especially those countries which don’t recognise it as the official state religion which is pretty much all of them.

      The Popes of recent history have done nothing of note except hide pedophilia, hoard the earnings of the poor, and resign.

      • Granixo
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        1 year ago

        It may not be THE vast majority of the world. 🌍🌏

        But having Catholicism as the main religion in ALL of Latin America is pretty relevant. (And i know because i’m chilean 🇨🇱).

        • RBG
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          1 year ago

          Ok, but the question is what has the pope(s) influenced positively over the last 3 decades? Main religion in Latin America is a respectable feat but it is not necessarily a positive influence nor has that been established in the last 3 decades.

          • @killeronthecorner
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            51 year ago

            I’ve had a lot of downvotes and zero answers. Take that as you will.

        • @killeronthecorner
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          41 year ago

          Yeah, SA is certainly an exception in that regard, but one that makes the rule

      • @angrystego
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        01 year ago

        angry

        The pope influences opinions of millions of catholic voters.

        • @killeronthecorner
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          11 year ago

          Distributed across many countries, limiting the impact of their vote outside of countries that are state- or majority -catholic.

          • @angrystego
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            21 year ago

            There are lots of countries with significant catholic population or even majority.

            • @killeronthecorner
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              1 year ago

              There are significantly more that don’t.

              I’m not sure what point you’re trying to make. If you were to ask me, "are there a lot of Catholics in the world?” my answer would be: yes. Because there are. About 15% of the population of the planet is technically* Catholic. That’s a lot of the population of the earth comparative to almost anything that isn’t a birth-given attribute.

              However, in the biggest countries in the world, and for the majority of countries in the world, they are not a majority. Even less so for countries that play a significant part on the world stage in a political way.

              I’m happy to ask the same question again as I’m awaiting an answer and, as a scientist, I will change my view in line with the evidence that is presented: in the last 30 years, outside of Vatican City, and in states where Catholicism is not the state or most widely recognized religion or denomination, what meaningful and significant political decisions or stances has the pope influenced?

              * The methodology of this is questionable but I’m happy to take it on face value for the purposes of this discussion.

              E: it’s easier to accuse someone of trying to impersonate you than it is to actually win an argument, see below for a demo.

              E2: Oh so they always resort to childish ad hominems, how embarrassing for them! https://lemmy.world/modlog?page=1&userId=3261234

              • @angrystego
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                21 year ago

                Is Latin America not important enough? How about Poland or Italy? There are even 20% of catholics in the USA. According to Wiki, there is 1.3 billion baptized Catholics worldwide - that’s important enough to me. Do you really think major religions play no role on the political stage?

                • @killeronthecorner
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                  -11 year ago

                  15% of the world’s population is ~1.3b people. You don’t need to quote the same stats back at me.

                  Where did I say anything about SA not being important? Equally, why fixate on SA if the pope has influenced so much politically in the rest of the world?

                  Also we’re talking about Catholicism and the Pope, not other major religions. Stop moving the goalposts.

                  I’m still waiting for the answer to my question.

                  • @RedAggroBest
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                    11 year ago

                    Stop moving goalposts

                    You say as they address your issue and name several Catholic majority countries where the opinions of the pope sway politics far more than you’re accepting.

                    You’re the one moving goalposts on them lol

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                Politicians fight dirty over smaller voting demographics, Im pretty sure its a big enough percent to make a difference

                E: the user I responded to attempted to impersonate me after losing this argument.

                • @killeronthecorner
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                  1 year ago

                  “pretty sure” is a very weak stance, especially with the continuing absence of evidence to support this conjecture

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -11 year ago

                    Oh, my bad, I was trying to be polite. Ill rephrase.

                    You are wrong. The professional demographics manipulators know better than you do. Which is why you are asking a question you know cannot be answered in the way you posed it without a 5 year study on catholic peoples opinions on a broad range of topics before and after a public vatican statement involving those topics.

                    The people whose jobs rely on the ability to read and understand demographics attribute weight to smaller demographics, and apply even greater weight to the catholic population. You are just openly incorrect.

                    The cuban vote is considered a huge swing population. Thats at 2.4 million cuban descent americans. Catholic americans top off just under 62 million. I am pretty damn sure that 18% of americans is a very relevant percent of americans. And, more importantly, every single career politician is pretty damn sure too, and this is the one topic you can be confident that a politician actually knows what they are talking about.