scary graph time

  • @[email protected]
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    42 hours ago

    On one hand, sometimes I feel like most insurance should be the government’s job.

    On the other hand, if climate change is making some areas really hard to live in, maybe we should consider closing down or moving whole cities instead of trying so hard to stay.

  • @[email protected]
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    22 hours ago

    World is becoming unprofitable I guess might as well milk it for all we can get before we move to the next… oh wait…

  • @DarkShaggy
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    471 day ago

    Yes you can deny the science all you want but you know who won’t? The insurance companies. When no one will insure houses in FL I’m sure the GOP will rush to the rescue.

    • NaibofTabr
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      2023 hours ago

      Also, notably, the Pentagon (US DoD), which has been making plans for preparing or moving facilities (especially navy bases) for rising sea levels and other climate change effects for at least 2 decades.

      When I learned about that it made perfect sense, because long-term projections and planning is what they do, and I realized that everyone who denied the climate change evidence was an ignorant fool. If DoD is doing prep work for it then there’s more than just evidence of occurrence, there’s enough practical data to do serious planning with.

      • @shalafi
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        314 hours ago

        That makes an excellent point to bring up with deniers. Love to see one stumble-fuck around trying to praise the military while saying they must be run by liberals.

        • @SacralPlexus
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          17 hours ago

          It is a good point but I have a family member who will begrudgingly not push back too much about whether climate change is happening (though you can tell he wants to) but will argue that you can’t prove it’s man made.

          You’re fighting decades of propaganda and it’s hard.

  • @[email protected]
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    517 hours ago

    I’m surprised to see several midwestern and northeastern states considered to be somewhat of a climate haven show up repeatedly, and it makes me wonder what other non-climate effects (e.g. financial, legislative) may be at play as well.

  • Rentlar
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    1824 hours ago

    Okay so if the taxpayers don’t want the risk and the bill, we should put transfer this risk to those most responsible: fossil fuel companies, and oligarchs.

    They must pay for flood, fire, hurricane and drought damages which they have wrought through their excess carbon emissions. They must rebuild homes in suitable locations for the conditions they have caused.

  • @[email protected]
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    1423 hours ago

    Maybe if people would stop living in places where natural disasters regularly happen without significantly adjusting their goddamn building strategies to create structures that not only survive, but also remain safe living spaces during these events for fucks sake.

    • @PagPag
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      5 minutes ago

      Damn son, did you just solve the puzzle?!? Where have you been this whole time? We needed you!

  • Tarquinn2049
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    620 hours ago

    The only reason it’s unsustainable is because they are trying to charge less than they should for insuring something in these locations, not built to survive the hazards of them. If insurance companies would stop spreading the cost around to make insuring these properties not cost as much as it should, it would work as the incentive it is supposed to be to change behaviour. By spreading the cost out to people not affected by high risk, they are punishing good behaviour and rewarding bad behaviour.

    If they charged the premiums that it would actually take to insure these places based on their risk and their risk alone, it would either be sustainable, or no one would want to pay it… either way, it solves the problem.