sesquipedality (
sesquipedality) wrote2010-01-11 10:08 pm
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A little theory I'm working on
I theorise that people born after 1980 are (on average) massively more worried about climate change than those born before. I further theorise that this is directly correlated to the fact that those of us older than this were far more scared of nuclear Armageddon than environmental Armageddon in our formative years.
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I think the thing that scares me the most about climate change is having been a researcher in a subject where understanding the impact of climate change was pretty essential, I can still remember the abject shock at reading the early papers that told us just how fast climate change had happened in the past (big switches in ~10 yeasr), and then looking at the overwhelming way in which it transformed the landscape. Most people have no concept of what a 1 degree change actually means for their environment, and like most of my peer group I can already see the evidence of it happening around me. Insects have one of the most rapid response rate, and I noticed the local insect fauna switching a few years ago. My environmental scientist friends confirmed that they had also noticed this, and most of us think the momentum is already too strong to stop. It's down to mitigation now.
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The environment problems now are something closer to home, more likely, I have an affect on and I'm more adult so it does cause me more worry.
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*Oh, and, of course, the Mummies and dinosaurs chasing me home from the museum, but I gather that's quite normal for small kids in whatever year ;-).
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Of course I'm talking in generalisations. I was just wondering why climate change doesn't scare or bother me that much.
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That's not to say I'm not concerned about climate change but it doesn't leave me shit scared.
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There's also some lessons about the limits of what is achievable with political coordination, control, and activism; against the nuclear threat there was SALT and the NPT, which had some effect but did not solve the problem.
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"The Pew report found that people over 65 are much more likely than the rest of the population to deny that there is solid evidence that the earth is warming, that it's caused by humans, or that it's a serious problem. This chimes with my own experience. Almost all my fiercest arguments over climate change, both in print and in person, have been with people in their 60s or 70s."
As you'd expect, he and his supporters reckon it's because the old are closer to death, and so either won't be around to see the results, or find reminders of mortality upsetting; and his opponents reckon it's because the old have seen so many other scares and doom-threats that they've become sceptical of new ones.
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