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Cyclone of '08


caldrail

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The huge storm in Burma has left as many as ten thousand people dead. Its hard to understand the scale of disasters like this. Even the secretive burmese government has felt it has no choice but to ask for foreign assistance. No doubt many people are pointing fingers and blaming Global Warming etc etc. Its as well to point that terrible storms have happened before, its just that the modern media make us so much more aware of what happens around the world now and that given we only live for a short time, so much of what has happened in the past is something we're not often aware of. We've certainly been made aware of this one.

 

I'm thinking in terms of something like the change in british climate in 1314-15. Previous to that was the Medieval Warm Period, a time when agriculture could have done better if the agricultural system hadn't been held back by tax and the manorial system. But in 1314 it all changed. The summers were exceptionally wet and the winters hard. Starvation became commonplace.

 

 

Doesn't this all sound familiar? Our recent summers have been wet also, the flooding exacerbated by settlements in flood plains and little opportunity for rainwater to soak away where great swathes of concrete and asphalt cover the ground.

 

Since the black death spread from India thirty years later and reduced the population of europe by 3/4, lets hope the similarities aren't too close :D

 

Important Reminder

Its Compost Awareness Week next week. Make sure you know where your compost is, and use your compost responsibly. As long as compost levels are properly controlled, we can offset our Compost Footprint and escape the worst of Global Composting.

 

Log-On of the Week

BJ, our new all-singing and dancing Lord mayor of London, has succesfully logged on to his PC in his new office. Way to go B. Keep up the good work.

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Re: the environment...this is something my dad and I have talked about for a few years now...just that no one 'round these parts cares to hear it. Oh, I truly believe that we should all drive smarter, live smarter, be more aware of our environment. But we still are in the midst of something that really wasn't all our creating, and we aren't going to change things, either.

 

As for BJ...I'm guessing he's a few steps on Dubbya.

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The problem these days is that our awareness of the enviroment has almost religious overtones, that if you speak against the enviromental gospel you get burned at the stake, whether the gospel is correct or not. Our own government has jumped on the enviromental bandwagon eagerly in its quest to redistribute everybodies wealth into public servants mortgages. The simple fact is the earth is a dynamic system far more powerful than we are, and as much as caring for the enviroment is laudable, its highly unlikely that driving hybrid bubble cars is going to suddenly prevent any changes in climate. Its already happening - and like any other species on earth, we either adapt or perish when the changes hit us.

 

Incidentially, last nights news carried a report that as many as 100,000 people have been killed in that cyclone. Its getting difficult to visualise what it must have been like.

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I agree with your points, but I do think that, while we can't change the course of events, we can all live smarter. It may not put even a minor dent into the course of affairs, but that doesn't mean that making certain changes won't be beneficial to our lives in general. Take the use of hybrid cars...it's something I'm interested not to "stop global warming," but because we need to be open-minded about our energy consumption in general. They're more efficient, which is just smart practice. Now, if I want a sports car, I'm going to go the fossil-fuel-route...unless there's a hybrid sports car than can out-perform it's gas-guzzling cousins. But for day-to-day driving, I want to drive something that is a good, solid car and that is efficient; after all, the less money I waste on gas, the more I spend in the rest of the economy. And, hey, if it ends up cutting smog levels, then that's just an added bonus. I think if more people continue on that path of reason, the better we'll be as a (global) society...that the focus should be on efficiency with stability, not necessarily for everyone to go hug a tree.

 

As for Burma...100,000 people...Christ. What I heard last night is that India told Burma that this was coming, and did so with enough time to have started evacuations...but Burma's junta was too stubborn to heed warning. If that's true...wow. What will be interesting to see is what, if any, reaction this will bring out from the Burmese people. Is this the straw that breaks the junta-camel's back? I hope that something major changes, but in my gut I know it won't.

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Well, the demand for performance means that eventually hybrids will include sports models, and in theory the performance potential from an electric motor will ouitclass that of an internal combustion engine - its just that so far once you've done the quarter mile in six seconds you run out of juice... :)

 

Will people ever learn? No. The burmese government didn't listen because it lives with its head in the sand and is too concerned with enforcing its rule. In any case, living smart is only smart in someones opinion. I could buy a hybrid and feel very smug, yet still die when a tree falls on it in strong winds.

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Will people ever learn? No. The burmese government didn't listen because it lives with its head in the sand and is too concerned with enforcing its rule.

 

Apparently the Burmese leader / tyrant Than Shwe has promised

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It gets worse doesn't it? Now the burmese government is turning the whole thing into a propaganda exercise and photo opportunities, whilst appropriating the aid that has got through. Its worse than Africa.

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