2021/01/28

What Does It Mean To Wait On The Lord? | Think About Such Things

What Does It Mean To Wait On The Lord? | Think About Such Things

What Does It Mean to Wait on the Lord?



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Dig into the Bible and see what it means to wait on the Lord? The Hebrew word for waiting will open your eyes to a beautiful understanding of our relationship with God.

I’m pretty sure most Christians have said, “Oh, I’m just waiting on the Lord.” And I am 100% guilty of this on numerous occasions.

But what does it mean to wait on Lord? A lot of times Christians think that when they are waiting on the Lord, it’s this quiet unproductive posture of…….well waiting. It’s all based around time.

At least that’s what I always thought it meant. I don’t know about you but when I think about waiting it’s like waiting at the doctor’s office or inline for groceries or even worse…the DMV.

via GIPHY

And have you ever noticed that waiting for stuff like that can really drain you?

It’s weird… you are at the DMV for like 4 hours (no joke) and once you’re done you’re ready to take a nap or do a hardcore Netflix binge. Am I right? Never do you feel energized and ready to go afterwards.

But is that what God is calling us too? Is He calling us to idly wait?

Waiting on the Lord: What Does that Mean?

In Isaiah 40:30-31 says,

Even the youths shall faint and be weary,
And the young men shall utterly fall,
But those who wait on the Lord
Shall renew their strength;
They shall mount up with wings like eagles,
They shall run and not be weary,
They shall walk and not faint.

What God is saying is that waiting on Him does the absolute opposite. It actually renews your strength and it even takes it up a notch saying even if you do a lot of stuff (run and walk) it’s not going to affect you.

So, what does it really mean to wait on the Lord?

Those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength? Well, if you actually dig into that word “wait” in the Hebrew which is qavah (H6960) it means, “to bind together.”

קָוָה qâvâh, kaw-vaw’; a primitive root; to bind together (perhaps by twisting), i.e. collect; (figuratively) to expect:—gather (together), look, patiently, tarry, wait (for, on, upon).

We also see this word used in Psalm 27:14

Wait for the Lord;
be strong and take heart
and wait for the Lord.

Just think about that for a second.

First off, “to bind together” is not sitting in a corner, waiting patiently or being quiet. It’s not even meaning to just wait for God to answer me in a few days or weeks. It’s about binding together with Him.

Those who “bind together” with Him shall renew their strength. So, what Isaiah is saying here is you’re getting your strength renewed by being very close to the Lord.

Those who “bind together” with Him shall renew their strength. “Waiting” is a proactive stance of drawing close to God.

-MELISSA TUMINO

It’s like what Jesus said, “I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me, you can do nothing.” John 15:5

remain in him is waiting on the Lord

I am the vine, you are, the branch is us binding ourselves to Him …
It’s about being intertwined with Him….

That’s where we gain strength. That’s where we see fruit. You don’t bare fruit by being spiritually idle.

That’s not what waiting on the Lord is. Waiting is productive in nature.

God wants you to draw close to him. Bringing our presence into His presence, and in that place, where the Spirit of the Lord and there is freedom. – 2 Corinthians 3:17

That’s also the place we can hear Him more clearly. If you are 50 feet away from a friend who is talking to you in their normal talking voice. You won’t be able to hear them well or not at all. But if you are only a foot away from them you can hear them very clearly.

That’s how it is in the spirit as well. The closer we get to the Lord the easier it will be to hear and discern His voice. (John 10:27-28 ) It’s the same concept!

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Waiting on the Lord in The New Testament

We have dug around in the Old Testament on what it means to wait on the Lord. But what about in the New Testament? Is waiting on the Lord the same or is there another level of understanding?

Let’s look at Acts 1:4 where Jesus tells his disciples to wait for the promise.

On one occasion, while he was eating with them, he gave them this command: “Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised, which you have heard me speak about.

Wait is the word perimenō. It comes from two Greek words ( G4012 and G3306)

In a nutshell, it means to “to abide, to tarry, to continue to be present, to last, and endure.

It’s one of the words used in John 15:5 for abide or remain (“I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain (G3306) in me and I in you,)

μένωménō, men’-o; a primary verb; to stay (in a given place, state, relation or expectancy):—abide, continue, dwell, endure, be present, remain, stand, tarry (for), × thine own.

I love how one of the translations is “Be Present.” It reflects well with the Hebrew understanding of waiting. To bind with Him is to be present with Him.

So next time you’re wondering, or thinking I need to wait upon the Lord on an answer or something. Remember it’s not about waiting around for this huge revelation to hit you randomly.

It’s about being proactive in our relationship with Him. It’s about binding, remaining, and being present. It’s about relationship…it’s about intimacy…

“I’m going to get so close to Him. So that I can be strengthened and hear clearly what the Lord’s will is for me.”


Well, there you have it! I hope this post has encouraged you and it has encouraged me in my posture in waiting on the Lord. I’ll end with this quote


“Waiting is a very active part of living. Waiting on God, if we do it correctly, is anything but passive. Waiting works its way out in very deliberate actions, very intentionally searching the Scriptures and praying, intense moments of humility, and self-realization of our finiteness. With the waiting comes learning. I can’t think of much I’ve learned that’s positive from the times I’ve plowed ahead without waiting on God.” 

― Wayne Stiles

2021/01/27

The Climate Crisis – A Race We Can Win | United Nations

The Climate Crisis – A Race We Can Win | United Nations






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The Climate Crisis – A Race We Can Win


Climate change is the defining crisis of our time and it is happening even more quickly than we feared. But we are far from powerless in the face of this global threat. As Secretary-General António Guterres pointed out in September, “the climate emergency is a race we are losing, but it is a race we can win”.

No corner of the globe is immune from the devastating consequences of climate change. Rising temperatures are fueling environmental degradation, natural disasters, weather extremes, food and water insecurity, economic disruption, conflict, and terrorism. Sea levels are rising, the Arctic is melting, coral reefs are dying, oceans are acidifying, and forests are burning. It is clear that business as usual is not good enough. As the infinite cost of climate change reaches irreversible highs, now is the time for bold collective action.

GLOBAL TEMPERATURES ARE RISING


Billions of tons of CO2 are released into the atmosphere every year as a result of coal, oil, and gas production. Human activity is producing greenhouse gas emissions at a record high, with no signs of slowing down. According to a ten-year summary of UNEP Emission Gap reports, we are on track to maintain a “business as usual” trajectory.

The last four years were the four hottest on record. According to a September 2019 World Meteorological Organization (WMO) report, we are at least one degree Celsius above preindustrial levels and close to what scientists warn would be “an unacceptable risk”. The 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change calls for holding eventual warming “well below” two degrees Celsius, and for the pursuit of efforts to limit the increase even further, to 1.5 degrees. But if we don’t slow global emissions, temperatures could rise to above three degrees Celsius by 2100, causing further irreversible damage to our ecosystems.

Glaciers and ice sheets in polar and mountain regions are already melting faster than ever, causing sea levels to rise. Almost two-thirds of the world’s cities with populations of over five million are located in areas at risk of sea level rise and almost 40 per cent of the world’s population live within 100 km of a coast. If no action is taken, entire districts of New York, Shanghai, Abu Dhabi, Osaka, Rio de Janeiro, and many other cities could find themselves underwater within our lifetimes, displacing millions of people.

FOOD AND WATER INSECURITY


Global warming impacts everyone’s food and water security. Climate change is a direct cause of soil degradation, which limits the amount of carbon the earth is able to contain. Some 500 million people today live in areas affected by erosion, while up to 30 per cent of food is lost or wasted as a result. Meanwhile, climate change limits the availability and quality of water for drinking and agriculture.

In many regions, crops that have thrived for centuries are struggling to survive, making food security more precarious. Such impacts tend to fall primarily on the poor and vulnerable. Global warming is likely to make economic output between the world’s richest and poorest countries grow wider.

NEW EXTREMES


Disasters linked to climate and weather extremes have always been part of our Earth’s system. But they are becoming more frequent and intense as the world warms. No continent is left untouched, with heatwaves, droughts, typhoons, and hurricanes causing mass destruction around the world. 90 per cent of disasters are now classed as weather- and climate-related, costing the world economy 520 billion USD each year, while 26 million people are pushed into poverty as a result.

A CATALYST FOR CONFLICT


Climate change is a major threat to international peace and security. The effects of climate change heighten competition for resources such as land, food, and water, fueling socioeconomic tensions and, increasingly often, leading to mass displacement.

Climate is a risk multiplier that makes worse already existing challenges. Droughts in Africa and Latin America directly feed into political unrest and violence. The World Bank estimates that, in the absence of action, more than 140 million people in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and South Asia will be forced to migrate within their regions by 2050.

A PATH FORWARD


While science tells us that climate change is irrefutable, it also tells us that it is not too late to stem the tide. This will require fundamental transformations in all aspects of society — how we grow food, use land, transport goods, and power our economies.

While technology has contributed to climate change, new and efficient technologies can help us reduce net emissions and create a cleaner world. Readily-available technological solutions already exist for more than 70 per cent of today’s emissions. In many places renewable energy is now the cheapest energy source and electric cars are poised to become mainstream.

In the meantime, nature-based solutions provide ‘breathing room’ while we tackle the decarbonization of our economy. These solutions allow us to mitigate a portion of our carbon footprint while also supporting vital ecosystem services, biodiversity, access to fresh water, improved livelihoods, healthy diets, and food security. Nature-based solutions include improved agricultural practices, land restoration, conservation, and the greening of food supply chains.

Scalable new technologies and nature-based solutions will enable us all to leapfrog to a cleaner, more resilient world. If governments, businesses, civil society, youth, and academia work together, we can create a green future where suffering is diminished, justice is upheld, and harmony is restored between people and planet.

In what ways is the climate crisis irreparable? - Quora

(1) In what ways is the climate crisis irreparable? - Quora


In what ways is the climate crisis irreparable?


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29 Answers




Eric Hawthorne
Answered March 14, 2020




One of the major effects of rapid global warming is inability of many species, and types of ecosystems, to adapt or migrate fast enough to survive.

And when species or ecosystems disappear from the planet, it can take tens of millions of years for similar species or ecosystems to evolve and re-establish, even should the climate be restored to something similar to when they were thriving. And note that it would be only “similar” species and ecosystems, not the same species, or ecosystem compositions, as before. Those are gone.

In a more short term sense of irreparable, excess CO2 put into the atmosphere now will continue to be there and have its planet-heating effect for 200 years. Additionally, excess heat at Earth’s surface region that we’re causing now gets cycled down into the depths of the ocean and warms the ocean slightly down to enormous depth. A vast mass of water acts as a thermal mass, storing the heat. So that thermal energy stays there for perhaps a thousand’ish years, having its effect on climate for around that long. These are among the reasons we say we have already locked-in global warming for some considerable future time, even if we stop emitting now. Earth’s atmospheric/oceanic system is just a really big system, and effects on it take hundreds of years to work through the system.

The hard thing to get our head around is that even though we’ve already caused some level of locked-in change and harm, we should still act urgently on it to avoid the total cumulative effect being even worse, and catastrophically bad, as will very likely happen on current business-as-usual emissions trajectories.

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Paul Noel, former Research Scientist 6 Level 2 UAH Huntsville Al. (2009-2014)
Answered February 21, 2020




Since the climate crisis is a product of the stylesheet of the UK Guardian and never had any scientific, physical or historical manifestation I would say that the reason it is irreparable is purely that it is likely to put the UK Guardian out of business once and for all.

Stylesheets are used by reporters to define the correct phrases and methods etc to produce articles. The UK Guardian chose in early 2019 to introduce the terms Climate Crisis in order to hype up the articles and get clicks etc. It is just clickbait.

As to the world environment it is astoundingly resilient. It seems to recover sometimes slower and sometimes faster than one would think. I can safely tell you that the world is showing amazing recovery all over. Rather than failing it is actually getting better almost everywhere at this time. There literally are more trees now that ever before. We are seeing massive wildlife improvements. We are seeing sea life in recovery. Whales for example are very nearly to the level they were before whaling was introduced. Polar bears have 30,000 or more new bears since 2006 when Al Gore did his famous movie.

Are there problems. Absolutely. But things are getting better.

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Victor Williams, Internet researcher
Answered April 10, 2020




Climate scientists working for monied-interests like to use charts, statistics, etc wherein they manipulate data to fit a certain model. This is called outcome-based science. The rich class have been calling for the implementation of a carbon tax. Just what the world needs another way for the rich class to confiscate the wealth of the commoners, speading misery and poverty.

Climate change fanatics, zealots, what have you are misguided and delusional.

Carbon dioxide is a trace gas that is essential for plant life. Adding CO2 to the atmosphere results in plant growth. Plants respond by releasing oxygen. Climate change fanatics have been taught that a trace gas that comprises .04% of the atmosphere can somehow magically transform the earth into a greenhouse. That is preposterous.

All this emphasis on climate change has drawn attention away from real threats to the environment. The impression I'm left with is climate change zealots don't care about real threats to the environment that have the potential to destroy the habitability of the planet earth. For example, the spread of radioactive isotopes into the environment via the nuclear power industry.

Maybe people just want to live in a world contaminated with radioactive isotopes in the air, food and water. Maybe people think that living in a world contaminated with microplastics would be cool. Maybe people think living in a world where Communist China is allowed to pollute indiscriminately is exciting.

I don't know why I even bother responding to these kinds of questions. I'm getting paid nothing for these posts. Why should it be left to me to educate people regarding the hypocrisy of climate change fanatics?

People better become wise to the ways of the elite or accept the consequences. It may already be too late to save the planet from the effects of the groese mismanagement of the planets resources by the rich class.

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Related Questions
More Answers Below

How can people deny climate change and the fact that we are in a climate crisis right now? No matter what your beliefs or views are, it’s happening right in front of us!


What changes would you bring to correct the climate crisis?


Will 3 trillion dollars solve the climate crisis?





Francisco Maldonado, BAC1-11; B727; B757 Airline Transport Pilot License
Answered March 13, 2020




What makes you think that we're facing a “climate crisis”?

Because you heard it in the news?

Fact is there is no climate emergency or crisis or any such thing. There has been only a very slight increase in temperatures (about 1.11°C in 100 years), zero increase in hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, floods, or any other type of weather related natural disasters. None.

Global Warming and Hurricanes

No, Hurricanes Are Not Bigger, Stronger and More Dangerous

Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change Assessment: Part I: Detection and Attribution

Tornadoes and Global Warming: Is There a Connection?

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.climategate.nl/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/morner.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwiH5sjBvYvoAhUDc60KHXC9CNQQFjASegQIBhAB&usg=AOvVaw25_oNZ_hyX1sya9XuMNrJg&csh … (more)

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Guy Malbec, Researching Climate-Change since 2006
Answered March 5, 2020




There is an ocean current circling the Arctic called the Beaufort Gyre.

Historically speaking, the Gyre used to switch directions from clockwise to anti-clockwise and then back again, every 5–7 years.

For the past 20 years, the Gyre has been spinning in the same clockwise direction. Over those same 20 years, the Gyre has accumulated 8000 cubic kilometres of fresh water from melting ice. All that fresh water is captured in the Gyre and kept close to the Arctic.

When the direction of the wind changes, all that fresh water is going to be ‘ejected’ out into the surrounding water, vastly increasing ocean stratification, and thereby disrupting ocean currents.

That would be the ‘First Domino’ falling.

A disruption of the Atlantic Meridonal Overturning Circulation would: 1) Completely change the climate of Western Europe; 2) Trap even more heat in the Antarctic; 3) Weaken the East Asian monsoon even further; 4) Dramatically affect marine wildlife, and more.

Every system that collapses will result in pushing more systems to collapse.

Like dominos.

So you see, even if we wake up tomorrow and invest truly radical efforts at mitigating CO2 emissions, the process of planetary climate collapse is already beyond our ability to reverse.

And it could happen any moment.

https://climate.nasa.gov/news/2950/arctic-ice-melt-is-changing-ocean-currents/

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Dan Henneberger, B.A. Life Sciences & The Arts, University of California, Los Angeles
Answered March 1, 2020




It is irreparable because humans will not do what is necessary to solve the problem. Most important is to reduce the population with birth control. Very few will do it. Second that could be done at this time is…STOP eating all meats!! Now how many will do that? Producing all the meats humans eat causes more air, water and earth pollution than any other source! That means cars, trucks, trains, planes, ships and anything I forgot to mention. Growing cows, chickens, pigs, sheep and any animal causes more POLLUTION and is what is causing Climate change. This is a worldwide problem that people just don’t get…..and most likely will NEVER understand. They are meant to keep ignorant of the problem by the Major Banks and Corporations of the world that control and own everything. What else prevents change? Greed, Corruption and the pollution of Plastics. Do you think humans will change? Dreamer!

You want to try to change things for the better? Check it out, healthy people are Vegans! Humans were not meant to eat meat. In the past history it was a last resort survival food. Tell your friends and keep telling others. Be vegans.

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Paul Fishman, Adjudication Litigation Legal (1989-present)
Answered March 12, 2020




The Climate Crisis has been manufactured and exaggerated up as a ploy of fear and control instead of using reasonable common sense. The real truth is that it took 150 to 200 years from the start of the Industrial Revolution to make some effect of changing the climate. It will also take at least 100 year to reverse the effects human development has on the climate. Without our human effects, the earth always goes through climate changes and crisis in cycles. However we can be good at Conservation by development over time in 9 to 10 decades for renewable energy sources that will reduce carbon emissions and will make a bit but not total change to the climate. For example the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland Ohio was a very toxic dirty industrial place back in 1970. Now 50 years later with changes to eliminate the pollutants with clean Conservation the river has been cleaned up and improved. Over a time of a century or two with our world going into the Information and Technology Revolution, clean energy with patient investment and time can make some difference. A long term vision and goal must be make without undue changes put upon the earth's population. Social adaption also takes a lot of time as well.

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Daniel Cooper, BS Electrical Engineering & Physics (1967)
Answered February 23, 2020




It is not irreparable. There are two ways it will be repaired.

First, we can come together and work to solve it. It can be done, we know how, and we have the technology. We will have to ignore those who say it doesn’t exist, those who say we are all doomed so there is nothing to do, those who say their one way is the only thing to do, and those who are making money out of not doing anything and buying governments to serve their ends.

Second, we can keep our heads in the sand. Global civilization will collapse and the population will crash to a very small number, due to a lot of factors of which climate change is only one. Then nature will repair itself over a few thousand years.

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Marc Lambert, Inventor/Producer of "EGMi Metacognition for the Masses"
Answered March 1, 2020




Planets like earth are constantly changing internally, externally, and from external influences of orbit and changes in the sun, it would be rare for a change to bring back the exact conditions to an area.

Here in SEQ OZ we got our average rainfall this year and may go over but the changes of many years of drought and rising temps have caused some changes in the country itself, fauna and flora that will never go back to the exactly the way they were 30 years ago.

EGMi can stop humans polluting/destroying and zero carbon emissions may slow warming, but I live on the edge of what was a big volcano its development, eruption the changes it made are irreparable but made my home.

















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Allan Travers, I have accrued 66 years of experience and observations
Answered April 14, 2020




Anthony, there is NO climate crisis, just an attempt by a very evil and greedy group of very wealthy people who have world dominance as their main agenda. In achieving their end they have taken a totally natural occyrance like the planets warming and cooling cycles, and added their own lie to it by attempting to use the earth’s natural warming cycle, as it is promoted, is being caused by mankind, burning fossil fuels. The truth is, that the earth is in a warming phase of it’s temperature fluctuating cycle, and in many years from now will begin it’s return to the cooling period, and then followed by a warming period. This is the earth’s cycle since creation. Now what is believed to be the case is that CO2 is released when things warm up and are recaptured by such things as the oceans when it cools down again. So CO2 does NOT cause the earth to warm up, and the amount of CO2 we humans produce is insignificant compared to all the other sources of nature combined. So don’t believe the bull. First comes the warming, then comes the CO2. Not the other way round. There is no climate crisis and there is nothing to repair, it’s all about virtue signalling and making money out of people’s fears.

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Andrew Forrest, Chief Engineer at Solstad Offshore (2005-present)
Answered February 29, 2020




In what ways is the climate crisis irreparable?

It’s not irreparable, nothing is. In terms of human lifespan, which is the common scale applied to solving problems, then you could say it’s irreparable. The planet’s energy balance will reassert itself in the fullness of time, and in geological terms it will be minuscule.

We mightn’t have the same view. This is why it’s very important that we become more responsible for what we are doing to the only biosphere that we know of. The sooner we wean ourselves off the teat of hydrocarbon fuels, the sooner we can re-establish normality and the less price we pay.

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Keith White
Answered February 21, 2020




The climate is irreparable because:-
It is not damaged, and
It is NOT humans that are causing the change.

If you can suggest some method to control the Earth’s orbit and the massive gazillion watt heater in the sky (that we call the sun) then you might have some hope of influencing the climate - otherwise just enjoy the ride and stop stressing and stop being fooled by climate alarmists and hoaxers.

Now I am NOT religious at all - but the Bible warns us of “False Prophets”- perhaps it is more wise that I originally thought?

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Daniel Kinch, performer, author of play about AGW currently touring US
Answered March 3, 2020




As a result of the Industrial Revolution and the use of fossil fuels at scale, we’ve added 2.7 trillion tons of carbon dioxide, a potent greenhouse gas, to the atmosphere. No one has any notion on how to remove it or break it down into component parts. It will be in the atmosphere for centuries, and it will contribute to heating the planet past the point where big mammals like humans can survive. It will also heat the earth past the point where we have Arctic sea ice, which would otherwise prevent release of hundreds of billions of tons of methane currently sequestered under the ice.

There are dozens of other feedback loops driven by climate crisis, but the two I’ve mentioned are sufficient to drive our climate past the point where we can survive the Sixth Mass Extinction, already in progress.

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Dave Brunfeldt, 40 years as a radar designer. PhD electrical engineering
Answered February 25, 2020




Climate changes. It always has and always will. Repair means that it has been broken and should be repaired. Says who? Climate is probably different than it was 5000 years ago, but is it worse? Is it broken?

If it is broken, what is broken? Don’t give me projections that say it will break. Right now, what is broken? Different isn’t broken. Not the way you want it, isn’t broken.

Climate will never repeat itself. There are too many degrees of freedom, too many parameters that go into climate to ever be the same over and over again.

So perhaps your question should be more specific. Give us a measurement of one part of the climate and then define broken. Maybe the respondents can address a particular “broken” thing in the climate.

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Guido Martinelli, former Zero Waste- Sustainability Energy Saving Advisor at Cooperativa La Ringhiera (1983-2010)
Answered March 14, 2020




Many facts made the greenhouse effect grow. And some facts are the effects of global warming itself… like.. more methane from melted ice will improve global warming. In theoric line is recoverable. but require too much time. Also, crude oil is considered not renewable.. when in a few millions of years we will have new oil. It is easier to stop climate change, but oil corporation lobbying action is winning and hope to block climate overheating and disasters related is like to be in the last position of the marathon at 500 meters of the arrival and hope to win… NO WAY. We must prepare to live in a climate troubled planet..

















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Anton Carver, Understands Science well enough to read Scientific Papers
Answered February 21, 2020




The past is fixed. Extinctions are permanent. Vast swaths of coral aren’t going to make it and the marine ecosystems they support are in trouble. Ice can be refrozen, but temperatures have to drop considerably for that to happen—it can’t happen this century. Consequently, sea-level rise will continue for a good while after we manage to peak temperatures (if we do that) and that will occur a few decades after we peak carbon dioxide concentration (if we do that) and that will happen a good while after peak emissions (if we do that).


Scientists compare climate change impacts at 1.5C and 2C

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Ken Warren, former Software Engineer (1979-2010)
Answered February 23, 2020




There is no climate crisis. It is the damage the West’s own-foot-shooting is inflicting that will be irreparable. Do not follow Europe’s lead on this road to Mediaevalism, as described in this article. The real western civilisation emergency

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Kelly Mitchell, Analyst at AmaZix
Answered February 26, 2020




Well, here’s the multi-year chart of the Antarctic sea ice anomaly. It looks like a steady upward trend with some volatility.


so - what are you talking about? Oh, right - the news reports about ice calving events. Well, here’s the dirty secret - ice calves because there’s too much of it, not because it’s melting. It builds up in the interior, then glaciers push out at the edges. The edges break off into the ocean. It’s been happening for - hmm - over a billion years, except during periods when the Earth was truly warm and had no ice at the poles. Yes, that’s happened a number of times.

So - please don’t panic. Everything is actually fine.

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Bill Crean, Former meteorologist on network of met. stations.
Answered February 21, 2020




Assuming the theory of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) is true, then the climate crisis is irreparable because few people will do the necessary to stop the warming trend.

My answer in the link outlines some measures, which would help reduce the AGW trend:

Bill Crean's answer to How can we save the world?

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Bruce Bell, former Data Tech - following Climate Science since 1995
Answered March 3, 2020




The only irreparable thing about the climate crisis is the Denialists.

If they were not in the picture, we’d be well on our way to curing the problem by now - it wouldn’t get fixed instantly, but we WOULD be on our way.

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Daniel E Hofford, former DataBase Programmer/Systems Analyst (1994-2010)
Answered February 23, 2020




In the way that climate scientists have been utterly cowardly in their appeasement of and capitulation to a Leftist political agenda. They have besmirched science and the methodology of science. Shame on them, one and all.

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J Michael Sullivan, studied at Boston University (1986)
Answered March 2, 2020




No way to accurately tell, but it is more than likely that thousands of species have already gone extinct during our watch. How many of these species might have proven to be valuable with regard to medical research and/or fighting disease we will never know. Continuing this madness for much longer is going to paint the human race into a corner. The 1% know it and are thus hoarding everything they can get their greedy hands on. The question is, what are we the common man going to do to prevent the SFHTF since the elites aren’t lifting a finger?

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Vicente Gonzalez, former Physician
Answered February 21, 2020




the climate on our planet has periodic cycles and changes and this circumstance "will not change". What can change is that the human being can adapt to excessive atmospheric warming and of land, seas and rivers. It is man who is "at risk", not planet Earth.

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Darcy Wilson
Answered March 12, 2020




Well first there is no crisis. It is a hoax. The response to this hoax will cause irreparable damage to our economies and way of life. Unless we stop this useless end CO2 action we are doomed. Read agenda 2030.

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Keith H. Burgess, R.E. Climate Change & Common Sense, Research (2019)
Answered February 26, 2020




The governments or a majority of people could stop anthropogenic global warming & climate change if they wanted to Anthony, but they are not prepared to do what is needed to stop global warming.

We probably have left it too late to reverse global warming, we can probably only stabilise it at its present level, IF action were taken immediately, which it won’t.
Keith.

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John Murphy, former Chemical Engineer at Oil Refining, Computer Programming, Currently Barrister.
Answered February 21, 2020




Be so kind as to define “climate crisis.”

You are the 105th person of whom I have asked that question in the last couple of months.

See if you can be the first to answer it. If you can’t I will know your question is not genuine.

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Richard Rothwell, former Senior Software Engineer in Data Analytics
Answered February 25, 2020




About 2/3 of CO2 emissions ends up in the ocean. So removing it from the air after it is released is rate limited by how fast it evolves from the ocean. So the whole process is slow, and essentially irreversible.

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Martin Harris, former Forward Observer to Battery Commander at 49th Field Artillery Battalion, Charlie Battery (1955-1957)
Answered April 8, 2020




What crisis? It was warmer in the Paleolithic period when modern humans began to use hand-made tools and cave art for the first time.

MH

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Chris Beall, Educator (2002-present)
Answered February 23, 2020




There IS NO “climate crisis” Climate change is a natural, cyclical process that is no threat to mankind.

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