siderea

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@TokenBoomer

"Landsailor
Deepwinter strawberry
Endless summer, ever spring
A vast preserve
Aisle after aisle in reach
Every commoner made a king

Earthbreaker
Noble and prized
Feed me beyond my means
Hello, worldmaker
Never deny
Build all my wildest dreams
But there's a storm outside your door
I'm a child no more..."

(Vienna Teng, "Landsailor")

@mo_ztt

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@jsdz

Article: [list of ways to stop burning fossil fuels]

jsdz: No! My list is better! [exact same list of ways to stop burning fossil fuels.]

@DougHolland

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

[continued]

"Findings

The final dataset included more than 11.5 million tested isolates. Raw antibiotic-resistance data included nine pathogens and 43 types of antibiotic agents. Significant correlations between PM2.5 and antibiotic resistance were consistent globally in most antibiotic-resistant bacteria (R^2=0.42–0.76, p<0.0001), and correlations have strengthened over time. Antibiotic resistance derived from PM2.5 caused an estimated 0.48 (95% CI 0.34–0.60) million premature deaths and 18.2 (13.4–23.0) million years of life lost in 2018 worldwide, corresponding to an annual welfare loss of US$395 (290–500) billion due to premature deaths."

 

Air pollution (PM2.5) can be a direct vector of antibiotic resistant bacteria, and caused approx 0.5M deaths in 2018, per new study.

Just published in The Lancet Planetary Health (peer-reviewed scientific journal):
"Association between particulate matter (PM)2·5 air pollution and clinical antibiotic resistance: a global analysis" (by Zhenchao Zhou, PhD, Xinyi Shuai, BSc, et al.)
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanplh/article/PIIS2542-5196(23)00135-3/fulltext

"The major air pollutant, in the form of particulate matter (PM)2.5, has been shown to contain diverse antibiotic-resistant bacteria and antibiotic-resistance genes, which are transferred between environments and directly inhaled by humans, causing respiratory-tract injury and infection. [7, 8, 9] PM2.5 could also increase cell-membrane permeability to enhance the efficiency of horizontal gene transfer, accelerating the evolution and exchange of antibiotic-resistance elements in bacterial pathogens. [10, 11]"

@collapse

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

@ComradePorkRoll
In 2000, I went to Burning Man, which is, if you don't know, a festival that is held on the dry lake bed in a desert, at the end of summer, at which there is no general provision of water. You are warned when you buy your ticket that your hydration is your problem, and that the average human adult in that environment requires two gallons of potable water a day not to die, so you'd better figure out how long you're going to be there and bring enough water for yourself.

I'd never been camping before under such circumstances, but the person I was attending with had a great bit of advice that worked well for me. He insisted that I get a Camelback, which is a water backpack with a drinking tube.

I made a point of never leaving my tent, not even for a trip to the loo, without having my Camelback on my back. The pragmatic upshot was that drinking water was always as near as my right shoulder. Sipping from the tube became habitual.

I've never been so hydrated in my life.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@icepuncher69

This is not the recipe to save the world, but one thing you can do to help lean on the lever is disinvest from any bank that funds fossil fuel extraction. I'm not talking primarily about investment accounts. I'm talking about ordinary banking and credit cards. If you bank with Bank of America or Wells Fargo, move your money. If you have a Citibank credit card, get a credit card with someone else.

The Rainforest Action Network annually publishes a report "Banking on Climate Chaos" for consumers to look up their banks and see how dirty they are. Recommended.

Banks turn out to be surprising leverage points in the extractive industries. They're actually much larger and much more powerful than the extractive industries they lend money to. The extractive industries need banks way, way more than banks need the extractive industries. Banks could be convinced to stop funding them by social pressure, and then the extractive industries would starve and die.

@TokenBoomer

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

@Gloomy "We're fine - the hole's in the other end of the boat!"
@wabooti

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

@wabooti

Location: Massachusetts, USA

First credible flood warnings in my area.

Some context: The region in which I live, after catastrophic flooding in the middle of the 20th century, domesticated and tamed all of the rivers. We have a system of dams and other flood control that mostly keeps our water levels very stable. New Englanders do not understand how artificial the stability of our water levels is, and the kinds of floods we used to have here before all the dams were built to make sure that never happens again.

But now we're getting rainfall like never before, and it's not like our dams are any better maintained than our bridges are - and our bridges are a known scandal.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

@kinther @doom_and_gloom

Heh, city-dwellers have generally been oblivious to how food gets on their tables for much, much longer than the public had the internet.

When I was a kid in the 70s, it was a commonplace in calls to modernize education to decry "memorizing countries' imports and exports" as an archaic waste of time. And there was none of that in the enlightened education I received.

Of course now I find myself endlessly fascinated by facts like "Australia is/was the biggest seller of coal to China" and "Ukraine provides a third of the wheat bought by African countries".