Good morning all. Apparently, it’s my anniversary. According to WordPress, I started blogging on this day, exactly seven years ago. 🙂
To be honest, all I remember about that day, and that first post, is that I didn’t expect anyone to read it. Nevertheless, I decided that if I really did need to have a blog [as all the pundits said], it would be about my passions rather than just ‘marketing’. So I dusted off my soapbox, hopped on and let rip about climate change.
Sadly, little has changed between then and now. In case you’re interested, this is my very first post, dated December 29, 2011:
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When I first started writing science fiction, I was aware of climate change, but I blush to say I did not take it very seriously. I assumed that global warming would be ‘fixed’, like the hole in the ozone layer, before it could become a genuine cause for concern. Oops…
Fast forward ten years and climate change is one of the hottest topics in the media. Thanks to Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth, climate change has become a part of mainstream consciousness. Yet despite multiple summits – Durban being the latest – and enough talk to float a thousand zeppelins, we seem to be further from a genuine solution than ever before. Everyone knows that the world should move to a low carbon economy, but no-one wants to suffer in the process. Understandable, but just a tad short-sighted given how much suffering there is likely to be if we don’t.
So who are the protagonists in this tragic comedy? Well, in terms of sheer numbers, ordinary people like you and me are at the top of the list. We don’t understand the science – no surprise there – so we only know what the media choose to tell us, and the media are having a field day playing both sides against the middle.
On the one hand they are gleefully telling us about island nations like Tuvalu that are already beginning to disappear beneath rising sea levels, but on the other hand, they are also telling us that scientists are divided about whether climate change is real or not.
To keep the pot boiling, the media give equal air time [and validity] to crackpots like Lord Monckton who know less about the science than I do. They also keep us guessing by all the things they don’t say. For example when they talk about dissent in the scientific ranks they fail to mention that most of the dissenting scientists are not in the climate change discipline.
However the strangest aspect of the media coverage, is their lack of interest in ferreting out who is paying whom to say what. I have yet to see a single mainstream article that names climate change skeptics who are paid thousands of dollars per day to ‘consult’ with the very industries that have the most to gain from raising doubt about the science.
These industries [petroleum and coal spring to mind but they are not the only ones] are using the exact same tactics that Big Tobacco used so successfully to drag the smoking ‘debate’ out for thirty years or more. They are funding genuine scientists, as well as those with no credentials whatsoever, to raise doubt in the minds of governments and ordinary citizens alike in order to delay action on climate change for as long as possible. These delaying tactics translate into profit for them, and helpless confusion for the rest of us.
And the media either can’t or won’t report it.
I am realistic enough to know that libel laws make this kind of reporting difficult, however I can’t help thinking that a certain amount of editorial gagging is also going on. After all, the media is now run by a few, very large, very powerful media barons who have connections to other equally powerful corporate players, and all of them have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo [business as usual].
Little wonder then that ordinary people are confused. But what of governments? Surely they should be better informed than we are?
The problem with governments all over the world is that they are run by politicians who have all the same failings as ordinary people. Some are stupid, some are greedy, some are self-centred and ambitious, and some are simply short-sighted. They know that climate change is real and they know that hard decisions will have to be taken if we are to avoid the worst of the consequences climate change will bring, but they are afraid of what will happen now if they try to do anything. Millions of people are already out of work, and the industries that used to employ them are tottering on the brink of collapse. Surely now is not the time to slap them with a carbon tax. Surely now is not the time to insist that they clean up their act. Surely now is not the time to rock the boat.
Or is it?
Perhaps I have spent too long playing with plot lines, but it seems to me that this is a perfect time for Darwin’s theory of natural selection to kick in. I say we should let the deadwood die instead of propping it up with financial assistance that simply ends up in the pockets of those who caused the mess in the first place.
And while the market is sorting out which companies are the fittest, government support can be given to all the new, emerging, low carbon industries that have been starved of funding for so long.
Let’s reward these new industries for being innovative and efficient. Let’s reward them for being lean and mean. Let’s allow them to move into the spaces left by the old dinosaurs. Let’s allow them to revive our flagging economies, and in the process give jobs to those people prepared to learn the relevant new skills.
Yes, there will be disruptions and yes, we may have to adjust our standard of living a little, but surely that is better than suddenly waking up to find that the global markets have collapsed completely because every nation on earth is threatened by rising sea levels, crop failures, famine, floods, fires, drought, disease and all the other lovely things nature can throw at us?
I love the good things in life as much as anyone, so I too I like things the way they are now. Nonetheless, if things must change then I’d rather get used to those changes gradually. And I’d rather have some choice in the matter.
– If power production is part of the problem [as it is] then I’d rather pay a competitive price for solar panels than keep on paying for dirty power.
– If petrol driven cars are part of the problem [as they are] then let me choose to buy a hybrid or electric car instead [which I can then charge from those lovely solar panels I put in].
– If shipping food from one end of the globe to the other is part of the problem then let me choose to eat only food that is in season and grown locally.
Adjusting to change does not have to be horrendous. Those who have money only have to change their priorities. Those who do not have money should get assistance, and most importantly re-training opportunities so they can take advantage of the new jobs the new industries will bring.
A smooth transition is possible, but only if we get our collective heads out of the sand, and only if we recognize that helping the most vulnerable amongst us is not charity but an investment in the future.
As a writer I can see the possibilities for a better, brighter future, but only time will tell whether we make the transition smoothly, or fall in a heap as a species.
As a human being I’m hoping we don’t go the way of the real dinosaurs, but as a writer I have to acknowledge that at the moment, an end-of-the-world scenario is more likely.
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Thank you to all my online friends. You’ve made the last seven years fun. I hope the next seven are even better!
-hugs-
Meeks
January 7th, 2019 at 10:45 am
Congrats on seven years. That’s a long time. I’ll be seven years this July. Phew! Yes, sadly little has changed on the climate front, and recently under T(he) Rump, we have lost ground. Ugh. I am hopeful though as the US voters rebel against the greedy, corrupt old guard and set a new direction. (Fingers crossed!).
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January 7th, 2019 at 12:27 pm
We have the same greedy corrupt old guard here and we hope to be rid of a lot of them come the next election – March? May? Old men with vested interests in the status quo need to be…retired.
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January 8th, 2019 at 4:14 am
Hear, hear!
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January 2nd, 2019 at 8:12 am
The world needs more Meeks in it. I love reading your posts, fantastic interesting conversational viewpoints and although I’ll never really fathom virtual reality or sci-fi you’ve given me an appreciation.
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January 2nd, 2019 at 9:43 pm
-grin- My job here is done. mwahahahaha!
Happy New Year, EllaD. If you can manage it, a few more posts in 2019 would be nice. HUGS!
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January 2nd, 2019 at 10:26 pm
Your wish… I posted a 2018 wrap-up on NYE, am working another WiP 😎
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January 3rd, 2019 at 10:21 am
I’m honoured. 😉
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January 3rd, 2019 at 10:36 am
Just read it and commented. 🙂
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December 31st, 2018 at 7:13 am
A powerful first post. You verbalized all that’s on my mind. As a misanthrope, I see most humans as being stupid, short-sighted, and greedy, so it will take a massive environmental crisis, and even then, real change probably won’t happen. And as an American, it’s horrific the caliber of leaders we now elect. Wish I could say something positive, but all I can say is: Happy Anniversary!
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December 31st, 2018 at 7:53 pm
Hi Pete. The US isn’t alone in electing stupid, short-sighted, greedy politicians. It’s like a disease that’s affecting most Western countries, including my own. I just hope that it’ll be like a boil – once pricked, it’ll go away for another generation.
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December 30th, 2018 at 10:56 pm
Good morning to you too, Meeks. 😀 … The tide is turning, there’s no doubt about that, unfortunately that just makes the ‘Canute’s’ dig their heels deeper into the sand … but enough of them. They’re like political and religious extremists, and won’t change their minds … so it’s best to focus our energies on those who are willing to change, who are willing to work toward a future where responses to the radical changes that are already here are based on sound scientific environmentally ethical practices. 😀
Congratulations on your 7th Blog-O-Versary! 😀
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December 31st, 2018 at 7:54 pm
Thanks, Wids, and you put your finger right on the heart of it. ‘They’ won’t change, but there’s heaps of decent people who will. They’re the ones we should be speaking to. -hugs-
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December 30th, 2018 at 11:57 am
[…] via 7 year retrospective […]
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December 30th, 2018 at 11:56 am
Reblogged this on Loleta Abi.
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December 30th, 2018 at 10:46 pm
Happy pre-New Year, Traci! I hope that 2019 treats you well. 🙂
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December 31st, 2018 at 7:11 am
Thanks, Meeka! You too!
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December 30th, 2018 at 7:36 am
An impressive first post, Meeks. I think mine said something very mundane like “Here I am”! Thanks for your posts over those 7 years. What a wonderful journey, and thanks for taking me along for the ride. Hugs.
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:44 am
-giggles- Hey! It got the job done.
Thanks for the well wishes, Anne. You and all my other blogging friends have made the last 7 years a joy. -hugs-
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December 30th, 2018 at 1:30 am
Great first post. So sad that it’s more relevant today than then. HUGS
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:47 am
Thanks, Marian. It saddened me too, esp. as we now have viable alternatives for things like baseload power [batteries]. I think the changes will all have to come from the grassroots level as our govts are still stuck in the Jurassic.
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December 29th, 2018 at 9:28 pm
happy anniversary 😉
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:51 am
Thanks, Dawn. -hugs-
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December 29th, 2018 at 8:42 pm
CONGRATULATIONS, MEEKS ❤
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:51 am
lol – thanks, CHRIS! -hugs-
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December 29th, 2018 at 4:38 pm
That was a great first post! Glad you reposted it, and happy anniversary.
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:52 am
Thanks, Audrey. Here’s hoping I’m proved wrong and things change for the better in 2019!
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December 29th, 2018 at 2:34 pm
Happy anniversary Andrea. Well blogged, you.
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:53 am
Thanks, Frank. I literally do not know where the years have gone. But I’ve been having fun. 😀
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December 29th, 2018 at 12:38 pm
Happy Blogging Anniversary!
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:55 am
Thanks, Candy. Your blog must be round about the same ‘age’? Hard to believe we met on LinkedIn [?] close to 7 years ago!?!
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December 29th, 2018 at 10:20 am
🙂 A happy seventh blogging anniversary to you!
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:56 am
Thank you, Renard! You guys make blogging fun. 🙂
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December 29th, 2018 at 9:49 am
The real climate change sceptics I can cope with as they can be shown the truth (preferably by a big mob…..Joke) it’s the paid sceptics I have a problem with who come at you with all the lines they’ve been fed, which they have to repeat if you ask a difficult question., hat I have a problem with since they don’t care about the wellbeing of the earth. It puzzles me who Trump, a climate change sceptic can take a risk with the future of his own grandchildren on the planet. If he abides by the Paris accord nothing is lost if he’s in the right, but if he’s in the wrong (which he is)then the planet gains cleaner air at the very least and that can only be good for his family.
Hugs
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December 30th, 2018 at 8:59 am
Funny you should say that, David. Or perhaps ‘funny’ is not the right word. I’ve been involved in some eye-opening threads on Twitter recently, and I now know first hand, how the skeptics spread ‘disinformation’. It’s actually scary. How do you protect the truth when logic and facts have no power to convince? 😦
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