After Climate Alarmism David Wallace-Wells
In the American Southwest, birds fell dead from the sky by the tens of thousands, succumbing mid-flight to starvation, emaciated by climate change.
Across the horn of Africa swarmed 200 billion locusts, 25 for every human on earth, darkening the sky in clouds as big as whole cities, descending on cropland and chewing through as much food as tens of millions of people eat in a day, eventually dying in such agglomerating mounds they stopped trains in their tracks all told, 8,000 times as many locusts as could be expected in the absence of warming.
The fires, you know. Or do you? In California in 2020, twice as much land burned as had ever burned before in any year in the modern history of the state five of the six biggest fires ever recorded. In Siberia, “zombie fires” smoldered anomalously all through the Arctic winter; in Brazil, a quarter of the Pantanal, the world’s largest wetland, was incinerated; in Austra
Jojo Mehta O termo ecocídio capta a natureza drástica do momento
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Lobby por ecocídio no TPI cresce e ameaça governos com má gestão ambiental - 17/12/2020
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by Michael Jessen on Sunday Dec 13 2020
Today’s children have given up watching and waiting. Their patience has run out. They are demanding the law recognize their right to a future that won’t become a climate catastrophe.
“Don t worry that children never listen to you; worry that they are always watching you.” – Robert Fulghum
In 1790, Irish statesman and philosopher Edmund Burke wrote that society is “a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born.”
In 1948, the United Nations ratified the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Article 6 of the declaration states “Everyone has the right to recognition everywhere as a person before the law” and Article 7 proclaims “All are equal before the law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal protection of the law.”