Originally posted by hack
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Originally posted by froot loops View Post
Isn't there a documentary on the theft of the strategic maple syrup reserve and it doesn't involve Bob and Doug Mackenzie?
https://www.eater.com/eat-drink-watc...episode-quebec.
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Originally posted by iam416 View Post
Correct. This is the reality of the climate change. Whether you take the IPCC predictions as gospel or mularky, the political and technological reality is that emissions won't be reduced by the amounts called for in the IPCC report by 2030 (or anywhere close). However, mitigating technology will eventually arrive. Whatever political gains can be made in the near term will be made on the edges, not in some sort of large-scale, pain-inducing radical policy shift today. Won't happen. So, technology it is....
The role of politics isn't going to be painful policy shifts -- I agree -- but it's important to keep the technical people grounded in reality, which seems a political task. Example here: https://www.wired.co.uk/article/free...dium=internal:
The advent of free or unlimited electricity plans might seem to encourage wasteful overconsumption. In fact, they could have the opposite effect as utilities offer additional services, products or incentives to help energy users smooth their consumption, for example shifting the use of appliances such as washing machines or dishwashers to off-peak hours.
Reality: everywhere with a power tariff below cost there is excessive and wasteful usage. Why does he expect people to shift their use to off-peak hours once the main incentive to do so -- money -- is removed? He's asserting that taking your main tool out of your kit makes the job easier. Maybe his idea is good and his explanation of it very bad, but this wouldn't be the first time technologists sank billions of dollars and years of time into an obviously-wrong solution.
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I once started a family squabble on my wife's side, because Aunt Ruth insisted we all had to gather round the piano and sing the real version while she played the tune. There was to be no gift exchange before this happened. I stood at the back and joked to Uncle Ken about singing the Bob&Doug version instead, and that was all it took to mutiny. That was the last time Aunt Ruth came for Christmas, and I am now more liked than before by the others.
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