January 19 2021 Happy New Year? 2021 hasn't really gotten off to a great start but perhaps it will improve, at least for a while. A still-raging pandemic, record levels of debt and the winding down of that 'shale revolution' may dampen an economic recovery for much of the world. Books Recently finished reading 'Deer Hunting with Jesus'[0] by the late Joe Bageant and am now working through Neil Postman's 'Amusing Ourselves to Death'[1], both of which I've seen referenced numerous times but never got around to when they were first published. Both are recommended for anyone trying to wrap their head around why so many seemingly well-off white folks thought it was very important to storm the US capitol during a routine electoral college vote certification. News In other news, 2020 is now considered the hottest on record, narrowly beating out 2016, more impressive when you consider humanity cut it's carbon emissions by roughly 7%. My guess is record forest fires and a slight drop in aerosol masking helped to make up the difference. Oh, and those methane clathrates in the shallow East Siberian Arctic Shelf have started to bubble in earnest[2]. It's often pointed out that methane, while a much more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 -- estimates are between 25 to 85 times -- is relatively short lived, converting to CO2 within 15 years. Unfortunately that's a moot point once a steadily increasing source of NH4 comes online. Random Stuff that caught my attention recently: - Climatologist Paul Beckwith has a 15 minute "State of the Climate"[3] on his YouTube channel. Shifting baselines really seems to bug him. - 'Science Talk with Jim Massa'[4], also on YouTube. Massa is a retired oceanographer who worked in the arctic and now is an educator in Fairbanks Alaska. A bit dry at times but he strives to present an accurate view of the current science on a variety of topics of interest to anyone concerned about the viability of life on this planet. His recent 49 min video titled 'Barreling Towards Hothouse Earth'[5] is an excellent example. - The Swiss Re Index[6], a ranking of global ecosystem health by country. Apparently 20% are at risk of ecosystem collapse, mostly due to loss of biodiversity. Doom Primer Looking through Under Deconstruction it occurred to me that perhaps some sort of primer, a Gentle Introduction to Our Uncertain Future is in order. There are various essay and video links that come to mind but I'm open to suggestions from anyone else exploring such topics. See the 'About' page for contact info. - - Refs: [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_Hunting_with_Jesus [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amusing_Ourselves_to_Death [2] https://v.gd/PnLnwT (Siberian Times article) https://youtu.be/6MaT8RsFrqo [3] https://youtu.be/O0lgTAEUYyA [4] https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpHeW5Ok5GbF3bUVyrfnxWg [5] https://youtu.be/OR0fJJeNBwg and some related links: https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-09/uoc--hro090820.php https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6vh4j5s2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representative_Concentration_Pathway [6] https://v.gd/q1da4Y (SwissRe.com)