Watch the videos of interviews of the environmental scientist Hannah Richey. She just wrote a book that shows how we are not doomed in terms of climate change and environmental damage. She eats a plant-based diet which is what we should all do to do our part.
Good metaphor! I have used the metaphor of being on a ship in the middle of the ocean and if we were termites we would have the option of eating the ship or the option of eating trees that are growing on the ship which would be sustainable. For some reason most people prefer to eat the ship. In the real world eating meat dairy and eggs is like eating the ship that we depend on.
Over the last five years, the insect populations have completely collapsed around my farm. All the bees, wasps and pollinators have completely disappeared. My fruit trees are no longer getting pollinated and don’t produce fruit anymore. All of the bird species that depend on the insect base, purple martins, hummingbirds and thrushes have completely disappeared. There were thousands of them just a few years ago and now there are zero. Our planet is dying.
Wv, my tiny backyard has all of that 😂 bird nests ( generations) now bees again I watch them pollinate and it's so beautiful. I have alot of plants too. But this year no praying mantis. Not a one not yet ,and so it begins. Godbless 🙏❤ side note , wv now legalized raw milk sales ? . . Really🤔
@@jayleeper1512 Yikes! I woulda' thought N. Idaho would be more protected in terms of biodiversity. I'm in the Cleveland area near Lake Erie and we used to get and are supposed to get these clouds of midges every spring (like mosquitoes) without stingers. Been here 30 years and it used to be that every spring there was a 1 week period where you'd go outside and be walking through a ton of them, now I might get 10-12 hanging to the side of the houses. Similarly, a 1-hour drive near the lake that used to splatter the grill and windshield with bugs now yields almost no hits. Scary stuff. It's like humans have to change our whole mindset and ask ourselves how we can increase bug populations so that we and all the other species have a future. Take care.
Thank you for this critical documentary. Considering mankind is responsible for the present 6th Mass Extinction, it saddens me that this report has been viewed by just 1,000 people. We depend upon a healthy ecosystem for survival, yet very few care.
Everyday people can’t truly understand the scale of earth’s ongoing destruction. 300 football size areas of the rainforest are cleared per hour as we watch this or 100 acres a minute. Let that sink in for a minute while another 100 acres of earths lungs are chopped.
In order to stop the present mass extinction we would have to get rid of Capitalism and create/adopt a new system like Eco-Socialism. Given human nature, I doubt that would be possible.
I agree, unfortunately capitalism is causing massive waste and misuse of resources. I like your thought on a eco socialism some kind of system that builds the natural environment instead of destroying it.
Capitalism makes the challenge much more difficult but not impossible. Our governments should limit and guide capitalists and capitalism to avoid catastrophe. Currently many governments like the US heavily subsidized animal agriculture when they should be encouraging a plant-based food system. What we can do as individuals is to adopt a plant-based diet to show our elected leaders that we are willing to make the change that is needed. Obviously we need to vote and do other political things as well.
I have came to a starteling question: Have we already killed 50% of the biomass? Over 50% of coral reefs (4th global mass bleaching going on...) This alone leads up to losing 25% of marine life. (In my books, this is certaily going to happen.) We are losing many other important ares too, like seagrass meadows. Oceans, specially top layers, are just too warm for many species. Death zones are spreading in ocean floors. Overfishing. Microplastics. Ocean acidification. - Seas may have already lost nearly 50% of their biomass due to human interactions. 50% of the insects gone. Mammals... 99,9% were wild ones 10k years ago, now only 3%, rest 97% is humans and domesticated animals. Forests are clearcutted and that has been going on thousands of years. Overall land coverage is taken by humans. Well above 50% mark. Specially single species agriculture covers huge land areas. No place on Earth that has no human influence (ie.microplastics, climate change, other pollutants and even human DNA). Our infrastructure weights more than very life on Earth. Mines pollutes large areas too. Even mountains are blasted away and all toxics runs to the waterways. - Land may have lost 50% of its biomass. And the destructive powers that we have are still accelerating. And the economy is not taking in account any destruction made for the very life we depend on. So really: have we killed 50% of all life on Earth?
they say 50% if coral but they dont remind you that we have only mapped about 5% of the ocean floor. so we have lost half of what we found. that doesnt mean theres not another 95% area of space we havent seen yet. and until they can tell us which humans caused the last 5 extinctions, i will not buy into them telling us this ones our fault. what caused the younger dryas? im pretty sure neanderthal wasnt driving cars and farming cows, but it happened to them anyway... and thats just one example. whos emmissions caused the last 5 to prove to me that this one has anything to do with us...
love how youtube deletes comments. incase you missed it, they can say we "depleted 50%" all they want but the fact remains that we have only discovered 5% of the entire ocean. so in killing half of 5% that we know of, we havent made a dent. so stop letting them brain wash you. its sad.
@@chesterfinecat7588 Hardly 100%, because we die as species before every inslngle other organism dies. That means, some will survive and keeps on living after us. But we are currently killing most of the larger species, except domesticated ones. Rats, cocroaches and some bacterial life are most likely surviving (until Sun expands, boils Earth .and may even swallow Earth).
Animal agriculture is the leading cause of deforestation and thus habitat loss. If each of us adopts a plant-based diet we would be doing our part to encourage the needed changes.
I think we’ve altered the Earth’s natural systems soo radically already that there’s no way we could fix this in time even if we dropped EVERYTHING and completely reversed course now.
"IF" If we can wake up out of the coma in time to catch the falling knife during the hurricane after we escape the forest fire and are not stopped by every corporate employ and military member paid to prevent us. Unfortunately there are millions of knives falling and we don't know which one we need to catch, but if we lose hope we are screwed. So stay confident!
No, no we cannot. There are too many concurrent global downward trends. Any one could mean the end of humanity. With humanity itself at stake and our inability to come to any consensus as to how to address it, there is no way we can address "external" issues. My gut tells me we have 20 years and 50 years left, give or take. The first is roughly when society will break. I do not know exactly what that means. The second is when humanity will reach a breaking point. I don't know if those are concurrent or sequential. Hoping sequential. I know that seems like nonsense. I'm still trying to better understand how I came to those numbers (I have been digging up information on climate science for many years now), but my "gut" has been so good at putting things together subconsciously over the years so it has me seriously worried. It seems way too quick to possibly be real.
I think you are correct. I come to similar conclusions derived from the work of William Catton, William Rees, The Club ofRome’s “Limits to Growth”, Nate Hagens, B. Sidney Smith, and others. All have publications and videos on UA-cam. Well worth the effort. This is locked in. These people are peering through a very small “frame” or attempting to bargain intellectually with a terrifying inevitability. Thanks for your comment.
Babies unattended are traumatized. They never grow out of dependent state they get stuck in from dissociating from the pain. They grow over the trauma, but are forever in a state of hope someone will come and deliver them from their distress. Silly, immature humans, no one is coming to save you from your messes, your pain, your useless lives,all the results from never taking proper care of yourselves. But you really aren't to blame. "I don't expect you to understand. After you've caused so much pain. But then again, you're not to blame. You're just a human, a victim of the insane." - John Lennon.
Most of the population increase will be in south Asia due to improved living condition. Most of the world is going down, 10 billion will be a peek followed by a steep decline. What's needed is to do things better on what we already use.
We need to organize to stop mono-cultures over large areas in low and highlands. Small is better, industrial farming and forestry is good for a handful of billionaires.
We must all (in the well off countries and those who seek to be) sacrifice a great deal of what we just take for granted now in our throw away society. I used to get 3d refund for any glass drink bottle I found. The only other rubbish was the piece of newspaper. That was in the late 50's.
A 100 years ago ecologist described the decline in the oceans as the "Tragedy of Commons" , if we were listening and voting for politicians rather than the capitalism that lobbies their policy we wouldn't be here today. What will people who watch this 100 yrs ago think about the humans today who aren't helping to end the inequities.
When was this content broadcast? Last year's heatwave was a warning from the earth, and even if temperatures will cool down a little, there will only be two or three years left. Now that many plants and animals are in danger of extinction, I once heard the answer to whether God would choose humanity or nature. People have a duty to do as I have done to reduce energy consumption as much as possible and leave opportunities for their children. We also need to control the population. I think we will see more droughts and floods in the future, and farming will become more difficult as crops are destroyed by hail before the harvest. If there are people who come to Japan for leisurely sightseeing, I would like them to advise them to buy Icon's products and return home as a way to cancel out their carbon emissions.
To help to do that, you just need to change your diet to plant based food. It's as simple as that! And still for most humans far behind their imagination.
@@notabene2403 Forests are cleared for cropping also, and not just for stock feed. Its never so simple. Greater sustainability and innovation in crop production is also needed. Thankfully some are working on just that, but it needs more support in general.
@@raclark2730 Better inform yourself, before posting BS! About 90 percent of the total soi crop goes into animal feeding. Additionally to huge amounts of corn and other grains, plus gigantic quantities of freshwater. And remember, it takes at least 7 kcal of grain to produce 1 kcal of meat! An incredible waste of nutrients.
All the average human cares about is meat meat meat and cars cars cars and I can't see that ever changing - ever until there are none of us left which will be no bad thing.
Each of us can make a difference by adopting a plant based diet. I haven't eaten animals since 1974 and each day this has saved 4,164 litres of water, 18 kg of grain, 3 m² of forested land and 9 kg of CO2. The amount of sea life and methane saved is almost incalculable. Even if people go "plant forward", or the Mediterranean Diet, vastly reducing their animal product consumption this will help massively. Going vegan is super easy these days than back when I started on this path.
The supermarket prices are not the real issue. The issue is what percentage of the price goes to the farmer and how much goes to the stealing parties in between farmer and cunsumer.
Yes and that pressure stifles ability to improve things on farm. The nitrogen run of problem for example is not hard to fix with a little help. All the science and methods are out there, the Dutch government ( and others ) are showing gross ignorance on that matter.
It is greed , indifference and stupidity . We will be all dead and dying in a few years . No one talks about the main problem , which is to many People .
Their actions against the general public and cultural sites is counter productive. People would be better of supporting groups engaged in active conservation and regeneration projects.
The young lad bashes meat eaters a lot. From my perspective, I've been forced to have a change of heart over that I was a vegetarian for 40 years, and a vegan for 4 years. But I had to quit just before Christmas. If I hadn't I truly believe I wouldn't be here now. I was getting so ill, my husband dpent 17 days in hospital, and it was because vegan foods sold in supermarkets with pretty labels are ultra processed rubbish - oh, unless I want to stand chained to the kitchen all day boiling chick peas and making stuff from wholefood ingredients. No time, and no interest. I dislike cooking at the best of times, thank you. Look at the back of that pack of vegan sausages, burgers, not-nuggets, faux chicken pieces... There's a lost of ingredients as long as your arm, and if you have even a hint of knowledge in chemistry, you will recognise the different types of dugar, derivatives of starch, and the industrially manufactured vegetable oils, as well as a whole list of chemical names that are less familiar. I rook it on trust that manufacturers who were selling goods to protect the planet were also creating goods that were good for me. That's rubbish, and so were the products. Ultra processed food, no matter how good it says it is for the planet, environment, etc is not good for us. I'm still in recovery from my foray into veganism. I think it has caused some permanent health issues now. I can see that. I recovered to a point, but the sharp pains I get in my joints have not gone away. I'm still having issues with walking properly and experiencing a lot of discomfort getting out of bed or a chair. I'm 58. I should not feel like this. The idea of cultivated meat - a prospect that I once supported, I now view with doubt. What is it made of? Where do the proteins and enzymes come from? Do they come from fields of GMO soy beans sprayed with Glyphosate? If you think such food is safe, remember this. I used to work for my country's Environment Agency, in gardening and conservation. Back in my 20's, Monsanto was pushing Glyphosate as ' so safe, you can almost drink it.' That's how they reassured my employer, by lying to him. He and half my closest colleagues are now dead. Cancer. Many of them by the time they were 50, the rest before they were retirement age. It's not a weedkiller - that stuff is a 'cull.' Its original use was as a tank cleaner. It was when someone noticed that when you threw the residue on the ground, and everything died, Monsa to relabeled it as a weedkiller. Then some bright spark noticed that if you sprayed it directly on a crop in seed, it dried the grains out to the perfect dryness. So they started spraying this tank cleaner onto our food. Small wonder I can no longer tolerate eating products with flour in it. I can't touch the stuff. I immediately suffer from inflammation problems that make my other conditions worse. And you can't tell me that none of this poison isn't going into cultuvated meat and dairy products. So, now I eat fish (currently building a large outdoor tank for raising my own eventually), I'll take an offer of venison from my hunter neighbour, I pick pheasant roadkill if it looks fresh, I buy organic milk products from a trusted source, and I currently have 6 duck eggs in an incubator by my feet. I don't eat red meat. In truth, I've never liked it. Turning vegetarian in the first place was very easy for me and I experienced none of the usual cravings - like bacon, which I abhor. I do think most omnivorous humans eat far too much meat, and I thoroughly dislike this fashion for the carnivore diet. But how do you get them to cut down their intake? Reintroducing dairy and fish into my diet had health benefits for me, and the same goes for a lot of other people. Thing is, a lot of vegans that voice their lifestyle the most are young. Young bodies are much more efficient at extracting nutrient from food, as I have discovered at great cost to my health in later life. Not everyone can extract nutrition as well as others. Genetics and age gets in the way of making this an even game for all, and that is something idealistic vegans will just have to put up with, and I don't see that it is any safer to consume dairy and cultivated meat that is farmed using GMO-derived proteins and enzymes. That last point is a particular concern of the omnivore/carnivore community that practices guided intermittent fasting. They're all talking about it, as those who have guided practice often insist on organic and grass fed animal sourced food, often buying direct from trusted farmers and not from supermarkets. Besides, regenerative farming (something that took me a very, very long time to warm to) is a way we can have both rewilding and animal farming. It results in much higher prices for animal products, but as I am prepared to pay £4 for a pot of the best quality organic yoghurt, making it last, and sacrificing one meal a day for this added luxury, I don't see that others can't (I live on a low income household. Lucky enough to have a good sized garden, hence the ducks). Meat should be a luxury. It certainly used to be 100 years ago. Now, it is so cheap, that I often see plates of it left on tables in my local cafe. It's obscene the amount of waste that occurs in these places (which you have to remember is repeated in every cafe, all across the country, in every Western country. Waste causes CO2 and CH4 as well, you know). People don't know how to clean a plate anymore, don't value the food they're given, don't bother to ask for a smaller kid's version if they feel they can't manage the standard plate. So if meat was made universally more rxpensive, same fir dairy, that would force people to make a little go much further. Less animals would need to be raised, those animals could be raised in regenerative farming conditions, so that would mean more trees, plants, and room for species. And who is to blame for not encouraging this? Governments. Governments work at a tenth of the speed that scoentists, concerned citizens, regenerative farms, and us permaculturists want yhem to. We get no encouragement, grants go to just a few people with enough acreage. Oh, and the other place that would be ideal for encoraging and saving smaller species - as many plants as you want, insects, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and small to medium animals? Gardens. There are millions of acres of gardens all around this world being mowed, manicured, weeded ruthlessly, sprayed with all sorts of dire concoctions available from garden centres, and planted with environmentally-unfriendly hybrised flowers that are of little use to s ythi g. Some of you still glowering at my anti-vegan comments will be guilty of mowing a lawn, planting fancy geraniums, trimming a monoculture hedge, and lovingly maintaining a pristine gravel driveway. And if you saw my garden, you'd probably be horrified at the towering nettles, the lawn that hasn't been cut in 21 years (think of all that carbon sequestered, and no furl spent, no long succession of cheap mowers purchased), my hand pruned, deeply unlevel hedgerow of highly varied species and ornamentals - carefuly chosen ornamentals. I was a gardener. I know what I'm doing better than most). My garden is a sanctuary. Since I moved onto this grotty, exhausted but of ex-sheep pasture, with the intention of planting a rewilding/permaculture/managed woodland combo garden (without knowing all the correct terms at the time), yes I've had comments from the neighbours as to its scruffiness. Stuff em. I knew what I was doing, and while the environment was struggling on the outside, I have healed the bare rocky land that it was, sequestered tons of carbon in the form of new soil, discovered ways of speeding up carbon sequestration very recently, and I feel that gardens are the way to protect wildlife better than upsetting farmers. Life for them is tough enough with supermarkets offering them rock bottom prices, wholesalers now going abroad - and priduce brought in from abroad means less environmental laws governing land use, uncontrolled chemical spraying, and much higher carbon emissions due to transportation pressures. So, you see. It's not easy to just keep saying people should stop eating meat and dairy. Some of us can't, and one day many of these young vegans will get old enough to find out they can't either. Just as I did. But we do have the answer in our gardens, our balconies, our windowboxes, and the big plant pot on our doorstep. That's where a good part of our green revolution can be, learning how to let go of the image of the immaculate, and return to the wonderfully wild - which, incidentally, young children enjoy more, where they can learn more - more than on the blank green square for playing (that's just parental excuses for brainwashed neatness. The kids are indoors playing on computers. We know that). Go to 'Wild Your Garden With Joel Ashton' for one of the best in guidance towards rewilding gardens. Friendly young chap, very likeable and informative, great ideas, visits gardens, rewilds actual gardens, talks to the best of environment experts (including Sir David Attenborough).
@@1timbarrett "Thank you for pushing back on the received “wisdom” of those who are convinced that meat-free lifestyles are best for our Earth. " The scientific evidence is absolutely overwhelming that plant-based diets are by far the best for the planet. If someone eating a standard American diet with typical amounts of meat and dairy goes vegan, they reduce the land needed to feed them by 80-89%, reduce water usage for food by 50%, reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food by 50%, and save boatloads of animals large and small. If everyone in the world went vegan or vegetarian, we would need 75% less land to feed everyone and could re-wild and reforest an area the size of North America plus Brazil. That in turn would sequester over 600 BILLION tons of CO2 by 2050 in the soil, roots and foliage of this massive re-wilding effort. Biodiversity in the oceans would shoot up dramatically on land and sea, and the added marine life would likely sequester an additional 100-200 billion more tons of CO2. There are no other carbon sequestration plans that come anywhere close to having this big an impact. And yes, most types of forests sequester far more CO2 than do grasslands and livestock. Take care.
@@kirkha100 Lierre Keith's book has been widely debunked, and tons of scientific evidence proves vegan and vegetarian books are by far the best for the planet.
Speaking as a 69 year old vegan I disagree with you. Haven't eaten meat since I was a grumpy todler and have been vegan for nearly 35 years and have lost count of the number of non-vegans that I have outlived.
Captar imediatamente essa fumaça é o futuro da economia de CO2. Com compra de volume / massa de CO2 , no modo : antecipada ou posterior a emissao , na bolsa de valores no mercado organico de CO2. Se querem limpar fazendas e pastos precisam fazer assim. Vcs só precisam arrumar isso.
1) Protojoya extinction 2) Fungi extinction 3) Animal dinosaur extinction 4) Insects extinction 5) Birds extinction 1990 last life extinction picked up will continue 2545, after that earth will no more life planet, remember human is only creatures which destroyed regenerate ability of earth life again, human is culprits creatures and nasty, 28% is 18+ out of 8.1 billion 😢, it is mean as 91% birth rate population will be 15 billion by 2050😢, The current population of India in 2024 is 1,441,719,852, a 0.92% increase from 2023. The population of India in 2023 was 1,428,627,663, a 0.81% increase from 2022. The population of India in 2022 was 1,417,173,173, a 0.68% increase from 2021. Eco+ nomy, nomy is human activities, so less eco more nomy indicates upcoming collapse and horrible things 😢 As river loosing biodiversity, forest near also will die, All nomy is making free oxygen into compound gas,which will lead further desart increase much faster than privious civilization like pyramid civilization,war contribution in chemical reactions is getting higher which not killing ecology also future possibilities of new ecology, All nomy is friction,nomy not just producing green house gas also produced heat, 67% ecology destroyed, 98.97% biodiversity totally destroyed, 99.95% animal species gone extinct, 78.79% fungus species gone extinct, fungus are medicine for trees, so trees are no more immune from micro life infections, human creatures already acquired 85% land of soil on earth, 21% drinking water river got dried 😢, 2022 birth rate was 88%, 2023 91%, ecology is immune system of earth, biodiversity is nervous system of earth 😢, as trees are not immune from micro life infections, all green animals wil face horrible disease soon, 2025 fst cat 6 hurricane landfall 😢 2035 cat7 as temperature will be 62°c 2055 cat 8 temperature will be 65°c and 39% drinking water river will dry totally 😢 2075 fst cat 9 hurricanes will landfall 55%drinking water river will dry with 89% ecology destruction 😢 2475 Highest temperature will be 97°c 😢 Please give rest to planet 😢 I hope my knowledge and love can protect earth, knowledge is Power and love is solution,all boys can apply for my boyfriendship, minimum 10 years relationship required to be my husband, knowledge is knowing with ledger and love is creatures like to do most naturally.
@@1timbarrett "I gather you are not a fan of Lierre Keith’s ‘The Vegetarian Myth’" It's been widely debunked. Leading scientific research overwhelmingly shows that vegan and vegetarian diets are by far the best for the planet. Nothing humans have done has caused as much harm to ecosystems as eating meat and fish has done. We are literally eating our way toward extinction.
I this documentary would be better but not. No limit to economic or population growth.Not a mention of the insane global north consumption; one child in USA consume 50 more times than a African one.What about the fact that 1% is responsible for the 45% aviation CO2 EMISSIONS etc
《 Arrays of nanodiodes promise full conservation of energy》 A simple rectifier crystal can, iust short of a replicatable long term demonstration of a powerful prototype, almost certainly filter the random thermal motion of electrons or discrete positiive charged voids called holes so the electric current flowing in one direction predominates. At low system voltage a filtrate of one polarity predominates only a little but there is always usable electrical power derived from the source Johnson Nyquest thermal electrical noise. This net electrical filtrate can be aggregated in a group of separate diodes in consistent alignment parallel creating widely scalable electrical power. As the polarity filtered electrical energy is exported, the amount of thermal energy in the group of diodes decreases. This group cooling will draw heat in from the surrounding ambient heat at a rate depending on the filtering rate and thermal resistance between the group and ambient gas, liquid, or solid warmer than absolute zero. There is a lot of ambient heat on our planet, more in equatorial dry desert summer days and less in polar desert winter nights. Refrigeration by the principle that energy is conserved should produce electricity instead of consuming it. Focusing on explaining the electronic behavior of one composition of simple diode, a near flawless crystal of silicon is modified by implanting a small amount of phosphorus on one side from a ohmic contact end to a junction where the additive is suddenly and completely changed to boron with minimal disturbance of the crystal pattern. The crystal then continues to another ohmic contact. A region of high electrical resistance forms at the junction in this type of diode when the phosphorous near the ĵunction donates electrons that are free to move elsewhere while leaving phosphorus ions held in the crystal while the boron donates a hole which is similalarly free to move. The two types of mobile charges mutually clear each other away near the junction leaving little electrical conductivity. An equlibrium width of this region is settled between the phosphorus, boron, electrons, and holes. Thermal noise is beyond steady state equlibrium. Thermal transients where mobile electrons move from the phosphorus added side to the boron added side ride transient extra conductivity so they are filtered into the external circuit. Electrons are units of electric current. They lose their thermal energy of motion and gain electromotive force, another name for voltage, as they transition between the junction and the array electrical tap. Aloha
Another method to plausibly transform ambient heat into electricity with equivalent cooling essentally consists of two electrodes closely face to face (~1 micrometer) in a vacuum wired to an external electrical load. The face of the [Emitter] electrode is covered with a uniform array of LaB6 tipped small diameter carbon nanotubes grown straight out. The face of the [Absorber] electrode is covered with small scale graphine flake char. [Rice U 2014] Thermal energy mobilized unattached electrons will tend to free themselves outward from the emitter tips and drift at ~1 million meters / second @ 25 millivolts (thermal electron energy @ 20 C) to the absorber which tends to collect them. A negative charge accumulates on the absorber. This repels oncoming electrons slowing their forward drift, cooling them. The absorber electrode charge is simultaneously the repelling cooling and the external electrical load voltage. The drift current and external wire route current are the same. The DC electrical power consumed by the electrical load depends on the load resistance. Thermal energy absorption always equals the electrical yield. Wire resistance is a practical loss not a true loss so lt is overcome by added device output. Extra cooling then balances the heat given off by the wire loss. The performance of the device is expected to be modest in the beginning but improve rapidly. Even early devices are expected to last a long time. There is little place for obsolence if the first installed device works adequately. They will withstand being short circuited indefinately up to an electromigration limit.
These events have been continuing and repeating since the planet began. The Earth is a thermostat. It reacts to different temperatures and keeps things stable with counter reactions. You should be amazed at what you are witnessing. Not crying like a silly baby girl. Why do you feel so compelled to be alarmist and unnecessary? Money? Fame? Selfishness? Greed?
"Why do you feel so compelled to be alarmist and unnecessary?" You apparently don't know the science: We are rapidly pushing the Earth toward a 6th mass extinction event.
@@MaroonedInDub "Why do you feel so compelled to be silly?" Nothing silly about it: It's terrifying and tragic. I take it you don't follow the science, but we are pushing the web of life towards collapse in four different ways simultaneously. For CO2 alone, we are increasing global CO2 levels ~9-10 times faster than it usually warms when coming out of an ice age (and big changes in CO2 levels were the main "kill mechanism" for most extinction events in Earth's history). But even if we solved the climate crisis, we're pushing the web of life toward collapse via infertility from chemical and plastic pollution. There's two more, but you get the idea. Take care.
@@HealingLifeKwikly I have made it clear that I have no interest in you or your thinking. I know that my thinking is good because it has served me well for sixty years. I can see clearly that your thinking is somewhat faulty and I find you irrelevent. Please go bother somebody else. You will have more success with a weaker person than me.
@@MaroonedInDub I was just responding to YOU, and you can't think well if you don't know the facts. I'm a senior university researcher who has been studying this for more than a decade. The Earth has never before seen what we are doing to her, and if we don't stop, worsening ecological and societal collapse is inevitable. Our civilization will collapse for the same reason that all advanced civilizations collapsed--a growing high tech society inevitably depletes the resources and destroys that web of life that allowed it to arise in the first place. We can still have good lives, but must go back to simpler agrarian economies and much simpler lifestyles. Be well.
We can all learn to eat less frequently. I once worked with a fitness client who realized that during one stressful weekend, she ate 20 times per day…! 😮
How long do we have to sit around and talk about what needs to be done before actually doing it? I think it's too late and we're doomed.
Watch the videos of interviews of the environmental scientist Hannah Richey. She just wrote a book that shows how we are not doomed in terms of climate change and environmental damage. She eats a plant-based diet which is what we should all do to do our part.
We all live within a bubble but continue to pollute like goldfish in a bowl were they are fed but the water isn't changed.
We all live within a "Closed System", so yeah, it's like a Fishbowl.
Good metaphor! I have used the metaphor of being on a ship in the middle of the ocean and if we were termites we would have the option of eating the ship or the option of eating trees that are growing on the ship which would be sustainable. For some reason most people prefer to eat the ship. In the real world eating meat dairy and eggs is like eating the ship that we depend on.
Over the last five years, the insect populations have completely collapsed around my farm. All the bees, wasps and pollinators have completely disappeared. My fruit trees are no longer getting pollinated and don’t produce fruit anymore. All of the bird species that depend on the insect base, purple martins, hummingbirds and thrushes have completely disappeared. There were thousands of them just a few years ago and now there are zero. Our planet is dying.
Wv, my tiny backyard has all of that 😂 bird nests ( generations) now bees again I watch them pollinate and it's so beautiful. I have alot of plants too. But this year no praying mantis. Not a one not yet ,and so it begins. Godbless 🙏❤ side note , wv now legalized raw milk sales ? . . Really🤔
Chemicals in the system. Bully tactic mega ag companies like Monsanto / Bayer are also to blame.
THat's awful, where are you?
@@HealingLifeKwikly north Idaho.
@@jayleeper1512 Yikes! I woulda' thought N. Idaho would be more protected in terms of biodiversity. I'm in the Cleveland area near Lake Erie and we used to get and are supposed to get these clouds of midges every spring (like mosquitoes) without stingers. Been here 30 years and it used to be that every spring there was a 1 week period where you'd go outside and be walking through a ton of them, now I might get 10-12 hanging to the side of the houses. Similarly, a 1-hour drive near the lake that used to splatter the grill and windshield with bugs now yields almost no hits.
Scary stuff. It's like humans have to change our whole mindset and ask ourselves how we can increase bug populations so that we and all the other species have a future.
Take care.
Thank you for this critical documentary. Considering mankind is responsible for the present 6th Mass Extinction, it saddens me that this report has been viewed by just 1,000 people. We depend upon a healthy ecosystem for survival, yet very few care.
When they talk about "answers" do you not feel, like me, that they're never going to happen?!
Best case scenario is we avoid a mass extinction but will suffer a mediocre extinction.
We’re kinda good at “mediocre”.
@@kirkha100Yes we are
Everyday people can’t truly understand the scale of earth’s ongoing destruction.
300 football size areas of the rainforest are cleared per hour as we watch this or 100 acres a minute. Let that sink in for a minute while another 100 acres of earths lungs are chopped.
In order to stop the present mass extinction we would have to get rid of Capitalism and create/adopt a new system like Eco-Socialism. Given human nature, I doubt that would be possible.
I agree, unfortunately capitalism is causing massive waste and misuse of resources. I like your thought on a eco socialism some kind of system that builds the natural environment instead of destroying it.
Exactly 💯 and that's why humans will soon be extinct
It's easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism .
Capitalism makes the challenge much more difficult but not impossible. Our governments should limit and guide capitalists and capitalism to avoid catastrophe. Currently many governments like the US heavily subsidized animal agriculture when they should be encouraging a plant-based food system. What we can do as individuals is to adopt a plant-based diet to show our elected leaders that we are willing to make the change that is needed. Obviously we need to vote and do other political things as well.
Strangely captivating, watching our severely malformed species self destruct.
I have came to a starteling question: Have we already killed 50% of the biomass?
Over 50% of coral reefs (4th global mass bleaching going on...) This alone leads up to losing 25% of marine life. (In my books, this is certaily going to happen.)
We are losing many other important ares too, like seagrass meadows. Oceans, specially top layers, are just too warm for many species.
Death zones are spreading in ocean floors.
Overfishing.
Microplastics.
Ocean acidification.
- Seas may have already lost nearly 50% of their biomass due to human interactions.
50% of the insects gone.
Mammals... 99,9% were wild ones 10k years ago, now only 3%, rest 97% is humans and domesticated animals.
Forests are clearcutted and that has been going on thousands of years.
Overall land coverage is taken by humans. Well above 50% mark. Specially single species agriculture covers huge land areas.
No place on Earth that has no human influence (ie.microplastics, climate change, other pollutants and even human DNA).
Our infrastructure weights more than very life on Earth.
Mines pollutes large areas too. Even mountains are blasted away and all toxics runs to the waterways.
- Land may have lost 50% of its biomass.
And the destructive powers that we have are still accelerating. And the economy is not taking in account any destruction made for the very life we depend on.
So really: have we killed 50% of all life on Earth?
We have displaced a lot and made them no longer function in a mutualistic way leading to an extreme overshoot condition.
they say 50% if coral but they dont remind you that we have only mapped about 5% of the ocean floor. so we have lost half of what we found. that doesnt mean theres not another 95% area of space we havent seen yet. and until they can tell us which humans caused the last 5 extinctions, i will not buy into them telling us this ones our fault. what caused the younger dryas? im pretty sure neanderthal wasnt driving cars and farming cows, but it happened to them anyway... and thats just one example. whos emmissions caused the last 5 to prove to me that this one has anything to do with us...
100% is within reach and likely.
love how youtube deletes comments. incase you missed it, they can say we "depleted 50%" all they want but the fact remains that we have only discovered 5% of the entire ocean. so in killing half of 5% that we know of, we havent made a dent. so stop letting them brain wash you. its sad.
@@chesterfinecat7588 Hardly 100%, because we die as species before every inslngle other organism dies. That means, some will survive and keeps on living after us. But we are currently killing most of the larger species, except domesticated ones.
Rats, cocroaches and some bacterial life are most likely surviving (until Sun expands, boils Earth .and may even swallow Earth).
Animal agriculture is the leading cause of deforestation and thus habitat loss. If each of us adopts a plant-based diet we would be doing our part to encourage the needed changes.
Hate to have to say it but you might as well just talk to a brick wall - 99% of the human race just doesn't care
I think we’ve altered the Earth’s natural systems soo radically already that there’s no way we could fix this in time even if we dropped EVERYTHING and completely reversed course now.
No, we cannot. Talking the random people hear indicates only a few would change their use of resources or even believe
"IF" If we can wake up out of the coma in time to catch the falling knife during the hurricane after we escape the forest fire and are not stopped by every corporate employ and military member paid to prevent us. Unfortunately there are millions of knives falling and we don't know which one we need to catch, but if we lose hope we are screwed. So stay confident!
No, no we cannot. There are too many concurrent global downward trends. Any one could mean the end of humanity. With humanity itself at stake and our inability to come to any consensus as to how to address it, there is no way we can address "external" issues. My gut tells me we have 20 years and 50 years left, give or take. The first is roughly when society will break. I do not know exactly what that means. The second is when humanity will reach a breaking point. I don't know if those are concurrent or sequential. Hoping sequential.
I know that seems like nonsense. I'm still trying to better understand how I came to those numbers (I have been digging up information on climate science for many years now), but my "gut" has been so good at putting things together subconsciously over the years so it has me seriously worried. It seems way too quick to possibly be real.
I think you are correct. I come to similar conclusions derived from the work of William Catton, William Rees, The Club ofRome’s “Limits to Growth”, Nate Hagens, B. Sidney Smith, and others. All have publications and videos on UA-cam. Well worth the effort.
This is locked in. These people are peering through a very small “frame” or attempting to bargain intellectually with a terrifying inevitability.
Thanks for your comment.
No chance.
Babies unattended are traumatized. They never grow out of dependent state they get stuck in from dissociating from the pain. They grow over the trauma, but are forever in a state of hope someone will come and deliver them from their distress. Silly, immature humans, no one is coming to save you from your messes, your pain, your useless lives,all the results from never taking proper care of yourselves. But you really aren't to blame. "I don't expect you to understand. After you've caused so much pain. But then again, you're not to blame. You're just a human, a victim of the insane." - John Lennon.
Awesome. I agree. Thank you.
Best not to have children at all.
@@fuxan that's a tough choice, for sure. Had it's ups and downs. I'm 72 and had none. 2 wives were enough children for me!
Most of the population increase will be in south Asia due to improved living condition. Most of the world is going down, 10 billion will be a peek followed by a steep decline. What's needed is to do things better on what we already use.
We need to organize to stop mono-cultures over large areas in low and highlands. Small is better, industrial farming and forestry is good for a handful of billionaires.
I don't think we can stop it. We can't be bothered to change anything. We have doomed ourselves out of stupidity.
We must all (in the well off countries and those who seek to be) sacrifice a great deal of what we just take for granted now in our throw away society. I used to get 3d refund for any glass drink bottle I found. The only other rubbish was the piece of newspaper. That was in the late 50's.
A 100 years ago ecologist described the decline in the oceans as the "Tragedy of Commons" , if we were listening and voting for politicians rather than the capitalism that lobbies their policy we wouldn't be here today. What will people who watch this 100 yrs ago think about the humans today who aren't helping to end the inequities.
Save the Animals
Save all living organisms, including the Animals…! 🙏
A good start is to learn how to grow your local botany if you are not already. Plants are the base after all.
When was this content broadcast?
Last year's heatwave was a warning from the earth, and even if temperatures will cool down a little, there will only be two or three years left.
Now that many plants and animals are in danger of extinction, I once heard the answer to whether God would choose humanity or nature.
People have a duty to do as I have done to reduce energy consumption as much as possible and leave opportunities for their children.
We also need to control the population.
I think we will see more droughts and floods in the future, and farming will become more difficult as crops are destroyed by hail before the harvest.
If there are people who come to Japan for leisurely sightseeing, I would like them to advise them to buy Icon's products and return home as a way to cancel out their carbon emissions.
What we need is to hire professional media influencers. People don't watch these videos its really sad.
No we cannot
It is already happening
Stop Deforestation
And increase reforestation.
To help to do that, you just need to change your diet to plant based food.
It's as simple as that!
And still for most humans far behind their imagination.
@@notabene2403 Forests are cleared for cropping also, and not just for stock feed. Its never so simple.
Greater sustainability and innovation in crop production is also needed. Thankfully some are working on just that, but it needs more support in general.
@@raclark2730 Better inform yourself, before posting BS!
About 90 percent of the total soi crop goes into animal feeding.
Additionally to huge amounts of corn and other grains, plus gigantic quantities of freshwater.
And remember, it takes at least 7 kcal of grain to produce 1 kcal of meat!
An incredible waste of nutrients.
@@notabene2403 Yes I am aware of these things.
All the average human cares about is meat meat meat and cars cars cars and I can't see that ever changing - ever until there are none of us left which will be no bad thing.
Experts must keep and save the records of Global Warming so that the next living things here on earth will know how the human beings vanished 😢
Each of us can make a difference by adopting a plant based diet. I haven't eaten animals since 1974 and each day this has saved 4,164 litres of water, 18 kg of grain, 3 m² of forested land and 9 kg of CO2. The amount of sea life and methane saved is almost incalculable. Even if people go "plant forward", or the Mediterranean Diet, vastly reducing their animal product consumption this will help massively. Going vegan is super easy these days than back when I started on this path.
The supermarket prices are not the real issue. The issue is what percentage of the price goes to the farmer and how much goes to the stealing parties in between farmer and cunsumer.
Yes and that pressure stifles ability to improve things on farm. The nitrogen run of problem for example is not hard to fix with a little help. All the science and methods are out there, the Dutch government ( and others ) are showing gross ignorance on that matter.
Sure we can stop it the problem is we don't want to stop
Kudos to Turkey from Donn in the USA! What a great documentary!
We can, but we don't want to
It is greed , indifference and stupidity . We will be all dead and dying in a few years . No one talks about the main problem , which is to many People .
Should we? The institutions we know, like our nation, won't consider it. But we can do things it won't allow.
There is nothing wrong with the Planet. The Planet is doing just fine.
In fact, the Planet is having a hell of a fun time.
When people say "the planet" they mean life on Earth, and the whole web of life is unraveling.
She asks, "Can we stop the Sixth Mass Exstinction?". Not looking that absolutely fabulous we're not, hun.
I thought birthrate is declining?
It is over all, most of the extra 2 billion will be in south Asia then they will follow the rest of the world in a downwards trend.
Join extinction rebellion
Their actions against the general public and cultural sites is counter productive. People would be better of supporting groups engaged in active conservation and regeneration projects.
Join a bunch of non-vegan car drivers - hate to have to say it but their EV cars are just as bad in their own way
You say "are country’s truly committed". I say "countries".
Pronghorn are losing their habitat to a big “green” solar project in Colorado.
Vcs tem um problema . E precisam resolver isso.
The young lad bashes meat eaters a lot. From my perspective, I've been forced to have a change of heart over that
I was a vegetarian for 40 years, and a vegan for 4 years. But I had to quit just before Christmas. If I hadn't I truly believe I wouldn't be here now.
I was getting so ill, my husband dpent 17 days in hospital, and it was because vegan foods sold in supermarkets with pretty labels are ultra processed rubbish - oh, unless I want to stand chained to the kitchen all day boiling chick peas and making stuff from wholefood ingredients.
No time, and no interest.
I dislike cooking at the best of times, thank you.
Look at the back of that pack of vegan sausages, burgers, not-nuggets, faux chicken pieces...
There's a lost of ingredients as long as your arm, and if you have even a hint of knowledge in chemistry, you will recognise the different types of dugar, derivatives of starch, and the industrially manufactured vegetable oils, as well as a whole list of chemical names that are less familiar.
I rook it on trust that manufacturers who were selling goods to protect the planet were also creating goods that were good for me. That's rubbish, and so were the products.
Ultra processed food, no matter how good it says it is for the planet, environment, etc is not good for us.
I'm still in recovery from my foray into veganism. I think it has caused some permanent health issues now. I can see that.
I recovered to a point, but the sharp pains I get in my joints have not gone away. I'm still having issues with walking properly and experiencing a lot of discomfort getting out of bed or a chair. I'm 58. I should not feel like this.
The idea of cultivated meat - a prospect that I once supported, I now view with doubt.
What is it made of?
Where do the proteins and enzymes come from?
Do they come from fields of GMO soy beans sprayed with Glyphosate?
If you think such food is safe, remember this. I used to work for my country's Environment Agency, in gardening and conservation. Back in my 20's, Monsanto was pushing Glyphosate as ' so safe, you can almost drink it.' That's how they reassured my employer, by lying to him. He and half my closest colleagues are now dead. Cancer. Many of them by the time they were 50, the rest before they were retirement age.
It's not a weedkiller - that stuff is a 'cull.'
Its original use was as a tank cleaner. It was when someone noticed that when you threw the residue on the ground, and everything died, Monsa to relabeled it as a weedkiller.
Then some bright spark noticed that if you sprayed it directly on a crop in seed, it dried the grains out to the perfect dryness. So they started spraying this tank cleaner onto our food.
Small wonder I can no longer tolerate eating products with flour in it. I can't touch the stuff. I immediately suffer from inflammation problems that make my other conditions worse.
And you can't tell me that none of this poison isn't going into cultuvated meat and dairy products.
So, now I eat fish (currently building a large outdoor tank for raising my own eventually), I'll take an offer of venison from my hunter neighbour, I pick pheasant roadkill if it looks fresh, I buy organic milk products from a trusted source, and I currently have 6 duck eggs in an incubator by my feet.
I don't eat red meat. In truth, I've never liked it. Turning vegetarian in the first place was very easy for me and I experienced none of the usual cravings - like bacon, which I abhor.
I do think most omnivorous humans eat far too much meat, and I thoroughly dislike this fashion for the carnivore diet.
But how do you get them to cut down their intake?
Reintroducing dairy and fish into my diet had health benefits for me, and the same goes for a lot of other people.
Thing is, a lot of vegans that voice their lifestyle the most are young. Young bodies are much more efficient at extracting nutrient from food, as I have discovered at great cost to my health in later life.
Not everyone can extract nutrition as well as others. Genetics and age gets in the way of making this an even game for all, and that is something idealistic vegans will just have to put up with, and I don't see that it is any safer to consume dairy and cultivated meat that is farmed using GMO-derived proteins and enzymes.
That last point is a particular concern of the omnivore/carnivore community that practices guided intermittent fasting. They're all talking about it, as those who have guided practice often insist on organic and grass fed animal sourced food, often buying direct from trusted farmers and not from supermarkets.
Besides, regenerative farming (something that took me a very, very long time to warm to) is a way we can have both rewilding and animal farming.
It results in much higher prices for animal products, but as I am prepared to pay £4 for a pot of the best quality organic yoghurt, making it last, and sacrificing one meal a day for this added luxury, I don't see that others can't (I live on a low income household. Lucky enough to have a good sized garden, hence the ducks).
Meat should be a luxury. It certainly used to be 100 years ago.
Now, it is so cheap, that I often see plates of it left on tables in my local cafe. It's obscene the amount of waste that occurs in these places (which you have to remember is repeated in every cafe, all across the country, in every Western country. Waste causes CO2 and CH4 as well, you know).
People don't know how to clean a plate anymore, don't value the food they're given, don't bother to ask for a smaller kid's version if they feel they can't manage the standard plate.
So if meat was made universally more rxpensive, same fir dairy, that would force people to make a little go much further. Less animals would need to be raised, those animals could be raised in regenerative farming conditions, so that would mean more trees, plants, and room for species.
And who is to blame for not encouraging this?
Governments.
Governments work at a tenth of the speed that scoentists, concerned citizens, regenerative farms, and us permaculturists want yhem to. We get no encouragement, grants go to just a few people with enough acreage.
Oh, and the other place that would be ideal for encoraging and saving smaller species - as many plants as you want, insects, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and small to medium animals?
Gardens.
There are millions of acres of gardens all around this world being mowed, manicured, weeded ruthlessly, sprayed with all sorts of dire concoctions available from garden centres, and planted with environmentally-unfriendly hybrised flowers that are of little use to s ythi g.
Some of you still glowering at my anti-vegan comments will be guilty of mowing a lawn, planting fancy geraniums, trimming a monoculture hedge, and lovingly maintaining a pristine gravel driveway.
And if you saw my garden, you'd probably be horrified at the towering nettles, the lawn that hasn't been cut in 21 years (think of all that carbon sequestered, and no furl spent, no long succession of cheap mowers purchased), my hand pruned, deeply unlevel hedgerow of highly varied species and ornamentals - carefuly chosen ornamentals. I was a gardener. I know what I'm doing better than most).
My garden is a sanctuary.
Since I moved onto this grotty, exhausted but of ex-sheep pasture, with the intention of planting a rewilding/permaculture/managed woodland combo garden (without knowing all the correct terms at the time), yes I've had comments from the neighbours as to its scruffiness.
Stuff em.
I knew what I was doing, and while the environment was struggling on the outside, I have healed the bare rocky land that it was, sequestered tons of carbon in the form of new soil, discovered ways of speeding up carbon sequestration very recently, and I feel that gardens are the way to protect wildlife better than upsetting farmers. Life for them is tough enough with supermarkets offering them rock bottom prices, wholesalers now going abroad - and priduce brought in from abroad means less environmental laws governing land use, uncontrolled chemical spraying, and much higher carbon emissions due to transportation pressures.
So, you see. It's not easy to just keep saying people should stop eating meat and dairy. Some of us can't, and one day many of these young vegans will get old enough to find out they can't either. Just as I did.
But we do have the answer in our gardens, our balconies, our windowboxes, and the big plant pot on our doorstep. That's where a good part of our green revolution can be, learning how to let go of the image of the immaculate, and return to the wonderfully wild - which, incidentally, young children enjoy more, where they can learn more - more than on the blank green square for playing (that's just parental excuses for brainwashed neatness. The kids are indoors playing on computers. We know that).
Go to 'Wild Your Garden With Joel Ashton' for one of the best in guidance towards rewilding gardens. Friendly young chap, very likeable and informative, great ideas, visits gardens, rewilds actual gardens, talks to the best of environment experts (including Sir David Attenborough).
Thank you for pushing back on the received “wisdom” of those who are convinced that meat-free lifestyles are best for our Earth. 🙏
Lierre Keith, “The Vegetarian Myth”. Good book.
Thanks.
@@1timbarrett "Thank you for pushing back on the received “wisdom” of those who are convinced that meat-free lifestyles are best for our Earth. " The scientific evidence is absolutely overwhelming that plant-based diets are by far the best for the planet. If someone eating a standard American diet with typical amounts of meat and dairy goes vegan, they reduce the land needed to feed them by 80-89%, reduce water usage for food by 50%, reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food by 50%, and save boatloads of animals large and small. If everyone in the world went vegan or vegetarian, we would need 75% less land to feed everyone and could re-wild and reforest an area the size of North America plus Brazil. That in turn would sequester over 600 BILLION tons of CO2 by 2050 in the soil, roots and foliage of this massive re-wilding effort. Biodiversity in the oceans would shoot up dramatically on land and sea, and the added marine life would likely sequester an additional 100-200 billion more tons of CO2. There are no other carbon sequestration plans that come anywhere close to having this big an impact. And yes, most types of forests sequester far more CO2 than do grasslands and livestock.
Take care.
@@kirkha100 Lierre Keith's book has been widely debunked, and tons of scientific evidence proves vegan and vegetarian books are by far the best for the planet.
Speaking as a 69 year old vegan I disagree with you. Haven't eaten meat since I was a grumpy todler and have been vegan for nearly 35 years and have lost count of the number of non-vegans that I have outlived.
We need the ecocide paragraph at the ICC asap!
What Dan5482 said. ShakeUp XR
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
No.
Of course we can, but they will not
Captar imediatamente essa fumaça é o futuro da economia de CO2. Com compra de volume / massa de CO2 , no modo : antecipada ou posterior a emissao , na bolsa de valores no mercado organico de CO2.
Se querem limpar fazendas e pastos precisam fazer assim.
Vcs só precisam arrumar isso.
Are we at risk killing ourselves?!
certainly not
Stop meat Save Ecosystem
1) Protojoya extinction
2) Fungi extinction
3) Animal dinosaur extinction
4) Insects extinction
5) Birds extinction
1990 last life extinction picked up will continue 2545, after that earth will no more life planet, remember human is only creatures which destroyed regenerate ability of earth life again, human is culprits creatures and nasty,
28% is 18+ out of 8.1 billion 😢, it is mean as 91% birth rate population will be 15 billion by 2050😢, The current population of India in 2024 is 1,441,719,852, a 0.92% increase from 2023. The population of India in 2023 was 1,428,627,663, a 0.81% increase from 2022. The population of India in 2022 was 1,417,173,173, a 0.68% increase from 2021.
Eco+ nomy, nomy is human activities, so less eco more nomy indicates upcoming collapse and horrible things 😢
As river loosing biodiversity, forest near also will die,
All nomy is making free oxygen into compound gas,which will lead further desart increase much faster than privious civilization like pyramid civilization,war contribution in chemical reactions is getting higher which not killing ecology also future possibilities of new ecology,
All nomy is friction,nomy not just producing green house gas also produced heat,
67% ecology destroyed, 98.97% biodiversity totally destroyed, 99.95% animal species gone extinct, 78.79% fungus species gone extinct, fungus are medicine for trees, so trees are no more immune from micro life infections, human creatures already acquired 85% land of soil on earth, 21% drinking water river got dried 😢, 2022 birth rate was 88%, 2023 91%, ecology is immune system of earth, biodiversity is nervous system of earth 😢, as trees are not immune from micro life infections, all green animals wil face horrible disease soon,
2025 fst cat 6 hurricane landfall 😢
2035 cat7 as temperature will be 62°c
2055 cat 8 temperature will be 65°c and 39% drinking water river will dry totally 😢
2075 fst cat 9 hurricanes will landfall 55%drinking water river will dry with 89% ecology destruction 😢
2475 Highest temperature will be 97°c 😢
Please give rest to planet 😢
I hope my knowledge and love can protect earth, knowledge is Power and love is solution,all boys can apply for my boyfriendship, minimum 10 years relationship required to be my husband, knowledge is knowing with ledger and love is creatures like to do most naturally.
I gather you are not a fan of Lierre Keith’s ‘The Vegetarian Myth’. 😮
Its poor cropping practice that's killing the insects, never that simple.
@@1timbarrett "I gather you are not a fan of Lierre Keith’s ‘The Vegetarian Myth’" It's been widely debunked. Leading scientific research overwhelmingly shows that vegan and vegetarian diets are by far the best for the planet. Nothing humans have done has caused as much harm to ecosystems as eating meat and fish has done. We are literally eating our way toward extinction.
its all pissing in the wind with WW3 going on , this is gonna suk
I this documentary would be better but not.
No limit to economic or population growth.Not a mention of the insane global north consumption; one child in USA consume 50 more times than a African one.What about the fact that 1% is responsible for the 45% aviation CO2 EMISSIONS etc
《 Arrays of nanodiodes promise full conservation of energy》
A simple rectifier crystal can, iust short of a replicatable long term demonstration of a powerful prototype, almost certainly filter the random thermal motion of electrons or discrete positiive charged voids called holes so the electric current flowing in one direction predominates. At low system voltage a filtrate of one polarity predominates only a little but there is always usable electrical power derived from the source Johnson Nyquest thermal electrical noise. This net electrical filtrate can be aggregated in a group of separate diodes in consistent alignment parallel creating widely scalable electrical power. As the polarity filtered electrical energy is exported, the amount of thermal energy in the group of diodes decreases. This group cooling will draw heat in from the surrounding ambient heat at a rate depending on the filtering rate and thermal resistance between the group and ambient gas, liquid, or solid warmer than absolute zero. There is a lot of ambient heat on our planet, more in equatorial dry desert summer days and less in polar desert winter nights.
Refrigeration by the principle that energy is conserved should produce electricity instead of consuming it.
Focusing on explaining the electronic behavior of one composition of simple diode, a near flawless crystal of silicon is modified by implanting a small amount of phosphorus on one side from a ohmic contact end to a junction where the additive is suddenly and completely changed to boron with minimal disturbance of the crystal pattern. The crystal then continues to another ohmic contact.
A region of high electrical resistance forms at the junction in this type of diode when the phosphorous near the ĵunction donates electrons that are free to move elsewhere while leaving phosphorus ions held in the crystal while the boron donates a hole which is similalarly free to move. The two types of mobile charges mutually clear each other away near the junction leaving little electrical conductivity. An equlibrium width of this region is settled between the phosphorus, boron, electrons, and holes. Thermal noise is beyond steady state equlibrium. Thermal transients where mobile electrons move from the phosphorus added side to the boron added side ride transient extra conductivity so they are filtered into the external circuit. Electrons are units of electric current. They lose their thermal energy of motion and gain electromotive force, another name for voltage, as they transition between the junction and the array electrical tap.
Aloha
The person who can think up a virtually free source of energy is going to become very wealthy. So far I have only heard of Star Trek solutions… 😮
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
🌺🍀⚜️🇨🇦⚜️🍀🌺
Another method to plausibly transform ambient heat into electricity with equivalent cooling essentally consists of two electrodes closely face to face (~1 micrometer) in a vacuum wired to an external electrical load. The face of the [Emitter] electrode is covered with a uniform array of LaB6 tipped small diameter carbon nanotubes grown straight out. The face of the [Absorber] electrode is covered with small scale graphine flake char. [Rice U 2014]
Thermal energy mobilized unattached electrons will tend to free themselves outward from the emitter tips and drift at ~1 million meters / second @ 25 millivolts (thermal electron energy @ 20 C) to the absorber which tends to collect them.
A negative charge accumulates on the absorber. This repels oncoming electrons slowing their forward drift, cooling them. The absorber electrode charge is simultaneously the repelling cooling and the external electrical load voltage. The drift current and external wire route current are the same. The DC electrical power consumed by the electrical load depends on the load resistance. Thermal energy absorption always equals the electrical yield.
Wire resistance is a practical loss not a true loss so lt is overcome by added device output. Extra cooling then balances the heat given off by the wire loss. The performance of the device is expected to be modest in the beginning but improve rapidly. Even early devices are expected to last a long time. There is little place for obsolence if the first installed device works adequately. They will withstand being short circuited indefinately up to an electromigration limit.
These events have been continuing and repeating since the planet began.
The Earth is a thermostat. It reacts to different temperatures and keeps things stable with counter reactions. You should be amazed at what you are witnessing. Not crying like a silly baby girl.
Why do you feel so compelled to be alarmist and unnecessary? Money? Fame? Selfishness? Greed?
"Why do you feel so compelled to be alarmist and unnecessary?" You apparently don't know the science: We are rapidly pushing the Earth toward a 6th mass extinction event.
@@HealingLifeKwikly "Why do you feel so compelled to be silly?"
@@MaroonedInDub "Why do you feel so compelled to be silly?" Nothing silly about it: It's terrifying and tragic. I take it you don't follow the science, but we are pushing the web of life towards collapse in four different ways simultaneously. For CO2 alone, we are increasing global CO2 levels ~9-10 times faster than it usually warms when coming out of an ice age (and big changes in CO2 levels were the main "kill mechanism" for most extinction events in Earth's history). But even if we solved the climate crisis, we're pushing the web of life toward collapse via infertility from chemical and plastic pollution. There's two more, but you get the idea.
Take care.
@@HealingLifeKwikly I have made it clear that I have no interest in you or your thinking.
I know that my thinking is good because it has served me well for sixty years.
I can see clearly that your thinking is somewhat faulty and I find you irrelevent.
Please go bother somebody else. You will have more success with a weaker person than me.
@@MaroonedInDub I was just responding to YOU, and you can't think well if you don't know the facts. I'm a senior university researcher who has been studying this for more than a decade. The Earth has never before seen what we are doing to her, and if we don't stop, worsening ecological and societal collapse is inevitable.
Our civilization will collapse for the same reason that all advanced civilizations collapsed--a growing high tech society inevitably depletes the resources and destroys that web of life that allowed it to arise in the first place.
We can still have good lives, but must go back to simpler agrarian economies and much simpler lifestyles.
Be well.
i mean we couldn’t stop the 5th🤣
No
We have to have science find ways to make our bodys stay healthy with consuming 1/4 of the Nutrients we consume now by down sizing our Bodys
We getting fatter not smaller . Dah
You can't do that. Scientifically impossible. Our brains use most of that nutrition anyway. We'd be reduced to gibbering monkeys.
We don't need science. Eat less
We can all learn to eat less frequently. I once worked with a fitness client who realized that during one stressful weekend, she ate 20 times per day…! 😮
@@farinshore8900you dont know that you use science all day every day.
I see Harry Potter.
At 4:00 we will drive us to the brink of extinction.
Remind me again, why should I care if I don't have kids?
Hawkes is smart, he gets my vote
No we cannot stop it now 😢