like holy shit the bourgeoisie are trying to kill us all actively en masse within our lifetimes and all movement against it feels like it has died come the 20s. Every time it gets brought up it feels like people are either revelling in it, are denying it, are too tired to care, say “someone’s going to fix it so there’s no point in worrying," or get angry asking “well what do you want me to do about it I can’t fix it” or something. It feels like we’re in a moment where we have just abandoned science all together in the decaying west, so the plan is almost like to keep attacking the biosphere out of spite for everyone around us.

It feels Lovecraftian, I can’t think about it because every time I do it paralyzes me in awe of the urgency and scope of what has to be done. Do I just stop thinking about it? I guess the answer is to keep organizing but I’m scared that we don’t have enough time at this rate to address it before it gets catastrophic and has irreversible effects

  • Dort_Owl [they/them, any]@hexbear.net
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    Hahaha that’s the fun part, you don’t.

    Real answer: As someone in the environmental sciences, it’s not easy. The thing keeping me going is knowing that there are many people who don’t want it to be this way and are trying very hard to stop it, and that when we succeed the Earth can recover. Stories of rewilded places bouncing back are hopeful.

    Also China is doing good things.

  • WokePalpatine [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    I was reading in Monthly Review today that the bottom 50% of the US already lives underneath the emissions targets required to meet the goals laid out and it’s really the top half (and really, really the top 10%) who need to make massive sacrifices. Made it seem way more do-able when looked at this way.

    International attempts to mitigate climate change began with the establishment of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio, followed by the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, forming the basis of all subsequent climate negotiations. This led to the 2015 Paris Agreement, in which countries pledged to reduce their emissions by certain stipulated amounts, with the object of reducing global carbon emissions by 45 percent by 2030 and reaching net-zero emissions by 2050. Central to the entire UNFCCC process has been differences in emissions between rich and poor nations. However, this emphasis on the nation in relation to international climate negotiations led to a corresponding deemphasis on the class basis of emissions. In recent years, the disparities in carbon emissions on a class basis have proven ever more crucial in addressing the climate problem. Inequality in greenhouse gas emissions within nations now exceeds the inequality between nations—although the two remain intrinsically related due to imperialism. Consequently, a combined class and nation approach that more directly challenges capitalism in all of its aspects is now required if there is to be any hope of solving the planetary climate crisis.

    Over the last few decades, there has been a dramatic reversal in the relative role of class and nation in the structuring of carbon emissions, due to enormous increases in class disparities under global monopoly-finance capital. (Note: the data in the studies referred to below add carbon emissions associated with net imports to domestic carbon emissions, with the result that total carbon emissions of Europe, for example, are 25 percent higher than if only domestic emissions were counted.) According to the 2022 World Inequality Report:

    In 1990, most global carbon inequality (63%) was due to differences between countries: then, the average citizen of a rich country polluted unequivocally more than the rest of the world’s citizens, and social inequalities within countries were on average lower across the globe than today. The situation has almost entirely reversed in 30 years. Within-country emissions inequalities now account for nearly two-thirds of global emissions inequality. This does not mean that there do not remain significant (often huge) inequalities in emissions between countries and world regions, on the contrary. In fact, it means that on top of the great between-countries inequality in carbon emissions, there also exist even greater inequalities in emissions between individuals [economic classes]. (World Inequality Report 2022, “Chapter 6: Global Carbon Inequality,” World Inequality Lab, wir2022.wid.world)

    The implications of this can be seen by looking at the United States. If we examine U.S. emissions reduction targets under the Paris Agreement (prior to the Donald Trump administration’s withdrawal from the agreement), the United States needed (based on 2019 data) to reduce its per capita emissions by 11.1 tonnes per year to reach its 2030 target. (One metric tonne [1,000 kilograms] is about 10 percent more than a U.S. ton, weighing 2,000 pounds.) Here it is significant that the bottom 50 percent of the U.S. population is already below the target level of annual emissions aimed at for 2030, which means that workers in the bottom half—assuming these targets still applied—would not need to reduce their emissions at all, and indeed would need to increase them by .3 tonnes on average, or 3 percent, to match the targeted per capita emissions. In contrast, those in the middle 40 percent would need to reduce their emissions by 12 tonnes on average, or 54 percent annually, to come into line with the national per capita emissions, while those in the top 10 percent would need to cut their average annual emissions by 64.7 tonnes per year, or 87 percent. A similar situation applies to France and other European countries. It follows that the emissions reduction efforts, particularly in the wealthy countries, need to be directed at the top half of the income distribution, making greenhouse gas emissions fundamentally a class problem. This is, indeed, the conclusion of World Inequality Lab researcher Lucas Chancel, who writes that “policy efforts should be focused mainly on reducing the emissions of the top half of the population, and particularly the top 10 percent” (Lucas Chancel, “Climate Change and the Global Inequality of Carbon Emissions, 1990–2020,” October 21, 2021, World Inequality Lab, wid.world/news-article/climate-change-the-global-inequality-of-carbon-emissions; Jomo Kwame Sundaram, “Inequality Worsens Planetary Heating,” Substack, August 12, 2025, jomodevplus.substack.com).

    https://monthlyreview.org/articles/mr-077-05-2025-09_0/

  • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    Either it’s too late or it’s not but we will only ever know the truth of it in hindsight. That’s a scary proposition but, unfortunately, it’s the reality.

    It’s really important to not foreclose on the opportunity for change by giving up prematurely. I know that’s hard (believe me, I do.) While it’s scary to confront the prospect of doing everything you can and failing or doing everything wrong and thus failing, it’s important to focus on confronting what it would be like not trying and failing. After all, everything seems impossible until it’s achieved and then retrospectively it seems as though it was an inevitability and so it’s preferable to try and fail than to not try at all. This isn’t any consolation and it’s completely intellectualizing the problem but it’s an important frame to maintain imo.

    There’s three paths forward, from what I can tell:

    1. Revolution and bringing the world back from the brink

    2. Climate apocalypse

    3. Climate catastrophe and reconstruction

    1 is what we can hope for. Idk if it’s a viable possibility but so be it. 2 means we’re all fucked. 3 seems the most likely but, thankfully, we can shoot for 1 and if we land at 3 then basically all the efforts will still be applicable to the latter anyway.

    A vulgar take on this next part would be to call it opportunism or accelerationism, but it’s really not - if we have a number 3 outcome and a subsequent partial collapse of society then the people who are best organized, who are the most connected to their communities and who are capable of vanguard-style leadership and who are genuinely able to provide for their community’s needs, are going to be the people who will be best positioned to reshape the political landscape. Post-WWI Russia was a similar situation. The years just prior to the Chinese revolution were too. It will be different under a number 3 scenario but the broad brushstrokes will remain the same.

    If the person who knows how to grow food and is looked to for organizing the distribution of local resources in serious post-collapse community says that we aren’t reverting to capitalism, people will listen. And I’m not even talking about some sort of autocratic edict being handed down here, obviously - if you’re a leader and you talk to the people in your community who look up to you and rely on you and you tell them about how the previous economic system’s externalities led to this outcome then you won’t even need to directly educate and propagandize them against capitalism because living in the fallout and having someone bring their attention to how deeply unwell and destructive the previous system was would turn anyone against it immediately.

  • Frogmanfromlake [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    At least you’re still able to imagine it. I’m currently living it with the area I live in being very vulnerable to it. You get weirdly accustomed to it. Things aren’t easy. Foot shortages and droughts are increasingly common, sometimes it gets so hot that I hide in this hole I dug near the house, and it’s depressing seeing non-reptiles becoming less common.

    Community is key and the silver lining here is how much closer everyone has become.

    • Orbital [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      Comment too earnest and real to make snarky clapbacks on “foot shortages” 0/10 do not recommend

      Seriously though, the fog of irony and nihilism is so heavy round here it can make threads with integrity and humanity even harder to take

      Organize and build community, worst case we’ll have someone to share the eulogies with

  • BanMeFromPosting [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    reality

    It is lovecraftian. Anyone who says otherwise don’t know enough. We are fucked. I interact with a bunch of climate/environment people and they’re all what this site would describe as “doomers”. That kind of annoys me, because a doomer isn’t just someone who knows what goes on and accepts reality.
    Even the IPCC would be called doomers, and those guys are notorious for pulling their punches in order to make it palatable for politicians.
    Most people my age do not want to talk climate. Neither do the people I interact with. Never in any depth. You only find this if you get them talking long enough. It feels like the prologue to children of men.

    The feedback loops have begun long ago. The Siberian permafrost is thawing. We are seeing massive algae death. The Amazon is no longer a carbon sink. The albedo effect on the poles is nearly gone. The old world is dying, a new one is struggling to be aborted. Now is the time of monsters.

    Apart from just not thinking about it, I find solace in the following places

    • China does good.
    • More and more people realise the gravity of the situation.

    I had to think about it for a bit to find the second one.
    When I had more energy I also found solace in involving myself in local volunteer work.

    CW: Suicide

    In my darkest moments I fantasize about doing a combined Bushnell/Mangione against the highest ranking capitalist I can willem-van-spronsen
    Mainly I just try not to think about it.

    Me Grumbling about cope.

    Also I chastise everyone who says shit like “don’t worry humanity made it thru the plague. Well persevere!” Dumbest argument I’ve ever heard. I don’t care about humanity persevering (and that is not at all a guarantee). I care about billions not dying and life not turning into living hell.

    Personally I am going to China to do a masters starting next year. Equal parts interest and future planning for becoming a climate refugee.

    • BanMeFromPosting [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      Read climate news about what China does to heal yourself a little bit. You can also read about how quickly things got better during the COVID lockdowns. It’s not impossible to halt what is happening.

  • HamManBad [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    Honestly, I’ve just been trying to ignore it except for when it’s useful for organizing and recruitment purposes, or during periodic reviews of my consumption habits to see if I can “do my part” better (which is easy when I don’t have money to spend on consuming). But since the climate is fucked unless capitalism ends, that’s where I put my mental energy, and the existential climate dread gets compartmentalized as much as possible. No use stressing about the eye of Cthulhu getting larger in the sky

  • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    At this point, imo, we are more or less locked into at least the end of modern industrialized society, and the deaths of billions. These deaths will be due largely due to food shortages (at some point, it won’t be possible to grow rice in SEA and that means famine) and forced migration, though also nuclear conflict breaking out, see eg the violation of the Pakistan/India Indus River treaty being explicitly named by Pakistan as an existential threat justifying nuclear war.

    I also think it’s basically impossible for us to “win” given that it would more or less require the death of the USA, whether by revolution or a very, very rapid collapse that burns through the fascist death drive remnants in short order, both ending within 5-10 years. I don’t think it’s likely that anything we do will matter, as what the US government actually does has nothing to do with what the people living in the US want, and the conditions are nowhere near a revolution, so even organizing probably won’t accomplish anything.

    But what if I’m wrong? What if getting out there and organizing actually works, and the ever-escalating crackdowns on the climate movement eventually make it so liberal co-option is no longer possible, and cause a backlash resulting in enough people turning for us to eke out a “win”? I don’t think it’s likely, but if my choices are to treat it as a 1% chance of winning or a 0% chance, well I might as well bet on the 1% because at least that’s something. And it would also mean I’d get to watch some billionaires get what’s coming to them.

  • FunkyStuff [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    As the effects become more real in people’s eyes, exponentially more people will become radicalized. It’s of very high importance for us to organize and have people across the world ready to be useful and educate people as the world breaks down over the next couple decades. If you’re the kind of person that’s getting “blackpilled” now, the knowledge, experience, and organization you can realize over the next 10-20 years can be what’s necessary for the world to keep spinning. If there is to be human civilization in 100 years, the people who learn the critical things necessary about everything from agriculture to logistics and cybernetics are alive right now and learning about how those things are necessary. No other future is worth considering IMO.

    • BanMeFromPosting [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      As the effects become more real in people’s eyes, exponentially more people will become radicalized.

      The issue for me with finding rest in this, is that I watched that Al Gore documentary when I was a kid. “By the time we can see the effects, it’ll be too late”. I keep thinking back to that. Brings me down.

  • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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    Honestly? By not hitching my hopes to a collective American national consciousness having a change of heart; by instead having a pretty well-developed strategy for land acquisition for the purpose of building communes that do extensive permaculture and silviculture, maximal self-sufficiency through appropriate technology, and biochar sequestration. My networks have a good amount of land projects going already, and most of what we need is for a lot of people to make the lifestyle switch from “living as an individual socialist under capitalism” to “living as part of a collective project”.

    In the meantime I have a low-end “first-world” income level with a high-end “third-world” consumption level. In less than a year I will be set to really take off with urban commune and workers’ cooperative projects. Maybe people see how much better of a living we’re making for ourselves and desert the market to us en masse, or maybe they don’t and make capitalist colossus teeter more. To hell or utopia; either answer satisfies us.

    Yes I am basically wagering that something close to the pre-Cambrian level of CO2 is not enough to turn us into a runaway hothouse Earth that resembles Venus, and that a lot of salvaging can be done in a generation or two once Western civilization topples under its own destabilizing forces. These may not be true but believing against them doesn’t help the cause.

  • 9to5 [any, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    I dont want to sound like a doomer but I guess Ive just accepted it ? Theres a realistic chance well see the end of the world as we know it within our lifetime.

    But its not like I’m a prepper getting ready for doomsday . I just try to live my best life and hope for the best.

  • culpritus [any]@hexbear.net
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    There is a tension between when global capitalism loses hegemony, and how that process of collapse plays out. My main concern is that the death drive of capitalism will result in a massive scale destruction of productive capacity that could be used to transition with better resiliency.

    If capitalism doesn’t terror bomb the world in its death throes, I’m fairly hopeful that much of the world can adapt pretty quickly. We can’t avoid significant climate catastrophe at this point, but there is a possibility of adaptation and resilience in that scenario.

  • BountifulEggnog [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    I guess I don’t know exactly what you mean by blackpilled. It already is too late to avoid irreversible catastrophe. In terms of the people idk, most people are ignorant. Ignorance is somewhat blackpilling I get it but idk.

    we have just abandoned science all together

    Even mainstream climate science has abandoned how bad the problem is. But yea people collectively have abandoned even that.

    Do I just stop thinking about it?

    That’s what I do tbh, I want to transition and fix my body. I know the world is ending but I want my little peace, my decade or two.

    • WhyEssEff [she/her]@hexbear.netOP
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      the problem is here specifically for me

      I can’t think about it because every time I do it paralyzes me in awe of the urgency and scope of what has to be done.

      • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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        “Though the problems of the world are increasingly complex, the solutions remain embarrassingly simple.” -Bill Mollison

        One of the biggest things that makes it hard to get started or maintain having a revolutionary practice is reconciling it with the things you want to do with your own life.

        To live in a way that is personally gratifying yet also consistent (in proportion to the your fraction of all of humanity’s impact) with long-term ecological viability is what will get us somewhere. It necessarily means an orientation, strategy, and lifestyle that are prefigurative.

      • BanMeFromPosting [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        The only real solution to your issue is to just not think about it I’m afraid.
        There’s patchwork solutions that aid in not thinking about it - Preparing for what comes, organizing so you feel like you’re doing some good, working to alleviate the worst of it, learning about nice things that are happening (mainly in China).
        You’ll still end up thinking about it from time to time. You’ll still be paralyzed. Hopefully it will be easier to break out of with some of these.
        I’ve never met a mentally healthy person who was aware of what lies in store for us. I’ve never met a mentally healthy person who was thinking about it.

        • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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          Dread and paralysis are two very separate things.

          If you know what to do (especially day-to-day) and have the will to do it, you’re not going to be paralyzed, even in the face of terror.