Man with private jet and flies on rockets propelled by billions of dollars meets with man who flies thousands of miles in private jets and has millions of pounds meet to lecture the lower classes on why they're causing global warming. It's honestly beyond ****ing parody. Jeff Bezos @JeffBezos · Nov 1 The Prince of Wales has been involved in fighting climate change and protecting our beautiful world far longer than most. We had a chance to discuss these important issues on the eve of #COP26 please log in to view this image — looking for solutions to heal our world, and how the @BezosEarthFund can help. please log in to view this image
I ve been reading that the development of burying the climate changing gasses in the oil and gas industry is well advanced, and Biden was also looking to enforce that. Probably no help in the coal industry though.
would be nice Boris Johnson @BorisJohnson please log in to view this image United Kingdom government official · 9h Forests are the lungs of our planet. Today @COP26, over 100 leaders representing 85% of the world's forests will take landmark action to end deforestation by 2030. With this pledge, we have a chance to end humanity’s long history as nature’s conqueror, and become its custodian.
Just been reading about meteor strikes etc (we should really have a science thread….) https://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/Natural_Disasters/impacts.htm It’s fascinating stuff. Even a relatively small strike would apparently have the same impact as a big nuclear war. While very big impacts are very rare that doesn’t mean one couldn’t happen at any time, they aren’t scheduled like buses, and apparently we aren’t very good at spotting them coming, several recent near (relatively) miss nearly undetected. Much greater chance of being killed by something crashing into the earth than of winning the lottery! All very interesting stuff. Perhaps I worded my original post clumsily. My point was that people going on about ‘saving the planet’ are, in my view, on the wrong track, and that the likelihood of us, collectively, doing enough to change the impact of climate change (whatever that impact is…) seems pretty slim unless it can be made profitable somehow, because that is what drives things. Perhaps I’m too pessimistic, the cost of stuff like solar and wind power is plummeting. All things are possible, even getting rid of plastic, if we have the incentive and if we can do it fast enough. We’ll never know about moving planets etc, that is hundreds if not thousands of years in the future. If we do I hope we look after them a bit better. Boring vox pop - what are the rubbish/recycling arrangements around the country. We have general rubbish taken every two weeks, and garden/green waste plus bottles, plastics, cardboard and paper recycling in fortnightly in the alternate week. This works well for us, diligent at sorting the recycling etc. now it’s seems they want to change it next year sometime to general waste once a month, food waste once a fortnight, all recycling in a big blue bin can’t remember how often and no Green waste taken unless you pay for it. I’ll need a bigger garden up just to store the bins in…..
NASA say that meteor strikes, of the end of days variety, are reasonably predictable and are cyclical to a certain extent. Something to do with which part of the universe we're travelling through and when. I actually think that being serious about climate change is just about the only thing that Boris is getting right. We seem to be world leaders. Our bins are: Food - weekly Recycling, general and garden - fortnightly. We're pretty good at sorting our rubbish, but it's amazing how much recycling we have considering there's only the two of us now. We have very little general waste, although I'm sure some of what we think is recycling is probably general.
Everything is collected weekly round here - black bags for general/food waste, see-through bags for general recycling, purple bags for clothes recycling, returnable canvas bags for garden waste. Very efficient. The only small issue is having to be up early enough to put out the black bags before the 7.30am collection - you can't put them out the night before because of the foxes.
Geek/intersting thread is the one for sciencey stuff... Bins round my way Black bin - general waste, fortnightly Blue bin - recycling, alternative fortnightly Green bin - food waste, weekly Brown bin - green waste, same weeks as blue bin, March to October, £20 a year for the privalage I think
At a guess, pink....ask Roland I'm 25 miles down the Clyde from Glasgow, so the rats there may have a different preference!
Revealed: Ursula von der Leyen used private jet to travel just 31 miles - The Telegraph https://apple.news
Malawi has just donated £1 million to help clean up Scotland #COP26 #Glasgow please log in to view this image
Chris Rose @ArchRose90 · 5h Sky News has suggested that we should eat mealworms, grasshoppers & crickets as a solution to the climate crisis. If that’s a solution then I’m afraid the planet will simply have to die.
Politics For All @PoliticsForAlI · 3h please log in to view this image please log in to view this image | NEW: Royal Marines have forced US troops to surrender just days into a training exercise after eliminating almost the entire unit. The British commandos “dominated” US forces during a training exercise in California, using a new battle structure
Owen Paterson MP was found guilty by a cross-party committee of MPs of 'egregious' breaches of parliamentary rules in taking over £100,000 per annum from each of two companies to lobby for them. One of these companies, Randox, was given nearly half a billion pounds worth of government contracts without having to go through a tendering process. Now, Tory MPs are being instructed by Boris Johnson to back an amendment by Andrea Leadsom aimed at setting aside the committee's conclusion, effectively changing the rules after the game's finished. This government is utterly and shamelessly corrupt.
I've seen nothing in the media that suggests Paterson was involved in any way with a large government contract to Randox. He took concerns he had about antibiotic residues in milk being sold in supermarkets to the Food Standards Agency. The standards committee found no fault here, but said in later emails he appeared to be promoting Randox technology. Paterson was not interviewed until late in the inquiry and his 17 witnesses were not spoken to, just asked to put in written statements. So the question is one of natural justice. As I understand it, Leadsom is not seeking to set aside the committee's decision, merely postpone it while independent third parties scrutinise the processes adopted by the inquiry. It's interesting that John Bercow, hardly a Tory stooge, has come out in favour of this and believes that Patterson has not had a fair hearing.