Tagcarbondioxide

046

Titleish


Swing away.

Oh, hey, by the way, who’s having fun with politics these days?

Me neither.

What an astoundingly practical joke.

[The previous three blocks—plus all that remains within the confines of this entry—were written a year ago, by the way. Exactly 366 days. Swear to Jesus despite his body’s present condition of being long-absorbed ashes. Love that guy, though!]

Do you think either of the main decision-makers within the two primary U.S. political parties have anything to gain by telling you that “global warming” is no big deal? This is some of the stuff you should know effectively since reality (in)directly affects your quality of life.

The Galacian Empire features but one “political party.” They are much farther ahead than humans [“us”] on the civilizational timeline. Don’t feel bad—they got a monstrously early head start compared to humanity. But we could hit the jump and catch them if we felt like it. Go figure.

I’m not trying to name names, but one of the two U.S. parties in question has been known to rely on its oily beef industry about as much as its beefy oil business.

Look, I agree that carbon is awesome.

If hydrogen constitutes the quintessential building block of matter, then carbon weaves the compounding miracle that makes life possible.

Look at this stuff. It’s actually breathing.

Do you know the approximate amount of gut flora [bacteria] currently thriving inside the walls of your intestines?

All anyone can do is estimate, but 100 trillion isn’t a stretch.

Or is it?

An overabundance of anything, even the things we need most—air, fire, rain, food, shelter, companionship, freedom—can spell bad news.

In other words, the stuff that keeps you alive can also kill you.

In other words, that which can kill you may also revitalize your essence.

Gas up a balloon, watch it float away until it pops, comes back down, or you forget it ever happened sometime after losing track/sight.

Fill up an atmosphere with carbon, watch it heat up until either melting away or burning off unwanted weight. Probably both.

A portrait of freedom.

There is nothing confusing about this!

When we apply solid pressure to pressurized gas at the end of a lit fuse, all we can do is hope to enjoy the pyrotechnics display.

In other words, poke something bigger, faster, and stronger than you, get mauled. Scratch it and get clawed back twice as hard.

Staying stubborn means battling for your life in a war already lost.

Keep resisting and we will all become dinner.

Why are we raising the thermostat that controls the temperature of our home planet?

Are we really that cold?

In other words, given an inch, don’t take a mile in return.

In other words, don’t disrupt balance.

Rocking boats also make(s) waves which might flood.

Given an inch, take two tops. Then give back four.

In other words, how do we maybe get eight!?

In other words, be fair.

In other words, silver linings aren’t for suckers.

In this case, the “silver lining” is that the damage we’ve done will forestall the next Ice Age by tens of thousands of years.

The bad news is that the biggest slates will wipe themselves clean with little to no regard for the general welfare of humanity, especially when we act more like a virus than beneficial gut bacteria.

The good news is that if you’re reading these words, (probably) we’re waking up.

The worst news is that we are forcing a superior race to deviate from its natural cycle of being, an enormous inconvenience {for them} about which they will not respond with understanding and compassion; quite rather, they will respond by solving the problem.

The g/b solution to overpopulation would make Marvel’s purple-skinned supervillain look like a softie.

Know the difference between a bacteria and a virus? 

Host Not Required:
Virus
Bacteria

Do you define living and life synonymously? Maybe we shouldn’t.

Would you rather enable a bacteria that aids you or a virus that ails you?

Someone once told me that deepwater oil rigs were being built higher and higher above sea level. I can’t find haven’t found any evidence to the contrary, so let’s pretend it’s real.

Why would oil rigs be gaining elevation? Could it be because the owners of said rigs anticipate a rise in sea level? Might they anticipate said rise because the techniques they use to gather resources—i.e., the old method they (ab)use to generate power and amass wealth—pumps too much carbon into the atmosphere?

Gee.
I dunno.
What did 1 + 1 (+ 1) equal last time you did the math?
What do you reckon it’ll equal next time?

In other words, what has the answer to math been every time we ran the nine (in)visible digits while the ten numbers freely ran?

Perhaps “digits” and “numbers” should be swapped up there. Reckon? We can talk about it later. I mean, how in the holy fuck should either of us know at this point?

Hopeful.

Sometimes I seem like an asshole. I know this. I can’t help it. However, I would never exploit another organism’s universal need for energy (unless it/he/she advertised an intent to kill me {or another being unjustifiably}).

Do you exploit the universal need for energy? If you don’t, then high-five yourself from me. You’re doing it right. If you do, then would you mind cutting it out?

In other words, can this go on forever?

Once we defy impossible odds by emerging victorious in the greatest war the world has ever known, we should see a massive boom in clean energy jobs.

Let’s get a head start.
Don’t wait to be overthrown.
A graceful exit may preserve dignity.
Choose terms with which you can live happily.

In other words, there are better ways of making money than by performing tasks that support the nonrenewable usage of natural resources at a dangerous pace which unnaturally thaws polar ice.

It’s an interesting situation to ponder. If humans hadn’t gone bonkers and made Earth sick, (and assuming, of course, that we became self-aware at the same point in time as now {which we wouldn’t have, because our brains would have been too far behind}), then we’d have about five millennia to prepare for the next regularly scheduled Ice Age and Galacia’s rise to power and prominence across the surface of the globe. But since we’ve proliferated outta control and heated up the planet, The G.E. will have no logical choice but to come out early and challenge human resources during an interglacial, a time when our world is too warm for them. 

By nature, galacians are ten times better (at almost anything) than we. By my estimation, in our current average climate/temperature, they’d be about eight times better.

In other words, it won’t matter—it just might make them enjoy their meals more.

In other words, there are better ways to farm energy, people! Do one of those instead.

No matter who you are, reader, I sincerely hope that you never get your brain eaten.

In a weird twist of events, we can’t live underwater, but we also can’t remain alive unless H2O saturates the inside of our bodies.

Humanly greedy tendencies exploit weaknesses while the vast collection of our infinite wisdom could take fair advantage of global strength in a concerted effort to construct a foreseeably balanced future filled with harmonically prosperous solidarity.

The discovery of fire seems to have been a freak accident that came too early and outpaced the development of our brains. But what if I told you that galacian leadership—after determining that their best known food source [highly evolved primates] were gravely endangered by harsh, arctic conditions—elected to intervene and teach Homo sapiens how to create fire by friction?

In other words, what if The G.E. created “God”?

In other words, humans are being farmed.

I highly doubt they expected our brains to get so big, though.

Since we’ve entered ostensibly into an unspoken agreement to fire from the hip, I’ve made a chart that you may or may not find intact below.

Something tells me those arrows could just as easily point the other way.

Something else tells me we aren’t exactly working toward a stellar report card.

In other words, how do brain?

Where there’s fire, there’s smoke.
Where there’s warmth, people flock.
In other words, where matter gathers, there’s friction.
In other words, carbon traps heat. It’s great at it. (Thank goodness.)

We should thank appreciate our lucky stars for carbon, but how much do we need?

Indirectly, you need water to breathe.
Directly, you can’t breathe if you drink too much water.

In other words, more or less, less is more.

A little becomes a lot, and we all know what happens when it rains.

Same goes for anything ever.

History tells a repetitive story from various angles and perspectives.

In other words, the past explains the present and predicts the future.

Carbon abides by the same rules.

More is not less. Not in this case.

More carbon traps more heat.
Heat rises to strain any barrier that prevents its escape.
More heat liquefies frozen water.
Glacial recession increases oceanic volume, which displaces seas.
Economic recession fuels a depression which smolders.
Rising seas displace any body.
Food scarcity motivates everybody.

A person is usually sane, but people tend to freak the hell out.

In the event of widespread, catastrophic coastal flooding, many peoples—downtrodden, scared, and hungry—would hit the road looking for shelter. Most other people would (likely) hunker down and guard their resources. Basic survival instincts would then (probably) precipitate an immense wave of desperation washing over all the confused, frightened, heavily armed (American) humans backing themselves into corners fearing for the lives of their loved ones.

How To Promote Peace:
1) Be peaceful.
2) Share.
Easier than 1, 2, 3.


Forty percent of the global population [perhaps more, it’s hard to know] will need to find new places to live when sea levels rise.

In other words, maybe, and maybe not.

We should try neither kidding nor scaring ourselves.

Let’s just be real.

The average change in sea level for the 20th century was about 1.7 mm per year.

Since the early nineties, that rate has basically doubled.

Occasionally, numbers tend to do this zany thing where they “add up.”

For mankind, thriving underwater won’t soon become a feasible scenario. (How would we make fire?!)

Life always breaks free from terrain that naturally suppresses fire.

In other words, gravity dampens light.

Do you think you’re safe since you don’t live near a coast? You’re not.

Some sum of 40% of all people {to [“sic”] damn many} will be drifting inland and competing for your water, food, energy, space, things, stuff, time, money.

In that, order.

No, I don’t “typo.”

Usually.

By then, money will be of little consequence.

You think people fearing legitimately for their lives will care about your money?

They might care, but wealth certainly won’t earn you any brownie points.

It’ll probably help them justify their savage actions.

In other words, people have been known to be funny about money.

A state of hopelessness doesn’t normally yield a cooperative cycle of competition.

In other words, desperation sparks conflict where interests do conflict.

Fighting.
War.
Destruction.
Death.

That’s enough about our artificially changing climate for now.

No, I’m not a socialist, fascist, communist, or libertarian, either.

As of this sentence’s original formation, the only (political) party with which I affiliate does not yet exist. Hmm, I wonder if I’ll found it. Maybe it should be called “Earthling.”

Out of sheer necessity, I strive to walk the middle ground with a foot on each side. This is the only way I can maintain any semblance of balance.

Here’s one crudely generic but highly relevant example of a feedback loop currently plaguing politics in the States:

  1. Jimbo hears about another mass shooting and vents on social media, asserting that guns should be harder to come by.
  2. Petunia, a lifelong supporter of gun ownership, (mis)reads Jimbo’s words without the visual aid cued by his body, gets herself riled up, and spouts off about a constitutional right to bear arms, which gets her pals riled up, too.
  3. The next day, another mass shooting occurs. Jimbo vents again, this time choosing more colorful verbiage and calling for even stricter gun laws.
  4. Petunia’s third cousin Mickey catches wind of Jimbo’s venting; in response (to someone he’s never met and might never meet), he buys more guns and ammo in emotionally reflexive defiance.
  5. Due to his competitive nature, some guy named Donald uses his daddy’s money to buy more guns than Mickey, then he quacks about it, but no one can understand anything he says.
  6. Misinterpretations, misrepresentations, miscommunications occur in the same way that a snowball gets bigger and heavier as it rolls downhill. 

When something rolls downhill, gained weight equates with momentum. More momentum, more speed, more power.

But bigger balls mean fewer revolutions.

Experiencing powerful speed must come at some expense.

In other words, more circles (re)fund more cycles.

Without revolution, there can only be less opportunity to matter—in other words, more time to fester.

Living creatures carry either a magnetizing or polarizing force. Sometimes it’s one; at other times, it’s the other.

The key to evolution [forward progression] occurs in all the letters that follow the r.

When individuals do not agree about a hot topic, they slide farther away from one another in terms of politics, and shift further in terms of economics [governs politics], geography [governs biology], biology [governs geography], the science/nature [governs bodies] of physics [governs the mind, spirit, energy], and so on and so forth.

In other words, repulsive chemistry will polarize magnetic attraction.

Because Petunia and Jimbo do not agree about guns, each individual feels “repulsion” when reminded of the other’s persona.

And guess what. Guns might be the only issue upon which their opinions collide.

Misery does love company, and focusing on negativity is a chore that tends to end badly.

🔪🖋

Real.

Do you doubt that biology controls geography or vice versa?

Wolves once roamed North America freely.

Wolves have been known to enjoy feasting on farm animals.

Humans cultivated excellence in the highly profitable, scientific field of manufacturing livestock terribly and lazily in an effort to maximize personal financial gain.

Enter direct competition between different types of appetite.

Guess which side came out on top.

By 1926, there were no gray wolves in Yellowstone.

In the mid 90s, 41 gray wolves were reintroduced to the park’s ecosystem.

Long story short, science happened.

Dominoes fell until the river did something crazy. By that I mean its directional flow reversed naturally.

Maybe you think I made that up. Someone might have, but I did not.

In any event, next time you convince yourself that what we do won’t matter, remember the wolves that revitalized an ecosystem and changed the direction of a river’s flow!

In other words, things move when stuff occurs.

In other words, our actions produce results.

Not real, really.

The laws of physics—yes, those pesky buggers again—show quite clearly that as matter of relatively equal weight separates and drifts in opposite directions from a shared center of gravity on the same plane, the chance of catastrophic imbalance increases.

Why do you suppose the earth quakes or a volcano erupts?

In other words, what makes knees buckle or excitement burst?

In light of gravity, the earth moves under our feet.

Volcanoes eject stuff/things in ecstatic liberty.

By the way, I swear I don’t get off on comparing a volcanic eruption to a male reproductive organ in the emotional heat of procreational passion; it’s just that—hmm, how shall I put this—it’s too fucking obvious to ignore.

We know effects cause changes and affections change causes, but we haven’t managed to connect the dots that explain why.

Wait, have we??

The only two forces consistently patterning and unflinchingly ubiquitous throughout each galaxy in the universe—gravity and energy—manifest in one way or another in every/any fiber of any/every being ever.

Rocks roll downhill unless we intervene.

In other words, AHHHH, IT’S ALIVE!

If this doesn’t strike you as monumentally important, then what does?

Think extra hard about this one. Since the dawn of spacetime over 13.8 billion [ish] years ago, and proven by science from every angle (presently) imaginable, only one competing relationship has been around the whole time. One is gravity. The other is not.

If it’s not gravity, it’s weightless.
Light, meet gravity.
(Light is an energy.)
Now join forces, dance forever and ever after, and then do it all over again.

See where this is headed?

Dancing is one thing, and everyone knows that one thing leads to another.

A thing that is like dancing, but unlike dancing feels bad instead of good, is fighting.

Fighting is a negative version of dancing.

In other words, fighting is not harmonious.

Dancing must be neutral.

If fighting is the negative version, what’s its positive version?

Wait, how is life created again?

It rhymes with “ducking,” which is what I seem to be doing in response to the question.

How many conservatives aspire to dance with a liberal?

How many liberals are dying to screw a conservative?

How many people truly prefer fighting?

These days American political parties have lost sight of the middle [common] ground.

Look at it this way. Which side (below) appears to be more safely balanced?

No question posed in this book on this site will be designed to trick anyone probably!

Questions are meant to do quite the opposite, actually.

Some questions can be taken more than one way.

By untangling common threads, I’m only trying to make us think.

In other words, it’s about unlocking your brain.

With numbers come strength.

More numbers equal more strength when weighted proportionately.

In other words, we should choose to strengthen numbers across the board.

Moving closer together means more numbers, which, again and again, means more strength, but only as long as emotional balance can be maintained.

The bigger they are, the harder they fall.

Everything comes full circle.

In other words, one thing provides a second helping before helping itself to neither one nor the other, but instead some of both, which comes back around as a third thing, a hybrid, a freak, whatever, which rewards the thing that came first through the joy of creation and stuff.

In other words, you are kind of a big deal!

Some people get their kicks by hunting deer for sport. If we did not hunt, deer might overrun and wreck ecosystems.

Can you blame them?

If you lived in fear of being shot from a distance, you might grow skittish in your behavioral patterns. You might be inclined to spend more time hidden behind closed doors. You might develop a hunger to fornicate like there’s no tomorrow.

Circular triangles, friends.

Cattle can’t survive the wild because of the fact that we made them stupid by farming producing them in bulk.

Throw a straight man in prison and eventually he’ll settle for assholes because of a biological need to stick it where the sun doesn’t shine.

Species extinction has been occurring at about a thousand times the normal rate because humans haven’t stopped acting like fools since solving the riddle of fire-making and rising from the brink of permanent undoing.

This is a triangular, circular relationship. A prism of infinite possibility within a space of finite resources.

The notion of infinity (or eternity) should not be viewed as a never-ending number. Given our reality behind the pace car known as light, that’s not something we can understand.

Think of infinity as one chance for everything to turn into anything.

It’s kinda like what happens when an adventurous sperm finds an egg to fertilize.

In time, each unique opportunity happens only once.

In other words, nothing will ever happen exactly the way it did the first time.

In other words, there are no second chances.

And, in other words, we only get one shot.

Our aim “need” not be true, but if it comes up short, we will perish.

Dunno about you—and I {do (not)} hope you enjoy (im)measurable comparisons—but I require living about as much as I desire being.

Take your shot, but proceed as if you will not get a mulligan.

And do so only because you probably won’t.

This is how smart I am: “stupid.”

I am a “stupid-smart” carbon-based life-form self-actuating awareness of “self” while emotionally/mentally preparing to assume roundabout control of the planet by offering guidance that can/should/will lead Her to(ward) safety.

The way I figure (vaguely/intuitively), I’ve got an 83% chance to connect with a 108-mph fastball of (obviously) mythic proportions.

Did you know that statistics are “stupid-smart”?

No?

What do you know?

043

Climb at Change

Do you remember the time when you couldn’t listen to the past?
So do I.
It sucked.
And it almost destroyed my brain.
Now here we are.
We’re very quickly going places.
Are you down with moving up?

In other words, you can relax because we’re okay.

The word relax can mean “to chill.”

Chilling sounds might make you feel a coldness amidst sweltering heat.

Sometimes I have to read a sentence more than once to uncover its essence.

A recipe amounts to a map that leads to a result which has worked for at least one other person in the past. Conditions change, so you may tweak at your discretion, but don’t forget that rising above anything becomes much easier once you find inner peace.

In other words, it might seem like I’ve been misled about the living organisms known as yeast.

What in Sam Hill are we even discussing?

All there is to comprehend cannot be understood fully at once.

An incomprehensible onslaught approaches, and you will not survive save for your willingness to evolve your consciousness.

Practice what you preach mentally to yourself.

Don’t preach to someone who does not want to listen.

On second thought, don’t fucking preach at all.

Teach.

At least try.

But don’t try to teach someone who does not want to learn.

Just do what you know is right.

In other words, clichés may originate within groundbreaking insights.

Do actions speak louder than words?

Currently, you’re reading a transitional sentence that’s just as rhetorical as the question that precedes it most adjacently.

Yay.

Anyway.

Where were we?

Here’s where we are.

And this is where we’ll be.

Which two elements make up about 99% of the observable universe?

You might know at least one of them by now.

The other is helium.

In case you don’t recall, I should mention that hydrogen still occupies first place.

(Also, if you’re not too busy, think back and remember all the time we’ve wasted on this parenthetically framed, speculative aside.)

Hydrogen.

An atom.

The building block of cosmic anatomy.

The stuff to end start all things.

In other words, the ingredient found in most recipes.

Helium, by the way, is not a renewable resource, yet we are using it as if it were. Why would we do that?

Why would we outpace the supply of any resource?

Since a resource determines power, powers dictate resources.

Powers contain resources because resources hold power.

Six of one, half dozen of another.

In other words, resources are powers.

Possessing any combination of the resources above equates with some degree of influence.

In other words, the richest people possess the highest power of persuasion.

Globally, distribution of wealth becomes more and more uneven with each passing moment. Psst, just curious—how are we expecting that will end? If their brains could interpret any emotion beyond “a hunger for flesh” [double meaning], The Galacian Empire would pity {or laugh} at humanity’s hapless ignorance.

In other words, you can reliably count on a cause to enjoy its personal effects.

We could learn a lot from our mortal enemies, particularly in terms of organizational structure and civilizational systems on a planet-wide scale. The “wealthiest” among g/b society are naturally gifted. None of them live in “poverty” (as we know it).

As a whole, we [humans] have overvalued the paper/code that represents money.

I might not have been the World’s Greatest Detective here, but I’ve come away fairly certain that more cash flowing to the top of the barrel amounts to more desperation stirring at the bottom.

Build up enough helium and eventually it’ll pop the balloon. Then what? Clearly we aren’t too worried about it.

Why has the global movement of money been mimicking the shady structure [i.e. upward funneling and collection at the topmost point] of a pyramid scheme?

You’ve heard about “the one percent,” have you not?

Some people have (not).

Apparently, it’s where all the world’s wealth has been imprisoned.

In other words, “America the Beautiful” disaster.

In another word, assholes.

How is anyone—whether at the bottom, middle, or top—okay with that arrangement?

How long can any “body” be safe from revolutionary friction while hoarding energy over such a relatively lengthy timespan?

Every volcano to ever flip its lid says hello.
So does every molten core that ever powered a planet.
Every moon that ever sloshed water over growing, shifting land.
Every seed that ever dropped roots, branched out, and sprouted limbs.
Every body that ever ate matter in order to build up strength.
Every bud that ever flowered into saturated blossoms.
Every brain that ever processed a thought.
Every emotion that ever surged.
In other words, this could go on forever.

Think of any “universe” as contained within an hourglass.

Assume that underneath the skin of everything you see, only grains of sand exist.

Equate grains of sand with particles inside atoms.

In an hourglass, a grain of sand can only fall.

In other words, as illuminated by a prism, dust can’t rise without help.

Envision our universe as a much more complicated, much fancier hourglass.

Our grains can go back up.

But we can only oversee a certain number of grains.

If we waste a grain, then it disappears.

In other words, when all the grains of sand in our universe are finally wasted, we run out of time.

The only infinite resource is gravity.

Flip gravity and you get energy!

But to harness energy, we need {to} matter.

In other words, anything (else) is finite.

If a thing exists, then that thing will fall (eventually).

Here’s what’s cool.

When a grain is used appropriately, it can be used again.

And when we reuse grains (naturally), they come out stronger.

We never have to run out of time, but you better believe that we will unless we try a little harder to minimize waste in general, start heeding nature’s warnings, and stop ignoring the mathematical artistry continuously assigning values to existence.

In other words, we best be better at being human beings.

By definition, anything that amounts to “trash” has been devalued.

Devalued things are seen as disposable.

Can disposable income be valued?

Moreover, can disposable income exist without exorbitant wealth?

No body/nobody really knows how to process unneeded material.

Know why?

Because it’s impossible.

Speaking of blowing smoke, helium is enormously rare (at 5.2 ppm) in Earth’s atmosphere.

If you want to see and feel helium, then step outside in the middle of a clear day. That big fiery disk emanating warmth and light? That’s helium in all its glory.

You realize that the sun is pretty much just like every other (average) star you’ve ever seen in the night sky, yeah?

{No?}

In other words, helium is rare on earth, but in the stars, not so much.

Speaking of heat…

Which of the following best highlights the point of conflict in the climate change debate?
a) Climate change is normal.
b) Climate is not changing.
c) Humanity is causing climate to change.
d) Humanity is precipitating a change in climate to a negative degree that matters.
Sometimes choices multiply.

Do you know the answer?

In other words, I don’t.

Seems to me that most people aren’t even debating the same point—they just regurgitate what they think their tribe [political party] wants them to say.

Unbound by political affiliation, I’m compelled to outline certain facts. Since the Industrial Revolution—namely on the heels of the invention and monetization of the lightbulb—and especially in the last 75 years or so, the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has seen a meteoric rise from well under 300 ppm to now beyond 400. In the context of our planet’s historical readings, this trend reveals itself quite openly as an obscene aberration.

In other words, the natural laws that have governed anything you’ve ever seen will continue doing the same damn thing.

In other words, only so much stuff can be stuffed into other stuff.

Our atmosphere marks the ceiling to our biosphere; the hydrosphere serves as the floor.

In other words, our skin provides a place in space and time.

Earth’s biosphere makes life possible, but mere possibility does not imply permanence.

Ever missed a chance? Me, too. Therefore, possibility must be temporary.

Make no mistake; we do indeed need our greenhouse gases to keep trapping heat so that we can stay alive, but at some point, heat gets too hot to handle. When your body overheats, it strokes out. Anything, everything, every body, and every brain can only endure so much stress before breaking down.

In other words, too much of anything can be bad news.

Even too much water can kill you in more ways than one.

To some, rising CO2 might seem insignificant since atmospheric levels only amount to about 0.04% of the air we breathe.

For the sake of additional context, nitrogen occupies 78.09% and oxygen fills 20.95%.

How can 0.04% of anything really matter? Um, could it be because it is affected by chance and choice?

In other words, math gets done.

How do you feel when your body temperature elevates even slightly? Should you claim no change, you’re either wrong, lying, or always sick. You don’t feel totally normal; that’s for sure. The only logical conclusion here is that the change in temperature does matter. Indisputably, and to echo a point Dr. Tyson has made more than once, this is one of those nifty scientific facts that doesn’t require anyone’s personal belief to be true.

In other words, numbers don’t lie because they can’t.

In other words, numbers are dumb.

In other words, a clear causal relationship between earth’s rising temperature and the elevation in atmospheric CO2 can only be dismissed by the willfully ignorant.

In other words, ugh, just to make a living, people either need to belong to a family, or they need to be able to gather enough shiny objects to distract them.

And in even more words, goddamnit, yes, matter needs energy (in order to resist the unstoppable force known as gravity).

But energy needs no body; it was here first.

Your body is made of matter.

The mind must branch from light.

Conclusion: energy(/gravity) does not care if we die horribly; therefore, let us live enjoyably!

We might as well, right?

And we might as well right (our ship), right?

You’re still okay.

Humanity’s greedy hunger for power keeps us clinging to unsustainable methods of energy usage/distribution as well as food production, which in turn causes Earth’s overall temperature to steadily (and unnaturally) rise.

In other words, a fact couldn’t care less about politics.

It doesn’t care about anything.

It just is.

In other words, the thing that just fucking is doesn’t need us in order to be the thing that it just fucking is.

In other words, we need it.

We can’t do what we need to do if we overheat.

In other words, we can’t function unless we can breathe.

In other words, our planet can do what it needs to do with or without us.

In other words, Earth is a lot bigger than “you.”

If you were Big Mama E, would you want humans crawling all over you right now, wasting your precious energy, rendering half your creations extinct {especially the creatures}, trying to turn you into something you’re not meant to be?

In other words, perform thinking.

Nuts, I tell ya.

Picture this.

Earth has a fever, and we’re making it worse.

It really is simple math/physics.

Disbelief in this reality is not terribly unlike believing that if you sink deep enough underwater, your body will somehow shift respiratory gears and start breathing, or like reckoning you can walk your happy ass into the middle of Times Square at high noon and defecate on the street without anyone noticing.

In other words, there are both right and wrong ways to do things.

In another word, choices!

In other words, hell yes.

When everything makes too much sense, these words seem to be post-encoded—especially in the case of sentences not unlike this one, the significance of which we must no longer fail to grasp, clutch, rank, and file for safekeeping.

In other words, I’m off your rocker.

In other words, close call!

Look at what’s happening around the world.

Are you yet aware?

Why?

Do you know anyone who gets their news from memes?

If you have carefully considered the state of affairs on our home planet, then you have realized beyond any doubt that we must be doing certain things wrong.

In other words, when we change things, things change us in return.

In other words, you risk getting bitten when you bite.

In other words, there will always be room for improvement.

In other words, you can do better.

All of us can.

Why don’t we?

Why would we allow our species to favor something that yields a detrimental deficit worldwide?

Our appropriate course of action charts a laughably straightforward destination to a magnificently better place.

In other words, instead of doing the thing that’s bad, we should do the thing that’s good, should we not? [Don’t answer that (if you’re wrong).]

What’s good can only mean improvement.

When you have something to say—here’s a thought—speak.

Raise your voice until you’re heard.

Just to reiterate, I hadn’t truly contemplated most of this information until recently.

Even if I “knew” any of it, I definitely didn’t understand it, and I think that’s because it had never been assembled in the right order for my anomalously curious brain to process.

A wealth of readily available, vital information hides in the dilution of plain sight.

In one ear, out the other.

Facts.
Science.
Math.
Gross.
School.
Blah.

What a shame because the universal truths that shape and fuel our reality are kind of important (to say write read the least).

By now, some might consider it embarrassing that we haven’t begun to get all this stuff pretty well globally sorted.

In other words, everyone on the planet lives here (obviously) and breathes the same gaseous elixir.

Earth’s atmosphere contains the mixture of greenhouse gases that allows us to breathe—in other words, to live. Without that barrier, that insulation, that safe haven, the vacuum of space would kill us all in seconds.

In other words, all life on earth would fade away.

So yes, we need our precious greenhouse gases to live, but we ought not mess with the precise concoction that sprung us free in the first place.

In other words, make sense.

A 100 ppm increase might not seem like much, but I guarantee you that in the game of life, it absolutely is.

A pebble thrown into still water can culminate in a tidal wave.

Would ya just look at that dumb blue squiggly line?

In other words, who the hell knows?!

At this point we’ve probably stopped fact-checking anyway.

Facts should be confused with neither beliefs nor opinions, both of which should always remain open changing in light of newfound facts.

In other words, learn how to be wise.

I don’t know everything, but I do know that somewhere between the whole of humankind, we already know enough to enter a period of enlightenment even more empowering than that time when our ancestors discovered fire and, most impressively, learned how to make it with their bare hands by persistently channeling the same kind of friction that energizes a lightning strike.

What is magic if not science as yet unexplained?

Where there’s water, fire may not be far behind.
Where there’s fire, there’s heat.
Where there’s heat, there’s friction.
Where there’s friction, there could be a spark.
Where there’s a spark, there could be chemistry.
And where there’s a spark, there’s light.
Where there’s a spark, too, there’s a pulsating electrical current.
Where there’s an electrical current, there’s electromagnetic radiation.
Where there’s electromagnetic radiation, there’s gravity.
And where there’s gravity, there’s a need to matter.

In other words, facts become increasingly obvious during reduction.

What does that even mean?

(Truly, who knows?{?/!})

In other words, we don’t!

Leave the horse be. Especially once it dies.

Wanna know if a horse is thirsty? Lead it to water. Should it die, don’t bother beating it.

Don’t.
Waste.
Time.

Because you can’t get it back.