MJSfoto1956 said:
A couple of false assumptions here.
- #1: just two feet would be enough to flood every coastal city to the tune of many trillions of dollars damage each year.
- #2: the oceans could rise that much (and more) in just decade if the Greenland ice sheet slid into the ocean (which it appears to be in the early stages of doing).
Basically, it is a bad bet to assume nothing is going to happen in our lifetimes. It is an even worse bet to assume it won't affect our children.
Two feet? Okay, in the worst case scenario, we have 80 years to save those cities, assuming the worst case scenario of water rise starts immediately. The best case is that we have 200 years.
I think that is more than ample time to sort out what to do with energy. Do you agree?
Greenland ice sheet sliding into the ocean may not come to pass. Just like all the other scary things that never happened:
+ runaway effect
+ 'artic summers ice free by 2013'
+ etc
I think the safest bet is that the catastrophe does not happen. 999 times out of 1000, it doesn't.
Peak oil, asteroids hitting the earth, the dollar crash, nuclear war with Russia, Hitler taking over, a new civil war, the return of christ, aliens, peak population by 1970, the new world order, the ozone hole killing us all, the mayan prophecy, global cooling, etc.
You are, most often, falling for someone's spook story when you believe that the end is near.
I am not making that bet and letting that sit in my psyche and brew. Been there, done that with peak oil in the late 2000's.