A conflict
Frederic J. Brown |
Letter to the editor in today's SF Chronicle:
Every day you can read about the worsening drought and the over-burdened electrical grid.
Then you also read about local and state governments demanding that new housing be built.
Anyone else see a conflict?
Steve Gro
San Francisco
Labels: Climate Change, Environment, Housing in the City
2 Comments:
They say we are in a drought as we do not have enough rain caused by climate change. Then mudslides from way too much rain caused by climate change. Talking out of both sides of their mouths.
Not only does California want more housing built they want it along the coastline where banks are ready to fund these billion dollar projects that will supposedly be under water soon and they’ll lose all of their money. I assume big banks are that willing to go bankrupt in the name of our safety. I haven’t been able to see any of the new home developments as I’m stuck at home after being asked not to charge my climate change saving EV. Yet 20 years are glass light bulbs and air conditioners worked just fine with plenty of electricity left over.
No man or technology can ever stop ocean waves. But we are brainwashed to believe that by completely changing our lifestyles we will be able to control the weather. I think there’s more than a conflict here.
“ the whole climate change process is the complete transformation of the economic structure of the world to socialism. It should happen much quicker, but it cannot happen overnight,”
Christiana Figueres. executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
https://twitter.com/mikebolen/status/1567320637781458944?s=20&t=OYFLROeQH8gD4S9HuVaiZg
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