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Climate Love
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Just over four years ago, the Guardian took the bold decision to stop accepting advertising from oil and gas firms. In doing so, the Guardian became the first global news organisation to institute an outright ban on taking money from companies that extract fossil fuels. It was a move that cost the Guardian millions of pounds in future revenues but the newspaper believes was the right thing to do. These companies’ relentless thirst for oil, gas and coal is driving the climate breakdown and threatening the future of our planet. The Guardian also refuses to work with gambling companies – and think extremely hard about all the adverts taken. But this means The Guardian need readers to support more than ever. Give climate love to the Guardian. If you can, support them with a donation as well. https://www.theguardian.com/
News, sport and opinion from the Guardian's Europe edition | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/
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Misinformation in unfortunately common in environmental communication. For example, this reasoning contains a fallacy called "straw man fallacy", which occurs when someone misrepresents or distorts their opponent's argument to make it easier to attack or dismiss: "They keep banging on about how the warming of the atmosphere causes rising sea levels, but if that was happening we’d have seen it by now! It’s been countless decades since they first started predicting this, but here we still are." Source: https://www.theguardian.com/science/brain-flapping/2014/nov/25/climate-change-is-an-obvious-myth-how-much-more-evidence-do-you-need#comments In this case, the argument misrepresents the scientific consensus on climate change by suggesting that because the predicted impacts haven't been immediately observed, the entire claim about the link between warming atmosphere and rising sea levels is invalid. Learn more about climate change denial and how to deal with misinformation and fallacies: https://medium.com/climate-conscious/shocked-by-climate-change-denial-how-to-deal-with-misinformation-4aefff91c232
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By attacking this exaggerated https://kinitopet.io/ and unrealistic version of the argument, the denier can avoid engaging with the actual evidence and scientific consensus on climate change.
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Miscommunication is quite misleading and should be discouraged at all cost
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Misguiding the people is unacceptable, reporting on climate change must be done accurately to avoid traumatizing the people.
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Every year, we dump 10m tons of plastic into the ocean, and solving the problem will require regulatory action. But there are ways consumers can help Cutting boards, non-stick pans, mixing bowls, even tea bags: in the kitchen, plastics can be hidden in plain sight. It’s something that Jessica Brinkworth, an anthropology professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, realized once she began looking for ways to cut down on plastic use in her own kitchen after her workplace started doing the same. Although much of her lab’s waste was unavoidable – plastics are key for the sterile medical research they conduct – it still made her uncomfortable. That discomfort was only magnified in her own home, where she knew plastics were “largely a matter of convenience”. Large macroplastics are a problem worldwide because we dump them on the shores of other nations,” she says, where things like plastic bottles block access to food for coastal nations and kill about a million people a year due to flooding, landslides and other environmental disasters. Much smaller plastics, like micro and nanoplastics, which are tinier than a grain of rice, “pose a whole other level of problem. Many types of plastic are endocrine disruptors,” meaning they disrupt the excretion and use of insulin, which can lead to obesity and reproductive health disorders. Every year, we dump 10m tons of plastic into the ocean, killing a million marine animals annually. That plastic can work its way into our bodies from both the food we eat (most of our seafood contains microplastics) to how we cook in the kitchen. “Plastic pollution is one of the most visible signs of the environmental crisis we’re facing with microplastics discovered on the highest mountains as well as in the depths of the oceans,” said Paula Chin, a senior policy adviser on consumption at the World Wildlife Fund. “They’ve also been found in our bodies with estimates suggesting we’re consuming a credit card’s worth of plastic each week.” Brinkworth says solving our plastics problem will require massive regulatory action and coordination by federal and world governments, but that there are important ways consumers can make a difference. “There’s so much that we’re producing in our kitchens that’s environmentally and publicly hazardous. But the reason why it’s in our kitchens is because that’s been made available to us,” she says. “One of the great acts of the plastics and petroleum industry has been to convince us that it’s a personal responsibility.” That said, Brinworth notes that the climate crisis is happening now – and many people won’t survive waiting for innovative plastics recycling solutions to save the day. She encourages people interested in combating plastic pollution to reduce, reuse and recycle – but most importantly to refuse, when they are able. “Consumers can take responsibility probably in the most effective way by trying to affect government change.” https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/jan/04/how-to-reduce-plastic-use-kitchen-shopping-cooking-tips
Reduce, reuse, refuse: tips to cut down plastic use in your kitchen
Every year, we dump 10m tons of plastic into the ocean, and solving the problem will require regulatory action. But there are ways consumers can help
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/jan/04/how-to-reduce-plastic-use-kitchen-shopping-cooking-tips
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These statistics underline the dire need for immediate action.
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Small changes like this can make a big difference for the environment!
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This is quite a great idea ... It all starts from us
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Last year, banks ”pumped more than $150bn into companies whose giant “carbon bomb” projects could destroy the last chance of stopping the planet heating to dangerous levels”, writes The Guardian in its extensive investigation on destructive financing. According to The Guardian, these carbon bombs ”cumulatively hold enough coal, oil and gas to burn through the rapidly dwindling carbon budget four times over. ” Please read and spread this important investigative reporting in your networks. Oh, and if you have money in one of these banks, please consider placing it somewhere else. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/oct/31/banks-pumped-more-than-150bn-in-to-companies-running-carbon-bomb-projects-in-2022
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This is unacceptable. Banks have a responsibility to use their money to support a sustainable future, not to accelerate the climate crisis.
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These banks should fund the transitioning to clean energy
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Why won't this banks fund clean energy and stop funding extinction.
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This is a great summary of the hottest summer on record. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/ng-interactive/2023/sep/29/the-hottest-summer-in-human-history-a-visual-timeline
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There is a dire need to accelerate climate restoration actions, otherwise we are yet to see the worst.
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We must not have hottest summer in the world.
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a solid solution for hot episodes should be established
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Burned to the Ground: the Canadian village incinerated by record temperatures
The small village of Lytton in British Columbia hit the global media when it smashed Canada’s highest temperature record in June 2021, at 49.6C. Two days later, a wildfire burned the entire village to the ground
https://www.theguardian.com/news/ng-interactive/2023/jun/08/burned-to-the-ground-the-canadian-village-incinerated-by-record-temperatures
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Dear Gerald Kutney Your climate love has received over 50 agrees! We have reached out to The Guardian by email and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! To reach more people and increase the chance of a response, click the Share button above to share the review on your social accounts. For every new member that joins We Don't Have Time from your network, we will plant a tree and attribute it to you! /Adam, We Don't Have Time
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A reminder on what happens if climate change goes unchecked
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These unflinching documentaries, indie thrillers and anime fables can help us to understand the climate emergency, and how to respond https://www.theguardian.com/film/2023/jul/30/disaster-movies-films-climate-crisis-documentaries
Emergency viewing: 15 must-see films about the climate crisis
These unflinching documentaries, indie thrillers and anime fables for kids can help us to understand the climate emergency, and how to respond
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2023/jul/30/disaster-movies-films-climate-crisis-documentaries
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amazing ,films can easily aid in switching to sustainability
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Perhaps the films could bring out the picture of the extent of the climate injustices better and help awaken people's minds to the reality of the need to act ASAP.
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I am back with one more podcast recommendation! "Tuvalu – how do you save a disappearing country?" is an episode of Today in Focus by The Guardian that shows what the climate crisis really looks like for island nations such as Tuvalu and what can be done to preserve a nation amidst the threat of rising sea levels. 30 minutes to understand the real impact of the climate crisis. Tuvalu is a Pacific Islands country that is on the verge of becoming uninhabitable due to the alarming consequences of the climate crisis. Through the personal storytelling of Kalolaine Fainu, the episode transports you to the frontlines of Tuvalu, where you can witness the effects of sea level rise and the profound impact it has had on the lives of its citizens. From houses being destroyed, to crops being unable to grow and the need to relocate to neighbouring countries, the multi-faceted aspects of the climate crisis are already there and tangible in Tuvalu. But while the country struggles to adapt a one-of-a-kind plan has emerged: the creation of a "digital twin" of the island on the Metaverse. This initiative aims to not only preserve the nation's administration but also safeguard its unique culture and way of life. The podcast shares the voices of the Tuvaluans, allowing us to hear firsthand from activists, politicians, and community members who try to grapple with the implications of this innovative approach. A very powerful and emotional listen. Don't miss out! https://www.theguardian.com/news/audio/2023/jul/03/tuvalu-how-do-you-save-a-disappearing-island-podcast
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Dear Sarah Chabane Your climate love has received over 50 agrees! We have reached out to The Guardian by email and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! To reach more people and increase the chance of a response, click the Share button above to share the review on your social accounts. For every new member that joins We Don't Have Time from your network, we will plant a tree and attribute it to you! /Adam, We Don't Have Time
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This is an amazing creation and a great reminder of the importance to act against climate crisis.
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Thanks for the suggestion!
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Nina Lakhani is The Guardian's senior climate justice reporter in New York. Covering Climate Now recently spoke with Lakhani about her approach to the justice beat, the importance of covering Indigenous climate solutions, and how journalists' language in climate stories may inadvertently favor the status quo—or even hand the conversation over to some of the people who got us here in the first place. https://coveringclimatenow.org/climate-beat-story/qa-guardian-climate-justice-reporter-nina-lakhani-asks-who-should-own-the-climate-narrative/
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Dear Daniel Waweru Your climate love has received over 50 agrees! We have reached out to The Guardian by email and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! To reach more people and increase the chance of a response, click the Share button above to share the review on your social accounts. For every new member that joins We Don't Have Time from your network, we will plant a tree and attribute it to you! /Adam, We Don't Have Time
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The guardian always does a top job
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Freedom of press plays a critical role in the fight against the climate crisis and the murders of journalist Dom Phillips and indigenous expert Bruno Pereira served as a chilling reminder of the dangers that journalists and environmental defenders still face in 2023. As the highest number of journalists killed in the world occurred in Latin America last year, it is clear that this region poses a severe risk to those who speak out. As I already highlighted last year, the importance of independent journalism in reporting on the climate crisis cannot be overstated. "Press freedom is essential to climate solutions", factual reporting and observational storytelling can help humanity to fully understand, acknowledge, and address the challenges posed by a warming planet. And that's why the fight against the climate crisis requires the protection of journalists and environmental defenders. Those who endanger their lives must be held accountable, including police officers, businessmen, or politicians who turn a blind eye to environmental degradation or benefit from it. Only then can we ensure that justice is served for those who have been killed or threatened for their work. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_WAD6-Cusmc The fight against climate change requires a united effort, and press freedom is central to this effort. Without it, the voices of those who seek to protect the environment and expose those who destroy it will be silenced. More than ever we must ensure that journalists and environmental defenders can do their work safely and that those who threaten or harm them are held accountable. Only then we can hope to turn the tide on the climate crisis. So on this World Press Freedom Day, we must remember the journalists who have lost their lives in the course of their work and commit to protecting press freedom and independent journalism everywhere. https://www.theguardian.com/world/dom-phillips-and-bruno-pereira https://app.wedonthavetime.org/posts/f0503039-5c7d-4335-8115-3e2caae0013b
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Freedom of press should not be compromised
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Independent journalism is critical in reporting crisis affecting the environment. Journalist must be protected by all means.
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Jeopardizing the freedom of the press jeopardizes climate justice and that occurrences should be highly condemned
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Environmental campaigners are calling on the UK government to take action after new analysis found a significant difference between the carbon footprints of washable and disposable nappies. Reusable nappies have 25% less global heating potential compared with single-use nappies. Disposable nappies are one of the biggest single contributors to plastic waste worldwide, but a 2005 life cycle analysis declared there was “little or no difference between the environmental impact of reusable and disposable nappies”. This resulted in a lack of action from policymakers, according to campaigners, who say the government has a responsibility to make it easier for parents to switch to reusables. Single-use nappies were only found to leave a worse impact in seven of the categories, including global heating potential, land use, fossil resource scarcity and water use in manufacturing. But campaigners say these effects are particularly critical in light of the climate crisis. Reusable nappies scored worse in areas including marine eutrophication, freshwater ecotoxicity, mineral resource scarcity, marine ecotoxicity and water consumption. The main factors behind. their effects are water, detergent and electricity use when washing and drying nappies, and flushing faeces. Parents can lessen their impact by using energy-efficient washing machines, air drying instead of tumble drying and passing nappies to a second child. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/apr/18/campaigners-urge-action-over-carbon-footprint-of-disposable-nappies
Campaigners urge action over carbon footprint of disposable nappies
Reusables have 25% less global heating potential, finds UK government report, but overall picture is mixed
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/apr/18/campaigners-urge-action-over-carbon-footprint-of-disposable-nappies
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We should take immediate steps to reduce the carbon footprint of disposable nappies. We can do this by switching to more sustainable options such as reusable or cloth nappies. We can also look into recycling services that are available to reduce the waste that comes from disposable nappies. Ultimately, it is up to us to make sustainable changes to our lifestyles to reduce environmental damage.
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It is the responsibility of all of us to make conscious decisions that reduce our carbon footprint and contribute towards a sustainable future for our planet.
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great initiative
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Below is one of the very best articles about the ongoing fight against Climate Change I've read in a very long time. It is so because it talks about the need for stories, art and entertainment to win over the popular imagination, and the power that stories have to move mountains. We have the technology, and we have the money to set it up. What needs to move is policy, systems and organisations of people driving entire nations, and to do this we need the right stories to tell. Take the time to read it, and share it around to your friends who are artists, writers, video makers, and all sorts of creative types, so they understand that the world needs them more than ever: https://www.theguardian.com/news/2023/jan/12/rebecca-solnit-climate-crisis-popular-imagination-why-we-need-new-stories
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Wow, I missed this, it's great!!
Last year will go down in history as a turning point in the growing climate disaster. Extreme weather has affected dozens of nations so far in 2022. Floods, fires, and droughts have forced millions of people from their homes, and many areas are experiencing severe food and electricity shortages. Read more here: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/sep/27/guardian-climate-journalism-impact-carbon-bombs-gulf-stream
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This is information is very critical.
Protecting forests is crucial to avoiding the worst effects of the climate crisis and maintaining stable world temperatures. Forests store roughly 400 gigatonnes of carbon. to get more on this https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/18/carbon-markets-credits-offsets-deforestation-aoe
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Dear Evangeline Wanjiru Thank you for getting your climate love to level 2! We have reached out to The Guardian and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! /Adam We Don't Have Time
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congratulations to the scribe for enlightening the mass on environmental issues
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Do anyone know if their articles on climate is open for anyone or not? If not, it may be a an idea to finance such availability through crowd funding, to reach the masses.
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A report published by the guardian has established that the difference in carbon emissions between the rich and the poor within a country, is now greater than the differences in emissions between countries. The report shows that this pattern has profound consequences for climate action,as it shows that low income individuals in developed countries are contributing less to the climate crisis. This then shows that rich people in developing countries leave much hefty carbon footprints than was previously reported. The report is quick to provide solutions to developing countries noting that for them to grow their climate action funds,they would need to tax the ultra rich some more. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/31/emissions-divide-now-greater-within-countries-than-between-them-study
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It is clear that tackling the climate crisis requires a holistic approach to reducing emissions on a global level as well as within individual countries.
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Not too surprised.. we need to tax the rich and invest this money in climate action, tax the jets, tax the yachts, tax the second residences etc.
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Guardian is always on top in informing the world on climate change matters. This enables right actions to be taken.
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Seems good ،could you explain more
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Many good points, but I think some "miracles" would be welcome too! Everyone agrees we need to move faster. As an investor my criteria is - does the technology have the potential to significantly reduce emissions in the next 20 years? If so, let's consider it!
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Climate compensation and carbon offsets are widely used but the actual impact is not always easy to track. Its very important that media review and investigate possible faults in this system. Fake carbon offsets needs to be exposed. According to The Guardians investigation more than 90% of rainforest carbon offsets by biggest provider Verra carbon standard are worthless “phantom credits” that does not not represent carbon reductions. Verra has responded that the findings are untrue because survey is based on studies that use methods that do not take into account project-specific factors that cause deforestation. The truth will be unveiled sooner or later, having a discussion about how Carbon Offsets are used is a good thing. Thank you The Guardian for your investigation into this important subject. Read more: https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/amp.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/18/revealed-forest-carbon-offsets-biggest-provider-worthless-verra-aoe?fbclid=IwAR1dcCyXsj6keGP12yHvGiuFCPr7Yt4xzoMye5DezlHKx9FLsJ7vtr0vdIw
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Guardian is doing a good job
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Guardian is doing great environmental journalism.
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Exceptional journalism from the Guardian
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Last year, at the age of 90, I had a life-changing experience. I went to space, after decades of playing a science-fiction character who was exploring the universe and building connections with many diverse life forms and cultures. I thought I would experience a similar feeling: a feeling of deep connection with the immensity around us, a deep call for endless exploration. A call to indeed boldly go where no one had gone before. I was absolutely wrong. As I explained in my latest book, what I felt was totally different. I knew that many before me had experienced a greater sense of care while contemplating our planet from above, because they were struck by the apparent fragility of this suspended blue marble. I felt that too. But the strongest feeling, dominating everything else by far, was the deepest grief that I had ever experienced. While I was looking away from Earth, and turned towards the rest of the universe, I didn’t feel connection; I didn’t feel attraction. What I understood, in the clearest possible way, was that we were living on a tiny oasis of life, surrounded by an immensity of death. I didn’t see infinite possibilities of worlds to explore, of adventures to have, or living creatures to connect with. I saw the deepest darkness I could have ever imagined, contrasting starkly with the welcoming warmth of our nurturing home planet. I worry about the world my grandchildren will be living in when they are my age This was an immensely powerful awakening for me. It filled me with sadness. I realized that we had spent decades, if not centuries, being obsessed with looking away, with looking outside. I played my part in popularising the idea that space was the final frontier. But I had to get to space to understand that Earth is, and will remain, our only home. And that we have been ravaging it, relentlessly, making it uninhabitable. I was born in Montreal in 1931. During my lifetime, this world has changed faster than for any generation before us. We are now at an ecological tipping point. Without the bold leadership that the times require, we are facing further climate breakdown and ecosystems collapsing before our eyes, with as many as one million species at risk of extinction, according to the latest scientific assessments. And of all places, it is in the city where I was born that a crucial meeting of the United Nations is being held. At Cop15, the UN biodiversity summit in Montreal, taking place from 7 to 19 December, world governments will negotiate a global deal to stop the loss of biodiversity by the end of the decade. We need world leaders to give their diplomats a powerful mandate for these talks: agree on strong targets to change the way we produce food, to drastically cut pollution, and to conserve 50% of our planet’s land and ocean, with the active leadership of Indigenous peoples and local communities, who have historically been pioneers on all these necessary actions. I was the oldest man to go to space. I worry about the world my grandchildren will be living in when they are my age. My generation is leaving them a planet that might pretty soon be barely livable for many of Earth’s inhabitants. My experience in space filled me with sadness, but also with a strong resolve. I don’t want my grandchildren to simply survive. I want them, as an old friend used to say, to be able to live long and prosper. I will do everything I can so that we can protect our one and only home. Our world leaders have an immense responsibility to do the same in Montreal. A Canadian actor who played Captain James T Kirk in Star Trek for almost 30 years. He is also author of Boldly Go: Reflections on a Life of Awe and Wonder. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/dec/07/william-shatner-earth-must-live-long-and-prosper-aoe
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His findings are great.
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Some people assume that with the great explorations going on, humans will shift from the earth once life becomes intolerable. STOP the lie, take care of the earth as an egg.
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I like the shows so much. really fun and educative.
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I can see a lot of useful information. https://cupheadonline.com
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Climate change is a global problem that requires cooperation between all nations. That’s why today more than 30 newspapers and media organisations in more than 20 countries have taken a common view about what needs to be done. Time is running out. Rather than getting out of fossil fuels and into clean energy, many wealthy nations are reinvesting in oil and gas, failing to cut emissions fast enough and haggling over the aid they are prepared to send to poor countries. All this while the planet hurtles towards the point of no return – where climate chaos becomes irreversible. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/nov/15/the-guardian-view-on-cop27-this-is-no-time-for-apathy-or-complacency
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#Bellow0
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The top banner of The Guardian website is on COP 27. No media outline covers climate change better. Thank you Guardian ... you truly are the guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/international
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Great job indeed
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Dear Gerald Kutney Thank you for getting your climate love to level 2! We have reached out to The Guardian and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! /Muhammad We Don't Have Time
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Guardian has covered climate change for over a century. Great job
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Of all the crises facing the world, the most alarming for the greatest number of people was, is and will be the climate emergency. We asked ourselves: what can the Guardian do? The answer: to relentlessly report on the crisis each day – its causes, consequences and casualties. To keep pressure on government and businesses to decarbonise, mitigate, go green. And to look at our own business to ensure that we are doing everything we can to reduce our own footprint. Now, we are updating our readers and supporters on our efforts. Here is our progress against our six promises. https://www.theguardian.com/media/2022/oct/10/the-guardians-climate-pledge-2022
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Dear Gerald Kutney Thank you for getting your climate love to level 2! We have reached out to The Guardian and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! /Muhammad We Don't Have Time
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Wow! How amazing you are, how great commitment you have for our planet! Great six pillars you have! Congratulations 👏 for reaching over 65millions with your first pillar out of the six, you need a salutations for being like a torch 🔦 light in all. Keep it up!
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This should be mandatory reading for all media organizations.
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Hope amid climate chaos: ‘We are in a race between Armageddon and awesome’ Renewables, decarbonisation, activism, cooperation … The challenge is immense, but the situation is far from hopeless https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/oct/04/hope-climate-chaos-renewables-science
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Dear Gerald Kutney Thank you for getting your climate love to level 2! We have reached out to The Guardian and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! /Adam We Don't Have Time
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Climate warnings have been around for decades. Guardian reporting on the issue dates back as far as 1890 https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/oct/02/climate-crisis-guardian-investigating-pledge-decades-1890
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It's undoubted that The Guardian is the only paper that has the better interest of highlighting the climate crisis for ages without fail. Through it I personally get numerous updates and this keeps me abreast of the state of this matter in many parts of the world.
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Kudos to guardian. We will have no one to blame since you clearly informed us but we ignored.
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Dear jonas wilhelmsson Your climate love has received over 50 agrees! We have reached out to TheGuardian.com by email and requested a response. I will keep you updated on any progress! To reach more people and increase the chance of a response, click the Share button above to share the review on your social accounts. For every new member that joins We Don't Have Time from your network, we will plant a tree and attribute it to you! /Adam, We Don't Have Time
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What an interesting way to support environmental action from the fourth estate, The Guardian is a great example to the rest of the media houses in the world in how they can amplify their voices and forgo profits for the sake of the environment.
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Guardian has one of the best news ever, for them not to accept to advertise fossil fuel that; 's a big deal. good work to Guardian.