• eleitl@lemmy.mlOPM
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    8
    ·
    9 months ago

    Location: Germany, France. The usual rioting, burning cars (in France) and attacking first responders and police with (sometimes illegal and dangerous) fireworks on the new year’s night (Germany). Several hundreds arrests, more of it in France. No reporting of mass attacks on women this year, at least so far.

    Farmers spraying political buildings with manure. Likely farmer blockades forthcoming starting on 8th January in Germany.

    Lots of austerity budget cuts forthcoming in 2024 in Germany due to budget having been declared unconstitutional. Energy announced to become even more expensive. Lots more hospitals closing down. Unemployment figures are starting to creep up. Dismal economic prospects, deindustrialization is picking up pace.

    No real MSM backpedalling in the NATO-Russia proxy conflict yet. Propaganda is still at deafening volume, but the general public is showing first signs of becoming weary of it.

  • possibly a cat@lemmy.mlM
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    NOAA in the US indicates that their models show strong agreement that El Niño will end in April-March, and that it is highly likely that ENSO will fully invert into another La Niña soon after. Spring traditionally has higher unpredictably in terms of ENSO fluctuations, fwiw.

    I was expecting it to last longer based on absolutely nothing. It looks like one model (CanCM4i) is predicting the possibility that it lasts a few months longer, vs. 5 in agreement that it ends April-March.

    It’s been a notably severe cycle based on SST warming (~2C, in top 10 since 1950), but if the 5 models are accurate on the timeline then it won’t beat some recent peaks (e.g. 2015) let alone set the record.

    There’s some interesting complexity in the ENSO record-keeping, though. They try to remove the effect of global warming when calculating the temperature variance, but a trend still exists that many argue is the result of additional warming that isn’t accounted for. The way that they account for warming appears to be by using a 30-year rolling average for the temperature baseline. How… linear.

    Also interesting, I think, is that NOAA uses a system that incorporates researcher predictions as well as statistical algorithms (having updated from a fully subjective system iirc). It has more predictive power at present than purely human or purely algorithmic methods. The algorithm on its own has a tendency to predict false state changes (indicated by a large drop in the predicted temperature deviance) at times when researchers accurately forecast a continued El Niño state. Researchers aren’t as effective at constructing confidence intervals for their predictions, though.


    I need to start a journal. I’m overloaded. I also need to unplug from more digital distractions. Headlines are clickbait, articles are spin pieces, and discussions are (while generally earnest) so narrowly-informed and attached to each own’s opinion that it makes it hard to partake.

    I understand why people are like this, though. We are all saturated in propaganda all of the time, and in the long run it has made us aggressively defensive of what we believe to be the truth - because we all fear that well-connected actors are trying to gaslight us into acting against our interests. And it’s true - it’s true even for people who are already gaslit by other actors!

    Trust is more valuable than gold in a world like this. The information ecology has effectively been poisoned. That is, imo, what people are observing when they mourn the “old” internet. Power struggles inevitably expanded their war into the digital theater. Part of that, of course, materialized through its intense commercialization.

    The multitude of firehoses of lies that are on full blast all of the time in every direction - for me - diminish the efficiency of the important information that I encounter. Naturally it muddies the water. But moreover, it is unfortunately simpler to remember enraging nonsense than to keep track of the important but tiny and sterile facts that are relevant for interpreting events. That’s just the trick, though, isn’t it? (Not a real question.)

    Additionally, watching world events (including collapse) is like the most immersive movie one could imagine. We’re actually living it - but in an indirect way. We aren’t living the things we read in headlines. I’m not living life on the Red Sea. The repercussions of events anywhere in the world may reach me. But as an individual, our subjective experience does not match our linguistic constructions. The reasons why gas is up, or why there was weather that killed the beans, or why some stranger is acting towards us with peculiar bias: These are essentially noise from the most basic level of the individual perspective. Larger systems thinking and understanding is built on top of that simple basis and provides it context, but such is not automatic. And understanding does not undo material harm, or protect one’s emotional health.

    I feel over-focused on my abstract world model and underfocused on myself as a human being living a subjective experience, and I think a journal might help with that.


    Regarding regional conflicts: I’m too jaded. I see people learning about the plights of others for the first time, and I feel the pit of my stomach drop. Too much change is needed, in too little time. Will it be tank fumes or nuclear fallout that does us in? (Fumes, I still think.)

    Oh well, I suppose it’s easier to do the right thing when one has less of a future to sacrifice.


    I wish I had the money it would take to garden my yard properly. I don’t see how the impoverished can escape their condition at this point. I think the best they can realistically hope for is not getting kicked off benefits / not getting fired / not getting evicted, and subsequently fed to the wolves.

    How come none of the people with money are making gardens right now? (Not a real question.)

    • maketotaldestr0i@lemm.eeM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      3
      ·
      9 months ago

      “I wish I had the money it would take to garden my yard properly”

      What requires money? , just take seeds and cuttings of anything you buy at the store to eat and plant them. a bag of lime and fertilizer will pay itself back x100. If you have a yard you are already 99.9% there just get a shovel. You could have the thing running full speed by spring

      • possibly a cat@lemmy.mlM
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Sorry. I tried being quick but ended up unclear. I meant proper as measured by my own ambitions.

        I’ve mentioned my first year of gardening a few times in the past. It was successful but there were numerous challenges and obvious areas for improvement. I do need amendments and I need enough to compensate for a large area of clay soil. I’d also like tree and root guards, a large quantity of mulch and also sand/pebble, better trellises, and some rain barrels. I think I’m going to need to rent a tiller, and and aerator might also be a good idea. A clean space for a seedling station and tools (including grafting) would be very helpful. That all adds up.

        A smaller or less ambitious garden will definitely yield harvests with less inputs. I’ve tended several smaller, cheaper gardens in the past. More people should garden no matter how simple, and at the entry level it is indeed very affordable. Your comment is very true in that context.

        However my current garden is more complex and I would like to scale it up to a large portion of the yard. For example I have grape vines, berries, and young fruit trees. I’ve had to make compromises to stay within my budget. They need more active protection, monitoring, and fertilizing. They need more help overcoming the poor, compressed soil. I’ve had to do various emergency transplants to areas of better nutrients or manually loosened soil. It frustrates me sometimes, hence the wish for money.

        With a larger budget I could implement everything at once, rather than doing it piecemeal and racing the seasons. I would be able to justify things like automated irrigation (the piping is not especially cheap even though I will do the system myself). I could develop more landrace cultivars based on prime stock. I would love a greenhouse but that would be multiples of the cost of an irrigation system even. I’m trying to assist adaptation of various species to the local climate and I’ve already lost a few good soldiers. Oh, and I have an expensive fascination with swales.

        Anyway, the point is that my idea of “proper” for my own garden is a bit eccentric… and the soil sucks.

  • mrpalmer16@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    8 months ago

    Daffodils blooming in Northern California, USA (which usually wait until spring).

    • eleitl@lemmy.mlOPM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      8 months ago

      Here in Southern Germany the usual weather whiplash due to jetstream destabilization: deep freeze, then balmy temperatures. Lather, rinse, repeat.

  • 8Petros (he/him)@slrpnk.net
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    8 months ago

    Infrastructure

    Public services - especially regarding persons with disabilities (PwD) - are being increasingly starved.

    In Poland, effectively 1st of January, the caretaker support (for people not employed due to taking full time care of their disabled relatives) has been replaced with “supportive money”, much harder to obtain and in lower amount. New parliament is promising substantial rises, but there is no money in sight to back them up.

    In UK, as almost 20% of municipalities warns about imminent bankruptcy, an old idea to “warehouse” PwD looms again.

  • Hillmarsh@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    8 months ago

    In the Upper Midwestern USA, we have had an unprecedented warm spell this winter, with almost no snow in December, and the mildest winter on record thus far. The only blip was a minor cold snap of below-zero wind chills for just over a week, and that just ended in the past couple of days. Now we are in a January thaw that looks to cause an entire melting off of the snow cover, which I don’t recall ever happening before during January in my life. This pattern is the result of a combination of overall warming and a “Super El Nino” pattern in the Pacific this year.