Clearly food production is the highest priority.
But certain types of food are not sustainable and use too much water.
Cattle and hog feed require so much water and then there's grazing areas and waste removal and transport. It's all avoidable as we don't absolutely have to eat meat to survive.
Almonds require an exorbitant amount of water. They are delicious but is it worth it in drought conditions?
Should we continue to fill plastic bottles full of diabetes causing soda? I say no.
People asked that I cap it at 10...
So eight now it's capped at 10...
I could expand to 14. Don't want to go any higher than that though.
But also want to hear back from the guts who said to cap it at 10.
We should probably pin this thread..
I've been thinking about air travel and how much carbon it vomits into the atmosphere.
It's really bad.
Can we afford to keep getting on airplanes and flying somewhere for a 5 night holiday?
Should sports teams be flying around the world for exhibition matches?
Should sports teams fly at all?
Should air travel be severely limited?
We're in a heat wave in Maine this week with highs of 90F all week and really humid. I'm right on the coast so there will be some reprieve here.
Nothing like what you're experiencing, but it's still a bit if a furnace blast, especially for this area.
But climate change projections have Maine as a relatively stable area over the coming decades.
I expect an influx of climate refugees over that time.
We need to beat back the likes of Wolves, Brighton, Palace, Leicester and Newcastle.
Another summer of recruitment and then set our sights on West Ham.
Hopefully football teams aren't training outside today. This kind of heat can kill, it happens to gridiron players here who have Macho coaches who insist on doing 100 wind sprints in Arabian Desert conditions.