Message from @uncephalized

Discord ID: 555887550644879380


2019-03-14 22:51:45 UTC  

which they kind of are

2019-03-14 22:52:20 UTC  

the efforts in planting trees to turn back the Sahara are showing positive trends which is good and could mean it'll work in other areas

2019-03-14 22:52:26 UTC  

like here in Aus

2019-03-14 22:53:10 UTC  

there used to be a forest that ran right down the middle of Australia that helped water travel very far inland that got destroyed by the Aboriginals, I'd personally love to see that rebuilt

2019-03-14 22:54:12 UTC  

efforts for reforestation and conversation have been tried in the Amazon as well, Steve Irwin had an interesting way of doing it by basically buying up large chunks of land to protect it

2019-03-14 22:54:24 UTC  

That's excellent. I know there have been some good results from experimental cattle driving practices in Africa too where they mimic the behavior of predators to force the cattle to clump up and move around more frequently--it gives the landscape more time to recover between being trampled and grazed and it helps restore arid grasslands.

2019-03-14 22:54:40 UTC  

which works great until a government comes along and says fuck you we're taking that land anyway and selling it

2019-03-14 22:54:55 UTC  

I would do something like that here if I were a billionaire or king of America

2019-03-14 22:55:11 UTC  

Buy up millions of acres and designate them as Terrain Protected Zones

2019-03-14 22:55:31 UTC  

It works great for fisheries, no reason it wouldn't work for land too

2019-03-14 22:55:42 UTC  

America I believe has as many trees now as when the Europeans first arrived

2019-03-14 22:55:49 UTC  

Our extensive National Forest system is a good start

2019-03-14 22:56:00 UTC  

I don't think so

2019-03-14 22:56:34 UTC  

There are accounts of explorers being able to walk across the whole continental US without leaving the forest in the 1700s

2019-03-14 22:56:54 UTC  

We've got some pretty big prairies in the middle these days

2019-03-14 22:57:16 UTC  

We might be close though

2019-03-14 22:57:23 UTC  

And prairie is good anyway

2019-03-14 22:57:32 UTC  

Doesn't all have to be trees

2019-03-14 22:57:45 UTC  

I think overall we're trending towards a more sustainable economy without the massive government overreach but we're going to end up with government policy slowing it down and taking credit for it anyway

2019-03-14 22:57:54 UTC  

Probably

2019-03-14 22:58:39 UTC  

Kind of like with racial discrimination I think the culture pulls ahead, then the government steps in and passes a law that is no longer necessary and takes all the credit.

2019-03-14 22:58:48 UTC  

me sounding like a hardcore Libertarian today 😄

2019-03-14 22:59:50 UTC  

Well I am not an extremist Libertarian but we've swung too hard the other direction so we need to pull that way.

2019-03-14 23:00:01 UTC  

true

2019-03-14 23:00:39 UTC  

i do wonder how much progress we're making overall in terms of conservation etc that the leftists actually know about

2019-03-14 23:00:53 UTC  

it'd probably make a good man on the campus segment

2019-03-14 23:01:38 UTC  

and the real progress will be made when someone finds a way to prioritize rubbish

2019-03-14 23:03:12 UTC  

Do you mean profitize?

2019-03-14 23:03:21 UTC  

Yeah that would be great.

2019-03-14 23:03:55 UTC  

oh yeah profitize

2019-03-14 23:04:06 UTC  

stupid spell checker

2019-03-14 23:04:24 UTC  

it red lined it and changed it and I didn't notice it

2019-03-14 23:04:33 UTC  

I'm hoping the microbes evolve to eat all our plastics

2019-03-14 23:04:46 UTC  

especially that one big lump of plastic

2019-03-14 23:05:38 UTC  

In the ocean?

2019-03-14 23:05:43 UTC  

ya

2019-03-14 23:05:53 UTC  

even as bad as that plastic lump is, the Jellyfish there are thriving

2019-03-14 23:06:06 UTC  

Well they like the water warming up

2019-03-14 23:06:38 UTC  

Cleaning up the plastic would save a lot of sea turtles and birds

2019-03-14 23:11:31 UTC  

one potential idea is to take the plastics and recycle them into nests

2019-03-14 23:12:04 UTC  

if it's not going to break down for a long long time use that stability