Climate & environment - Mar 18
by Staff
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... Here is what I said (or rather what I wrote that I was going to say, and then kind of improvised around…) ... The Age of Stupid very powerfully tells the story of the generation that chose to stick its head in the sand, to ignore the evidence, to stick with what is comfortable and familiar. It is the generation that clung to business as usual, that put its own wants above future generations needs. The results of such an approach, as having just seen the film you are probably feeling right now in the pit of your stomach, are too horrible to contemplate. That is not the world I wish to hand on to my children, or for anyone elses for that matter. Interesting discussion in the comments at Transition Culture original post. Annie Leymarie wrote: Watched it in Plymouth. Felt that despite the lack of any happy post-carbon-living scenario the film was energising, but the live discussions in the (relatively) low-tech setting in London after the film were even more inspiring. The raw energy of the speakers felt contagious. Graham Burnett wrote: Not seen AOS yet, but from the comments I’m reading I don’t think its a film I feel very sure about in terms of showing at meetings, advising people to watch, etc, I feel ambivalent enough about showing End of Suburbia, and at least that has a bit of a sense of humour…
The president will formally announce the scheme - and make a plea for other countries to follow the Maldives' lead - this evening, following the world premiere of The Age of Stupid, a major new climate change film in which a man living alone in the devastated world of 2055 looks at old footage from 2008 and asks why people didn't stop climate change when they had the chance.
Manhattan's Wall Street, barely a metre above sea level, for example, will find itself underwater more often as the 21st century unfolds, said the study, published online on Sunday in Nature Geoscience. |
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