Famine is fixable. So is climate change. It needs an open, fair world or no one will have an incentive to help

PNASNews @PNASNews  As temperatures rise, which regions will experience the most severe effects of #drought, #flood, and stifling #heat? Explore these #interactive global maps for insightful projections: https://ow.ly/gBtM50QTvOi #wetbulb #ParisAgrement #IPCC #ImpactAttribution #ClimateChange https://pic.twitter.com/ZwjvzK7nwM
Replying to @PNASNews

Suggest you work out the economic value to local people and to the global economy of greening all the Earth’s deserts. Things have changed some since Fews.net but not that much, only in ease of getting online. You have some better tools now, but perhaps lack courage and sustainable global methods. “Corruption” is not harder than famine. The consequences of fixing things is authors rights are routinely violated, and local people shoved aside. So if you map it, someone else is supposed to fix it? or if you fix it, someone else takes your credit? You say it ought to be fixed and don’t do it? Not an easy part of the game, an end game, but you have to do what you can in a finite lifetime.

Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

The Internet Foundation Internet policies, global issues, global open lossless data, global open collaboration


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *