Eric Jennings

one last poot before i start cooking...

a neighbor of ours heard our catalytic converter being sawed off at 5 am and tried to stop them. he was beaten, and they finished and left. another neighbor heard the commotion and called the cops. one cop showed up four hours later. a young kid. he was nice

a week later, i'm waiting for a green light so i can cross the street. same young cop is in his car at the light, sees me, smiles and waves

#CognitiveDissonance

i have to assume this kid/cop is naive as fuck and in for a life of pain. i feel for him, but, you know, also... #acab

Monstreline

@TonyStark most of the people who feel nostalgic for the great glory of US manufacturing also raised their children to believe that there too valuable, special and entitled to do such menial work. But they’re also deporting the people that will do that work. #CognitiveDissonance is the tagline of all MAGA pursuits. Cognitive dissonance is such a diplomatic way to say #Hypocrisy

Droppie [infosec] 🐨:archlinux: :kde: :firefox_nightly: :thunderbird: :vegan:

@ajsadauskas @jaystephens Ta, interesting. I vaguely recall some of that, but your helpful toot defo provided more info than i knew.

I think something like this is why i feel, & tbh remain, so archly cynical... If Straya, & frankly the rest of the world, was genuinely honestly doing all the serious shit needed NOW to decarbonise & ameliorate, then seeking engineering solutions in flood zones like this would be ok. Knowing though that we & most others are totes NOT seriously addressing the crisis, fuels [boom tish] my severe pessimism, coz eg, engineering designs need engineering assumptions [in this case including expected heights & frequency of floods]. Such assumptions necessarily must be predicated on a certain "steady state" belief [plus safety margins thrown in]. That's all fine, IF we had reason to trust such assumptions. I do NOT trust them, simply coz there IS no steady state; humans are continuing to add more & more CO2 & CH4 to Gaia's atmosphere, thus more & more raising the enthalpy, ergo the heating energy, ergo... yada yada.

#ClimateCrisis #NonLinear #TippingPoints #PositiveFeedbackLoops #FossilFools #RenewableEnergy #ChangeTheSystem #StateCapture #RightToProtest #Biodiversity #WeAreTotallyFscked #Misanthropy #Karma #NativeForests #StopLoggingNativeForests #FsckCapitalism #CognitiveDissonance

Droppie [infosec] 🐨:archlinux: :kde: :firefox_nightly: :thunderbird: :vegan:

@feather1952 Paul has mixed feelings, but i don't; i feel quite clear on this. IMO we are federally, governmentally, little more than mega-greenwashing climate-criminals, & absolutely do not deserve to host this. Given ofc my opinion counts for nothing, & we prolly will host it, coz this world just rewards abject shitfuckery, i do hope at least that ALL OS attendees make official public statements vigorously condemning us. This fraudulent govt [& predecessor] deserves excoriating opprobrium, not praise.

#ClimateCrisis #NonLinear #TippingPoints #PositiveFeedbackLoops #FossilFools #RenewableEnergy #ChangeTheSystem #StateCapture #RightToProtest #Biodiversity #WeAreTotallyFscked #Misanthropy #Karma #NativeForests #StopLoggingNativeForests #FsckCapitalism #CognitiveDissonance

Rupert Cocke

I talk a lot about #cognitivedissonance (doubling down on your identity when faced by contradiction) on my personal blog. This incredibly sad news story is perhaps the perfect example. independent.co.uk/news/world/a

D C Fitzgerald

Eichorn allegedly attempted to solicit sex from someone he believed to be a 17-year-old girl, who was actually an undercover officer. He was arrested on March 17 in Bloomington, Minnesota, and is now facing charges of attempted coercion and enticement of a minor. #value #maga #gop #republicans #news#crime #education #hypocrisy #psychology #cognitivedissonance

Droppie [infosec] 🐨:archlinux: :kde: :firefox_nightly: :thunderbird: :vegan:

While the government denies the science on carbon credits, the climate suffers

crikey.com.au/2025/03/12/carbo

QUOTE BEGINS

With the corporate sector increasingly sceptical of Australia’s carbon credit system and rumours that the government’s Climate Active voluntary credits scheme will be shut down, in February the Clean Energy Regulator (CER) — the body charged with overseeing Australia’s carbon credit system, issued a remarkable paper.

Designed to provide assurance that carbon credits based on “human-induced regeneration” (HIR) carbon sequestration projects — which are crucial to Labor’s underwhelming climate action policies — were credible, it purported to show how “projects registered under the HIR method earn carbon credits based on the sequestration of carbon in native vegetation. It provides an overview of the robust framework for large-scale sequestration throughout Australia”.

As we know from a wide range of scientists and experts in the administration of HIR schemes, the framework is anything but robust. In fact, it is almost entirely at odds with the basic science of vegetation regeneration.

The arguments made in the paper, which have been scrutinised by Andrew Macintosh, Megan Evans, Don Butler, Marie Waschka and Dean Ansell of ANU and UNSW, raise concerns that the Clean Energy Regulator — which has a history of attacking scientists who question its claims — continues to ignore science in favour of propping up a scheme crucial to Labor’s efforts to pretend it is serious about climate action.

In particular, the CER continues to push the claim that forms the illusory basis of around 95% of HIR projects — that stopping animals grazing on land allows plants to regenerate into woody vegetation, thereby storing carbon. The scientific consensus is that this is simply not true — it is the amount of rainfall that determines regrowth, not ceasing grazing. That means that the great majority of HIR projects are simply never going to do what their owners are being paid for, and the resulting Australian carbon credit units (ACCUs) are worthless in terms of stored carbon.

As Crikey detailed in 2023, the CER has fought a bitter battle against the science — including misrepresenting experts as backing the CER’s view. In documents released under freedom of information laws, we know that the CSIRO told Labor’s Chubb review of the integrity of ACCUs that “there is at present no clear evidence that changes in management of total grazing pressure will consistently result in an increase in carbon stocks in woody biomass across all regions of Australia’s rangelands”, before the CER demanded the document be edited.

As Macintosh and his colleagues note, the CER has since modified its position slightly but still defies science. In its February tract, it says “although many factors affect regeneration, the most important factor in sustaining the growth of vegetation following rainfall events is the nature, extent, intensity and duration of activities that suppress the growth of native vegetation”.

This is demonstrably false. As the Wentworth Group of Scientists told Chubb:

Most HIR projects have, however, been directed to arid and semi-arid regions where vegetation has never been cleared. In these boom or bust systems, rainfall is the key driver of vegetation change, and drives both increases and decreases in biomass. While reducing grazing pressure can result in increased tree and shrub cover in these landscapes, from a carbon sequestration perspective this effect is small relative to cyclical climatic drivers.

But the CER continues to reject the science. In its February paper, it claims “a 2021 analysis by Beare and Chambers found strong evidence that established HIR projects have resulted in significant increases in vegetation when compared with a business-as-usual scenario in a study of projects in New South Wales and Queensland.”

But what did the Beare and Chambers analysis, which examined 72 HIR projects in NSW and 51 in Queensland, actually show? It revealed a statistically significant increase in cover compared to control areas, but the actual increase itself was small, well below the levels for which the projects have been credited — and in nearly a quarter of projects there was no change, or vegetation actually reduced.

Moreover, the analysis relied on a dataset that the CER had itself previously dismissed as too inaccurate to assess projects, when Macintosh and co used the same dataset to show minimal increase in tree cover. There’s a similar inconsistency in the CER’s citation in the paper of a report by Dr Chris Brack as evidence that HIR works, when it too relies on satellite imagery-based data which the CER dismisses when it is used by critics.

The CER tries to resolve this contradiction in the latest paper by claiming “national-scale data sets may be useful to monitor the performance of the whole portfolio of projects once it matures to forest”. Presumably only if the CER likes the results.

Further evidence has emerged about the failure of HIR over the last year. A review by the ANU/UNSW experts assessed 116 HIR projects that had been established before 2017, which should have had substantial regeneration of woody vegetation by now. The study revealed the great majority of projects were not even compliant with the baseline requirements for generating carbon credits, such as having previously been comprehensively cleared, or with progressive requirements relating to revegetation.

And given the length of time after project registration, well over half of the projects should have had near-100% forest cover, but in reality only a small number had anything like the cover suggested by the amount of sequestration for which the projects had been credited. And changes in vegetation were heavily responsive to climatic events such as El Ninos and La Ninas.

The study concludes:

While some projects appear to have had a positive additional effect on canopy cover, even for these projects, the effects are small relative to the levels of credited sequestration and there is limited evidence of material regeneration. At the aggregate level, across all projects in the sample, the data suggest the projects have had only a small effect on canopy cover, with most of the change being attributable to seasonal variability in rainfall.

That is, the observed results are consistent with what the science has told us to expect: HIR works only at the margins. ACCUs based on HIR projects remain an expensive con.

QUOTE ENDS

#AusPol #ClimateCrisis #WomensRights #ShitParty1 #ShitParty2 #FsckOffDutton #WhyIsLabor #NoNukes #VoteGreens #ProgIndies #TuckFrump #ClimateCrisis #NonLinear #TippingPoints #PositiveFeedbackLoops #FossilFools #RenewableEnergy #ChangeTheSystem #StateCapture #RightToProtest #Biodiversity #WeAreTotallyFscked #Misanthropy #Karma #NativeForests #StopLoggingNativeForests #FsckCapitalism #CognitiveDissonance

Droppie [infosec] 🐨:archlinux: :kde: :firefox_nightly: :thunderbird: :vegan:

I'm nowhere near her electorate, but am on a mailing list from Zali Steggall, who just sent this. Fyi.

Quote

Yesterday, Labor and Coalition teamed up to rewrite election laws in their own favour—making it harder for independent voices like mine to compete and easier for them to cling to power.

Instead of focusing on climate action, the cost-of-living crisis, housing, or education, they pushed through laws that:

Hand themselves $4.82 million of your tax dollars—money that could have gone to essential services.
Let them outspend independents 112 to 1—with $90 million in election funding nationally while independents are capped in each set.
Keeping billionaires out, but special interest groups in—peak bodies (like Mining, Gas and Gambling lobbying) have $200,000 annual cap - 4 times the annual gift cap.

These laws aren’t about fairness or transparency or taking big money out of politics—they’re a power grab designed to silence challengers and protect their political duopoly and get the public to pay for it!

At the last election, 30% of voters rejected the major parties. The rise of Community Independents has shown that Australians want real representation—leaders who listen to their communities, not party machines. That’s why they are scared and changing the rules.

This is critical for Climate Action

The major parties have failed to act on climate for decades, prioritising fossil fuel interests over the future of our planet.

But I have fought to put climate on the national agenda—holding the government accountable and ensuring they listen to your concerns. We’ve made progress, but there’s still so much to do. If independents are locked out, climate action will stall.

Unquote

#AusPol #Greens #VoteGreens #ProgIndies #WeAreTotallyFscked #WeAreSelfishCruelBastards #Misanthropy #FsckOffDutton! #ShitParty1 #ShitParty2 #ComeOnTanya! #WhyIsLabor #NatsAreNuts #NoNukes #racism #FuckRacists
#ClimateCrisis #NonLinear #TippingPoints #PositiveFeedbackLoops #FossilFools #RenewableEnergy #ChangeTheSystem #StateCapture #RightToProtest #Biodiversity #WeAreTotallyFscked #Misanthropy #Karma #NativeForests #StopLoggingNativeForests #FsckCapitalism #CognitiveDissonance

Feb 13, 2025, 06:26 · · · 4 · 0
Ehay2k

@markwyner

Word lists like this, and other blanket policies now being mandated by the folks in charge, are indicative of the fact that they literally have no idea how anything works. They take a sledgehammer to everything, and then complain that there's too much collateral damage.

But honestly, half the country voted for them so let those people suffer along with the rest of us. It's going to need to get really bad for people to shake out of their #cognitivedissonance.