ย Whatย fun. Let's all have a jolly old flirt with fascism shall we? Italy, Israel, USA, UK, Russia. Anyone else want to join in?ย
This is how we turn Earth into lone and level sands stretching far away. Literally.ย
A thousand Ozymandias statues, proclaiming how "great" they made their nation.ย
The only thing we can logically do is COOPERATE. We are facing a planet-scale problem. You think global warming gives a shit about your precvious national boundaries?
It used to be obvious with pollution. I remember Chernobyl. "Radiation doesn't care about national b boundaries" was how ecocriticism said it at the time.ย
But ecocriticism wasn't loud enough. And ecocriticism was subtweeting "theory" aka flirting with symbolic fascism lite by using words like "dwell." And ecocriticism was positioning itself as "ecology is neither left nor right."ย
So ecocriticism was about as useful as a chocolate teapot for addressing the real issue at hand, which we all knew about since the mid-1950s (and before if we'd really been paying attention): global warming.ย
Time to stop kicking this fascist ball around and do what you were always going to have to do anyway: COOPERATE.ย
This is where Shelley, who stood up to the institutional bullying at Eton at age thirteen aka nailed it young and was ridiculously brave to the point of foolhardy, really really comes in handy:ย
A proposed strategy to reduce global warming by launching dust from the Moon to partially block sunlight from reaching Earth could be successful, but as you might guess, there are a few risks and unknowns that need to be considered.
Benjamin Bromley and colleagues at the University of Utah ran computer simulations that "found that maintaining a dust shield with a mass of 1 million tonnesโฆcould dim sunlight across Earth by 1.8 per cent, equivalent to completely blocking six days of sunlight," reports New Scientist, which says "The risks involved with such an approach in terms of how it could affect agriculture, ecosystems and water quality in different parts of the world are also unclear."