cardamomo 14 hours ago

There's a fantastic documentary about Burtynsky's work, Manufactured Landscapes. I highly recommend it, even if you just watch the opening. https://www.edwardburtynsky.com/projects/films/manufactured-...

jebarker 4 hours ago

I just finished reading “The Sixth Extinction” and it’s hard not to just feel sadness at many of these pictures. The economic benefits of this rapid human development are undeniable but the impact on earth as a whole is pretty horrifying.

  • frogperson 2 hours ago

    That book put me in a really bad place for more than a year. It was so depressing, i just couldnt shake the inevitablity of it all.

    The fascist take over of the US has been a quaint distraction, but in the end it also means nothing compared to the collapse of the food chain. You cant eat dollars.

    • jebarker an hour ago

      Yeah, the dissonance of day to day stresses and societal issues with mass extinction is hard to deal with. I’m currently putting together a pile of a few books that claim to have pragmatic but optimistic/hopeful views of where we go from here.

      • vitorbaptistaa an hour ago

        Any good suggestions so far? The best I read was Not The End of The World by Hannah Ritchie from Our World in Data.

        • jebarker 28 minutes ago

          Thanks for the suggestion. Two I’ve already read that I thought were decent were Bill Gate’s “How to avoid a climate disaster” and Kim Stanley Robinson’s “Ministry for the Future”. I have Drawdown next on my list.

AndrewKemendo 4 hours ago

Scarcely different than the world shown in WALL-E or idiocracy

atoav 12 hours ago

The first picture must be these windmills that ruin the landscape. /s