/r/aftertheflood

Photograph via snooOG

Holistic discussion of developments in climate science, politics, and preventative/reactionary measures being put in place to combat climate change.

Some topics: agriculture, biofuel, carbon dioxide, deforestation, desertification, El Nino and La Nina, emissions schemes, weather events, fossil fuels, geoengineering, global warming, greenhouse effect, GHG, heat waves, hydrocarbons, IPCC, ocean acidification, recycling, renewable energy and sea level rise.

"Global Warming" v. "Climate Change"

The Golden Rules:

  1. This is not the place to question the legitimacy of climate science or climate change, or concern trolling. Doing so will earn you an immediate ban.
  2. This is not the place to argue the merits of left v. right politics. This will earn you a warning the first time, and a ban the second time.

Rules:

1. Submission guidelines:

  • Submissions should be primarily news, developments and science on climate change.
  • Self posts must contribute positively to /r/aftertheflood, and foster constructive/reasonable discussion.
  • Submissions relating to politics/policies must be sufficiently related to climate change, in that they either relate to a policy affecting climate change contributions, or analyse the repercussions of the policy (or a trend of policies) from the context of climate change.
Do not submit the following:
  1. Posts that do not meet the submission guidelines.
  2. Images with no context, or purely audio links. Articles with supporting imagery, audio and/or video content are allowed.
  3. Requests for an explanation of the basics of climate change. If you'd like to learn about it, consider watching An Inconvenient Truth and Before The Flood.
  4. Mobile versions of sites, url shorteners: please directly submit the desktop version of a webpage in all cases.

2. Behaviour

Remember that you are speaking to other human beings! Be courteous.

  • Be aware of, and observe, reddiquette.
  • Personal attacks, abusive behaviour and trolling are not allowed, and will be removed.
  • This is a forum for serious discussion, memes are not allowed and will be removed.

3. Titles

Submissions must use either the article's title, or a suitable quote, either of which must:

  • adequately describe the content
  • adequately describe the content's relation to climate change
  • be free of user editorialization or alteration of meaning.

All reddit-wide rules apply here.

Our friends:

/r/aftertheflood

258 Subscribers

5

r/AfterTheFlood Book Discussion

Hey guys! We don't often get a chance to talk as a sub so I thought I'd give us a discussion topic for everyone to get to talk about some of the books they've read / are reading at the moment. They don't have to be related to the sub, but if you have anything to recommend feel free to contribute!

So far this year I've gone through:

This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs the Climate by Naomi Klein

Antarctica: An Intimate Portrait of a Mysterious Continent by Gabrielle Walker

Scale: The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability, and the Pace of Life in Organisms, Cities, Economies, and Companies by Geoffrey West

Catching Thunder: The Story of the World's Longest Sea Chase by Eskil Engdal & Kjetil Saeter

The New Zealand Project by Max Harris

Shaking Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda by Romeo Dallaire

Next up on my list are:

The Great Convergence: Asia, the West, and the Logic of One World by Kishore Mahbubani

The World is Flat: A Brief History of the 21st Century by Thomas L. Friedman

Homo Deus: A History of Tomorrow by Yuval Noah Harari

Prisoners of Geography: Ten Maps That Tell You Everything You Need To Know About Global Politics by Tim Marshall

What are you guys reading?

4 Comments
2018/08/22
06:06 UTC

8

“Climate change is here, it’s now and it’s hitting us hard from all sides.” - Global warming cooks up ‘a different world’ over 3 decades

0 Comments
2018/06/18
08:18 UTC

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