Originally Posted by
Aqueous Moon
No, you piece of rubbish. The Blackman is the one who has the melanin to survive global warming you fucking big pile of human pollution.
Melanin will spare nobody's life if global warming is really happening. If we continue living like we do right now every human will be dead in hundreds of years... and seriously there's not much thing we can do about it. If you think you'll survive just cause your skin is black, then you're very ignorant. You should get off this forum a little bit and read, just like I see you say sometimes, and/or think of solutions to save mankind cause we're all doomed... if you don't do it for mankind then do it for your "brothers and sisters" if they are so important for your selfish little person.
Some possible consequences of global warming
• Disruption of ecosystems that we directly or indirectly rely on, including oceans, wetlands, and forests. For example, relatively rapid warming and ocean acidification from excess CO2 affects corals and phytoplankton that play key roles in Earth's biosphere. Many thousands of species would be unable to adapt to a sharp warming trend and it's myriad of effects.
• Changing precipitation patterns and intensity: As warming raises atmospheric moisture capacity, more water remains in the air (acting as a greenhouse gas). However, the regional precipitation of extra moisture (from higher evaporation elsewhere) will likely result in greater storm intensity, and heavier seasonal snow events in affected cold areas. In other regions, drought and low snow pack (or early melting) will affect water supply reliability.
• Rising pest populations (including insects that carry disease and destroy forests and crops), as a result of higher temperatures, flood events, and longer breeding seasons. Early evidence of this can be seen in the North.
• Disappearance or shrinkage of mountain glaciers that feed rivers in many parts of the world.
• Alteration of oceanic "conveyor currents" that carry heat to northern latitudes, moderating climate in those regions. This process may in some cases act like a switch, cutting off flow once a threshold is reached. Evidence of a current-disrupting process has already been observed.
• Impacts on millions of coastal inhabitants from rising sea levels (including higher storm surge), due to melting & disintegrating glaciers and oceanic thermal expansion.
• More intense, expensive, and CO2-contributive wildfire seasons.
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