![atomic society cheat engine atomic society cheat engine](https://steamcdn-a.akamaihd.net/steam/apps/514500/header.jpg)
We need a major plan to build resilience.” In concrete terms, this means encouraging farmers to adapt their crops to the new weather patterns. “It’s just too late for all that, I am sorry to say. Professor Ramanathan no longer believes behavioral change can do the trick. If we are prepared, we can avoid most of the disasters.” “Fortunately, we are a lot smarter than that. We can choose to be like the proverbial frog who does nothing as the temperature of the water in which it is immersed rises till it perishes. We have choices to make, Professor Ramanathan says. When I say it is going to move into the living room, there are a lot of people who do not have living rooms anymore because of the fires, the floods.” and I am thinking that in another five, ten years insurance companies will go bankrupt, they won’t be able to insure your house. They’re trying to send their kids to school. They’re still living paycheck to paycheck.
![atomic society cheat engine atomic society cheat engine](https://www.cheatengine.org/forum/files/cheatengine_204.jpg)
“I am particularly thinking about those in their 30s to 50-year range. Prof Ramanathan expresses that one of his fears “is that climate change will move into our living rooms just like Covid, affecting everyone.” Floodwaters and fires make no distinctions between people and trees. Everyone is now suffering the effects of global warming – the poor, the middle-class, and the wealthy alike. It’s not just mother nature, the earth, and the poor who are now crying out. And it takes all the nutrients out of the soil.” So, you ask, ‘What's the problem with that?’ When you have heavy rains, most of the water goes into the ocean. What this means for the subsistence farmer in India is that “the monsoon rain is coming but it's pouring – when it rains, it pours. But they’re not like the western farmers of millions of acres, thousands of acres. But they are going to suffer the worst consequences of our love fest with fossil fuels. “They are still burning firewood and cow dung and organic waste to meet their basic needs of cooking and heating the home. “I have talked with Pope Francis about this,” he says. There are concrete, tangible ways, he says, that the “three billion people in the world who have still not discovered fossil fuels” are affected by the change in temperature and weather. Ramanathan admires Pope Francis for having connected the cry of the earth with the cry of the poor.
![atomic society cheat engine atomic society cheat engine](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/hgrIKUR5Hww/maxresdefault.jpg)
The wetter is horrible, if it's like the rain we saw in Germany – it just washes away everything, including people.” Wetter would be good if the rainfall came in gentle rain. Generally, the pattern is the dry regions are getting drier, and the wet regions are getting wetter. “What is supposed to happen once every thousand years, once every five hundred years, is happening twice in ten years. Everywhere people are experiencing bizarre weather,” the Professor continues. Ramanathan says we are just beginning to see the effects of “global warming, just in the last ten to fifteen years has morphed into a global disruption of the world's weather systems. The rise in temperature touches off changes in weather patterns since the two are in close relationship with each other. Imagine everything we’re experiencing amplified by 50%.” You see, going from 1 to 1.5 is a 50% amplification. Ramanathan says that he published a paper with colleagues in 2018 forecasting that by 2030 the temperature will have risen 1.5 degrees. In what way is the earth crying out? One of the ways is through the rise in temperature. Ramanathan participates in a meeting organized by the Pontifical Academy of Sciences (Gabriella Clare Marino/PAS)