From earth they came, to earth they must return
Humanity across the globe is threatened with a possible extinction coming from carbon dioxide
The writer is a political analyst. Email: [email protected] Twitter @Imran Jan
Humanity across the globe is threatened with a possible extinction coming not from terrorism or the coronavirus or even from western aggression. But rather from carbon dioxide. Humans are responsible for these carbon emissions. It is the Anthropocene epoch. Carbon accumulates in the atmosphere, which traps the heat here on Earth. When that heat cannot escape into space, global warming happens.
Different solutions have been proposed to tackle the issue of climate change such as electric cars, solar and wind energy, artificial meat, and so forth. They are all good and merit serious attention. Money hungry billionaires have suggested carbon suction technologies, which would suck the carbon from the environment. That is not the silver bullet for climate change beca
Под Новороссийском прошли боевые стрельбы взводов танкового батальона
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Российским водителям указали на «ежедневную» ошибку при запуске автомобиля
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After Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that his country will always be there to defend the right of peaceful protest, the first world leader to voice his views on the farmers protests, India slammed his remarks as “ill-formed” and unwarranted . Peeved over Canada s remarks, reports said External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar would skip a Canada-led virtual meeting on COVID-19. On the same day as India protested, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh took a dig at the state of internal affairs across the border in Pakistan and on countries that can neither make their own road nor walk on it. Do these statements suggest interventionism in international affairs is on the rise? Is domestic politics taking increasing precedence in how countries conduct foreign policy, and is the principle of non-intervention in international affairs a relic of the past that needs revisiting?