EU It’s a heatwave, not the end of the world

It’s a heatwave, not the end of the world​

The truth is that global warming could be good for humankind.
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Hold the front page: it’s hot in Greece. Italy, too. And – if you can believe it – in the south of Spain. Blaring sunshine on the Costa del Sol in the middle of July – will wonders never cease? Reading the newspaper coverage of this sunshine, you could be forgiven for thinking it was unheard of. That the Mediterranean had never sweltered before. That the streets of Athens and beaches of Alicante had never baked in the midday heat. ‘Italy swelters’, ‘Holiday hell’, ‘Unbearable’, scream the headlines, as if a most unusual calamity, unknown in the annals of time, had struck southern Europe.

Everyone needs to calm down. It’s a heatwave, not the end of the world. Yes, it’s hot. Temperatures are surpassing 40C in parts of Greece, Italy, Spain, Croatia and Turkey. It was 41C in Seville this week. It might reach 48C on some Med islands, including Sicily and Sardinia. ‘Some scientists believe’, says the Washington Post, that we’re witnessing Europe’s hottest days in 125,000 years. The last time it was this hot there were ‘hippopotamuses in the Thames’, says a breathless BBC. I’m taking it all with a pinch of salt. Right now I’m looking at a New York Times report from 8 August 1933 which said two cities in Spain had just experienced temperatures of 42.5C. It was like a ‘steaming cauldron’, apparently. Heat is as old as time.

Strikingly, that old New York Times piece was a tiny column on page 14 of the paper. Summer wasn’t frontpage news in the early 20th century, no matter how hot it got. It is now. The totally dog-bites-man story of scorching weather in southern Europe is being reported in apocalyptic tones. The word ‘hell’ abounds. ‘Deadly’, too. It’s an ‘apocalyptic round of heat’ and it’s ‘pounding the continent’, says the Mirror. Europe is ‘boiling in sweat’, we’re told. Not all of Europe. It’s pissing down in Britain. Where’s our global warming?

Even the name of the heatwave is designed to conjure up visions of hellfire and torment. Cerberus, it’s called, after the three-headed hound from hell of Greek mythology. Subtle. Extreme storms tend to get normal names – Storm Doris, Hurricane Laura – but heat in July is named after a beast from the abyss. It makes it impossible to have a rational discussion. The name Cerberus cajoles us into thinking of the heatwave as a retributive inferno. ‘Hound-from-hell heatwave sweeps across [Europe]’, as one headline puts it. The language dictates the thought. Just uttering the name of the wave gives credence to the ahistorical idea that it’s an End Times event. ‘Cerberus’s inferno’, newspapers cry.

Indeed, in Dante’s Inferno Cerberus torments sinners by tearing them apart. How apt. For this heatwave is viewed by our cultural elites as yet another of Mother Nature’s punishments of sinful mankind. The melting temperatures are down to climate change, apparently, which is to say: it’s our fault. Every heatwave in recent years has been interpreted by the hysterics of the misnamed intellectual classes as a ‘heat apocalypse’ brought about by man’s hubristic industrial behaviour. ‘[It] seems like End Times – and it’s our own damned fault’, said one observer of the ‘heat of late’. No wonder the mad dog Cerberus has come from the Underworld to boil us alive in our own sweat.

Every weather event now gets folded into the misanthropic narrative that says humanity has gone ‘too far’ and is being avenged by the Earth. Every flood, storm and rush of heat is marshalled to the neo-medieval claim that the heavens are divinely displeased with our marauding species. Weather is never just weather anymore. It’s a portent, a sign, a lashing out. ‘Nature is sending us a message’, leading greens say. Nothing better captures the irrationalism of our times than the rehabilitation of the ancient belief that natural calamities are a punishing visitation from a higher force. God, Gaia, Cerberus – someone’s reprimanding us.

Amid all this madness it can be difficult to speak the truth about heatwaves. But we must try. The first truth is that there have been heatwaves forever, long before modernity. Bald’s Leechbook, a guide to health compiled in the 10th century, advised people to avoid summer’s ‘boiling heat and the venomousness of the air’. There was a mega-drought in northern Europe for 37 long years between 1437 and 1473. There was burning sunshine in parts of Europe in 1616, leading to a ‘great heat’ and ‘dried-up rivers’. What caused those ‘heat apocalypses’? Factories, 4x4s, airplanes? It is a testament to the new clerisy’s doomerism and narcissism that they think our weather is without earthly precedent.

The second truth about heatwaves is that people are pretty good at dealing with them. Yes, high heat can be uncomfortable, sometimes dangerous. In the main, though, we know what to do. Ancient Romans took to ‘earth houses’ to dodge the flaming sun. Medieval peasants wore wide-brimmed hats and started work early in the morning on the hottest of days. Even pasty Brits in scorching Seville this week will have a fabulous time if they cover their heads, drink lots of fluids and avoid physical exertion. Everyone knows this. It’s in-built info. Whisper it: heatwaves are fun if done right.

Then there’s the third truth, the most unutterable one: it’s possible that the rising heat of recent years is good for us. For here’s the thing: extreme cold kills far greater numbers than extreme heat. Every year in England and Wales between 2000 and 2019 there were on average 800 excess deaths ‘associated with heat’ and 60,500 excess deaths ‘associated with cold’. Around 2,500 people die from heat in the US and Canada every year, compared with around 113,000 from cold. Even in India deaths from cold hugely outnumber deaths from heat. Globally, around 300,000 deaths a year are the result of heat, 1.7million the result of cold.

Why don’t we hear about all these cold deaths? The reason is as straightforward as it is callous – because the suffering of these freezing folk, most of whom are elderly, doesn’t lend itself to the political narrative about dastardly mankind setting the planet on fire. These victims of cold are an inconvenience, grit in the eye of the climate ideology, and thus they’re subtly erased. And yet, as Bjorn Lomborg points out, if cold is the major temperature killer, then surely the warming of our planet will reduce deaths in the round? Right now, he says, the warming of our planet ‘reduces more deaths than it causes’, possibly saving ‘100,000 lives each year’. That might change, if things get really hot. But for now, let’s welcome the reduction in cold deaths, even as we prep for future heat.

If things are getting hotter, we should mitigate the consequences. It really is that simple. And we know how to do it. More air-conditioning, more open public swimming baths, more electric fans and fresh drinking water. This is how the US halved its heat deaths over the past 60 years even as its number of hot days increased – by deploying tech to the great task of cooling people down. The idea that our response to hot weather should be to beat ourselves up over modernity and wind back industrial society is preposterous and undoable. Instead, enjoy the sun and fortify for the future. And Cerberus, don’t forget us – it’s miserable in London.

Brendan O’Neill is spiked’s chief political writer and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan O’Neill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. His new book – A Heretic’s Manifesto: Essays on the Unsayable – is available to order on Amazon UK and Amazon US now. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy
 
ITs southern europe, heat isnt a problem there because you are in the fucking water all the time... the only danger is sleeping drunk at the pool...
 
In Rome temps blast 40 deg Celsius. People faint, some maybe die. MAYBE DON'T WALK AROUND TOWN IN GREAT FLOCKS OF RETARDS IN THE MIDDLE OF FULL BLASTING SUN AT THE SOUTH OF EUROPE? Just food for thought.
40 degrees... how terrible. That's called the month of August here. We've already had several 99F/37C days here and there's a month and a half to go of things getting worse.

That said, you're talking about people who have more wine in their blood than blood. They can't take the sudden withdrawal as that alcohol starts evaporating out.
 
Why don’t we hear about all these cold deaths? The reason is as straightforward as it is callous – because the suffering of these freezing folk, most of whom are elderly,
Elderly people die every summer in crappy, neglectful nursing homes with no AC.
It’s pissing down in Britain. Where’s our global warming?
Global warming refers to the planet's overall temp increasing. Unusual weather like it raining all summer is actually part of climate change.

This author is literally a disingenuous idiot. Imagine thinking you're against the system while sucking off big polluters.
40 degrees... how terrible. That's called the month of August here.
It's really bad for people acclimated to the North. Even our fat cells are different based on what we are acclimated too. It's not just mental. Plus wet bulb temperatures are very dangerous. Your brain cooks inside your skull. If you live in a dry climate, you have no idea.
The reason I didn't know is because nobody talks about people who freeze to death
That's not true. I hear about warming shelter initiatives in Canada every winter. Also about homeless people who go to sleep in clothing donation bins and freeze to death.
 
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40 degrees... how terrible. That's called the month of August here. We've already had several 99F/37C days here and there's a month and a half to go of things getting worse.

That said, you're talking about people who have more wine in their blood than blood. They can't take the sudden withdrawal as that alcohol starts evaporating out.
Most of them are tourist retards. Rome is beautiful, but what's the point when all you see is back or top of ther people heads. Fuuuuuuuuck thaaaaaat.
 
The best part of "climate change" is that those "elites" that have created and implemented and exploited the policies that allow rampant pollution and the wholesale poisoning of our biosphere (whether or not this causes anthropomorphic climate change being completely besides the point) have managed to manipulate the masses (read: the actual victims of said wholesale poisonings) that its their own fault. And, in a roundabout way, that's not exactly untrue, but only in as much as its the (poorly considered) primrose path they've been led down by TPTB. Indeed, they have even gotten the troo beleibers to publicly self-flagellate in such spectacularly retarded ways, to the point that they have lost fucking life and limb with their dumbfuck publicity stunts. The power of the Hegelian Dialectic, folks.

Fun times.
 
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Cannot be shipped to CA, for some reason. Thanks anyway.
It's probably because it causes cancer or some other asinine reason because California.

You could try gardening centers or similar stores in the area to find a similar product.
 
To be clear, this is a BIG heatwave that interferes with day to day life quite severely in areas where temps reach 38-40 and above. Vegetation is dry and fires are starting randomly. The hospitals are filled with elderly and deathfats, which sure you might not care about, but they'll take resources anyway. It's harder to cool off important machinery, we had malfunctions in various radiology-related gear. The roads are starting to literally melt where there's some of that bitumen more viscous patching.
And it goes on and on for like 10 days now, and nights are also bad.
HOWEVER
This does not mean you deindustrialize the country because of it or panic. You simply invest far more into R&D about controlling temps and weather. What, you thought we gonna be at the mercy of elements forever? Humans always seek to control the environment. Not the other way around. We CHANGE things. For better or worse.
 
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It's probably because it causes cancer or some other asinine reason because California.

You could try gardening centers or similar stores in the area to find a similar product.
Ya, good idea, plan to do so.
 
As for Europeans, most of them live in shoebox apartments, either in really really old buildings (over 300 years old, srsly) built out of clay bricks or in post-WW2 concrete high rises.

For Murikan suburbfags who only know detached houses built from wood and stucco and drywall, y'all don't realize how fucking BROILING it can get in a brick/concrete apartment building. On top of that, the buildings have thick walls because when they were built (esp for the centuries old apts) the world was still coming out of the Little Ice Age (1350-1850 or so) and everybody's main concern was keeping the bitter cold out. It was cold far more than it was hot, and the hot times weren't as hot as they are now, so the goal was to build buildings that retained heat.

Now it's 2023, and it is 105 F for weeks on end, and the old buildings do what they were designed to-hold heat. So the interior temps gradually rise to a level that is literally unsurvivable. The electric systems were installed in a slapdash way during the interwar years (1919-38 ) and ever since WW2 ended the systems have just been patched and patched like your grandma's bedsheets, so they can't handle AC.

(Edit: fuck autodefault emojis!)

Places like England and France have all sorts of fucking bizarre building codes and bureaucrats to bribe, so most people can't just shove a AC unit in the window like in Murika. So people drop like flies. Decisions made by people who have long since turned to dust wound up being a grave, even though the future originally envisioned was anything but.
 
Cannot be shipped to CA, for some reason. Thanks anyway.
That's new, I was able to order some this spring. This fucking state. Your can try to increase the phosphorus in the soil by using bone meal. It will increase that hormone in the plants themselves, it's just takes longer and isn't as effective as the spray.
It's probably because it causes cancer or some other asinine reason because California.

You could try gardening centers or similar stores in the area to find a similar product.
It's not about the cancer this time. It's that California has insane controls and taxes on pesticides. The department of pesticides basically classifies anything that increases growth or reduces disease that isn't npk fertilizer as a pesticide. Smaller companies or those geared towards home growers don't find it financially viable to sell those products here. So the only way to get some of these is through big ag companies who sell it for a premium. I've started doing a Reno run twice a year for things like this. If I can't buy it in Reno I get it sent to the hotel. Sometimes you can find this stuff at cannabis grower supply stores, they don't seem to have to obey the law.
 
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