Global warming is so severe that I am surprised that we can still ignore the danger or divide ourselves into opposing factions.

“Global warming threatens our health, our economy, our natural resources, and our children`s future. It is clear we must act.”

Eliot Spitzer

I remember the first time they told me about global warming, I was in school.

The teacher was an alternative and progressive guy; he had studied in Bologna. This was evident by how he dressed, spoke, and said things.

He showed us photos of polar bears awkwardly standing on the retreating, ice-cracked muddy ground. Then he moved to maps focused on the ozone layer (or lack thereof).

His lectures exposed the problem with CFCs., which were completely new words to us.

I had promised myself never to use any spray cans of any kind again. Additionally, I vowed never to want to hear about Air Conditioning again.

Actually, we didn’t have this luxury at home. In my car, if I wanted cool, I had to lower the windows and hope that the mistral would blow.

I committed to recycling everything I could.

Environmentalism and its forms were my primary battle even once I entered politics.

When you talked about these things, you were seen as someone without any problems in life. You appeared to want to be original and alternative. Still, the topic did not lead you to win any election, from neighborhood to national.

It was an “outline”, one more thing that only the youngest wanted to include in the party programs. The others did not care at all.

All this happened in the 80s and 90s before this hard-to-imagine alternative reality became our tangible reality. 

Like most people, I vowed to do my part to stop hurting our Planet. But, to be honest, I didn’t think I had been able, after a few years, to witness in front of me the fading of the Planet.

I grew up carrying on speeches and battles that were losers. These did not disturb, or, at the limit, were accepted with a smile of circumstance.

I believe that at this point, even the most vehement deniers are finding it difficult to ignore what is happening.

Germany, next to Kholn – video from my car – @massimousai

GLOBAL WARMING IS RIGHT NOW

Torrential downpours, flash floods, forest fires, scorching temperatures, late harvests, ruined harvests … This is precisely what we have seen in Europe in recent years. From a climatic point of view, Europe has a privileged position over the rest of the Planet.

2021 was the year the world witnessed its first climate change-induced famine in Madagascar.

America was torn to pieces by a hurricane so powerful that it didn’t even lose strength as it traveled hundreds of miles across the earth.

Then we saw unprecedented droughts that evaporated entire sections of rivers in Argentina.

It is now assumed that a one-year-old child today will experience weather events 24 times more extreme in their lives than any older generation.

 Now, after the summer we just had, even that figure seems tame. We are glimpsing that future that we never expected to witness.

I must confess that finally, I have noticed that many of us are afraid. I am so scared for myself and the younger generations.

From 31 October to 12 November, Glasgow will host the  26th  United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26). It is seen by many as a critical moment for our Planet’s future.

While international engagement is essential to changing the world’s future, we can play a role in calling for change. Supporting change at the institutional, political, and corporate levels is crucial. There is still much we can do to help heal our beautiful Planet.

The hysterical reactions from motorists in London in recent days against those who protest because the British government does nothing against the climate disaster. This does not bode well for us who want to save the Planet.

Of course, it only takes a few populist slogans to convince people that “personal affairs are more important than the climate problem“.

But this situation makes us understand the problem. Many do not realize that if we do not take immediate action on the climate, their personal affairs also disappear. This would happen along with them as people and their loved ones.

So this problem is severe and significant. It is more than an hour late to go to work. Everyone should calm their nerves and see beyond the finger pointing to the moon.

Global warming
“Global Warming” photo by @massimousai

The Pandemic has taught us that by acting heavily, and together, you can fight a virus.

Perhaps by working heavily together on global warming, we can prevent the disaster in front of us.

Honestly, if we had invested before and better in research and hospitals, we might have avoided 18 months of lockdown. Wouldn’t it have been better?

I think so.

So why wait for a sure next climate catastrophe to bring us back to a lockdown? This future lockdown could perhaps be even less fun than the one we have been through. 

Because the climate could lead us to close ourselves again in our homes, without even having Netflix or Social Networks to let us pass the time.

A climate catastrophe would undoubtedly be much worse than the one that made us experience the Virus.

We must seriously ask ourselves how we can all do to help change the trajectory of the climate crisis. 

This is our chance to take responsibility and take control of our future. We should make sure those lessons we had in school long ago don’t become the reality we hoped would never happen.

That reality that many underestimated then and many still do. 

The fact that many did not see and made fun of us when we were so warmly committed to convincing them. We argued that those Bears with no more ice under their feet were a significant problem. For us who took the underground and complained exaggeratedly about a strike that would have caused 20 minutes’ delay to our trip.


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Massimo Usai https://urbanmoodmagazine.com

After more than 25 years spent between London, Warsaw, and Brussels—three cities that taught me everything except how to resist a good coffee—I’ve had the pleasure of collaborating with international outlets such as The New York Times, Time Out London, and Vancouver News.
Today, I’m the Director of Urban Mood Magazine and the Editor behind Longevitimes.com, where I explore stories at the intersection of culture, photography, and longevity.
I love blending images and words to turn every piece into a small journey—authentic, original, and occasionally a little mischievous.
In recent years, I’ve been diving deep into the world of Sardinia’s Blue Zone, developing expertise in longevity, traditions, and the science behind living better (and longer).
And yes—I’m also an Arsenal supporter. Nobody’s perfect. / To contact me massimousai@mac.com

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