• redballooon
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          1 year ago

          Because his explanation is bullocks. The whole argument is.

          • Thorny_Thicket@sopuli.xyz
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            1 year ago

            What exactly is bullocks about it?

            The sea level doesn’t just rise one day. It’s a slow process that’ll happen over decades. Many of the people living in those houses now probably want to sell in the near future while they still can. They might not get back what they paid but in 5 years you’re not going to get even that so better cut your losses. At some point the coastline gets so close that those houses will just be abandoned, demolished and people will have moved further inland.

            • redballooon
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              1 year ago

              It’s focused on some ideal coastline that fits the argument well.

              In reality you will see storms that set underwater whole metropoles repeatedly, think like New Orleans a few years back, but on a yearly base.

              And when it comes to the really big metropoles in Asia, they don’t have much options to properly relocate millions of people at ones.

              The likes of Shapiro won’t welcome them in the USA, even if they promise to stay in the rural centers.

              • Thorny_Thicket@sopuli.xyz
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                1 year ago

                I’m having some trouble understanding what exactly is the confusion here. If the sea level rises it’s not like people will just keep living underwater. They have to move somewhere else. Entire cities and towns has to be relocated elsewhere. Besides building massive sea walls there’s just no other option. This in no way implies it’s not going to absolutely suck for the people living there. Ofcourse it does.

                What exactly is it that Ben is wrong about here? This is really confusing to me

                • redballooon
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                  1 year ago

                  He’s pretending that this will just go smoothly with the help of the free market.