It's kind of bizarre that "prepping" (I prefer "preparedness" and fortunately like gardening anyway) is associated with the right when we have sober-minded scientists literally saying civilization stands a very good chance of collapsing. I think a lot of people "believe" in climate change, but relatively few people _believe_ in it, if that makes sense. It's coming.
"Prepping" became a "lifestyle", which means that it has become dominated by companies looking to peddle things to people whose judgment has been clouded by fear. There are ways to prepare for a climate-induced collapse of civilization, but stockpiling guns and MREs in a bomb-proof bunker will only suffice as a survival aid as long as there are people out who are actually prepared with agricultural know-how and tools (with the idea being, presumably, that you use your guns to threaten them to give you food (foolishly assuming that the farmers don't also have guns)).
Is this "winter is coming", "the end is near" tone helpful? I'm not necessarily saying it's outright false, but look, there've been past times where the end truly felt near, but we managed to overcome it... Again, we might not this time, but why should we bet against us? Does anyone want to be the lone survivor in the post-apocalypse? Sorry if overreacting.
No need to be sorry. It's really depressing, obviously I hope I'm actually wrong.
I find it useful because we might, in fact, overcome this, but for now we seem to be on track for 3+C of warming within my kids' lifetimes, wet bulb temperatures making a decent chunk of the Earth uninhabitable (even naked healthy people will die sitting in the shade), the loss of the majority of insects we need for pollination, sea level rise giving us millions of homeless people, wars breaking out over access to resources, increasing ocean acidity and anoxia threatening sea life, accelerating self-reinforcing carbon emissions (hotter weather melting permafrost releasing methane making weather hotter, ice sheets melting reducing albedo making Earth warmer and melting more ice) etc. and all of those put together don't make me optimistic.
Unfortunately the problem with "we managed to overcome it" is that everyone who didn't manage to overcome is not around to comment. I certainly aim to be someone who "manages to overcome it" but that won't happen by being ignorant of the dangers we face and failing to adjust my life in ways that maximize the probability of this.
I don't think you'd be the lone survivor in the post-apocalypse, short of going full Venus the planet will sustain _some_ life, including humans, hopefully. Where there are groups of people, or most other mammals I'd venture. there is at least the possibility of joy.
IPCC working group 1 is putting out a draft report Monday, let's see what they say.
Yeah, I hear you, but in this case I'm not attacking the left or the right here. I'm simply saying "prepping" as in "preparedness" for impending doomsday (not armageddon) where climate change has forced us all to rethink the modern life. Non-political. Survival.
I think the difference is right wing "preppers" are more individualistic. For them it's about saving themselves and their immediate family. The left acknowledges that we live in a society. And the real power to prevent happens at a societal level. So their energy is focused more on fixing government and through high leverage policy changes instead.