Richard Crim
2 min readSep 18, 2024

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Ummm...you do understand about the Climate Crisis right?

From the sound of your article you don't seem to realize how BAD things are and how much worse they are about to get.

The Crisis Report — 47

Let’s be CLEAR about what “Mainstream” Climate Science actually says. (Part One of Two)

It's happening WAY "faster than expected".

I conclude with this.

The SPEED that things are going to get worse now, is so TRAGICALLY bad, that thinking about can bring tears to my eyes.

Billions of human beings are going to die over the next 10 years.

The risk of civilizational collapse is GROWING. How does one “prepare” for that?

Dust Bowl 2.0, here we come. 2025 -2028 is probably going to see the collapse of the Great Plains agricultural zone.

This is not THEORETICAL anymore. This is our NOW.

If you waited this long to start prepping. Well, you waited till the VERY LAST minute.

THE LIFE YOU THOUGHT YOU WERE GOING TO HAVE IS GONE.

How do you deal with the “death of the Future”?

What should you do NOW, with this “knowing”?

I have been thinking about this a lot lately. It’s something I’m getting asked about more and more often. Plus it’s something I have to consider for myself.

I guess it comes down to this.

Things are about to DRASTICALLY change in the world. The “good times” of the 20th century golden age of relative peace and plenty are coming to an end.

It’s NOT the “end of the world”.

The world will go on for another 2.5 billion years before we think the sun swells and engulfs it. To future ages we will be an interesting set of fossils and a layer of weird chemicals in the rock strata.

It is the END of “life as we knew it”.

The life we all thought we were going to have went into the fire in 2023. That future is gone. In its place is a dark smokey cloud that smells like burning, blood, and death.

There is ZERO CERTAINTY now about the future.

All you can know for sure. Is that the rest of your life is going to be about things collapsing, sudden disasters, constant food insecurity, and repeated relocation.

That’s the “unvarnished” truth.

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Richard Crim
Richard Crim

Written by Richard Crim

My entire life can be described in one sentence: Things didn’t go as planned, and I’m OK with that.

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