Commando wrote:seriously, this thread is now a complete cyber skip bin filled with all kinds of waste from the internet...
dylby1 wrote:If the world ends it ends
If it doesn't shit continues as normal
Who gives a ****, we're screwed if it does, we're fine if it doesn't
Why read into it any further than that?
NUT347 wrote:Man up and get a PS3.
vulpine wrote:Now i think about it, knowing what was to come has already given me a winner. When I was purchasing land, I kept in mind the increase in rainfall, the rising sea levels and temperature increase and cyclone intensity increase.
Last wet season we had a record flood event, almost the entire area was flooded, houses lost and my neighbours all ended up under a foot of water. The dam overflowed, and any properties in its path were destroyed. My block was untouched
Now the property is double what i paid for it, and in an area which is predicted to have minimal temperature increase, solid rainfall and is outside the main cyclone zone.
Its also near to where a new town is being built, creating a solid ecconomy for the area.
What im getting at is, if you pay attention to the environment, there is always a silver lining
And yes, there is small pockets of land which will be vertually uneffected, as can be found if you research into historic CSIRO data on climate fluctuations.
t1MMy wrote:vulpine wrote:Now i think about it, knowing what was to come has already given me a winner. When I was purchasing land, I kept in mind the increase in rainfall, the rising sea levels and temperature increase and cyclone intensity increase.
Last wet season we had a record flood event, almost the entire area was flooded, houses lost and my neighbours all ended up under a foot of water. The dam overflowed, and any properties in its path were destroyed. My block was untouched
Now the property is double what i paid for it, and in an area which is predicted to have minimal temperature increase, solid rainfall and is outside the main cyclone zone.
Its also near to where a new town is being built, creating a solid ecconomy for the area.
What im getting at is, if you pay attention to the environment, there is always a silver lining
And yes, there is small pockets of land which will be vertually uneffected, as can be found if you research into historic CSIRO data on climate fluctuations.
Which translates to "I purchased land on the top of a hill"?
wicksy wrote:Global warming is a government conspiracy
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