638 points by rguiscard 3 days ago | 479 comments | View on ycombinator
tdb7893 3 days ago |
maebert 3 days ago |
Putting “fight” into quotes here is terrific amount of low level shade for a scientific publication. chef’s kiss
rdedev 3 days ago |
Edit: probably not this one but atleast tells us why measurement is needed https://youtube.com/shorts/-X5EhUbzLTY?si=_N92PNUiTi3STat6
kombine 3 days ago |
egonschiele 3 days ago |
stldev 3 days ago |
Facts cease to exist because you ignore them. I think Huxley wrote that.
frogperson 3 days ago |
laylomo2 3 days ago |
deadbolt 3 days ago |
alsanan 3 days ago |
kevin_thibedeau 3 days ago |
jimjimjim 3 days ago |
Can anyone here, hand of heart, say "I agree with this decision"?
Eufrat 3 days ago |
js2 3 days ago |
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/01/climate/ocean-observatori...
A few points:
1. The ocean observation system began operating in 2016 and was expected to continue for 25 years.
2. It cost $48 million annually to operate the network. The Trump administration repeatedly tried to shutter it, proposing to cut its funding by 80 percent in both 2025 and again in 2026. Congress pushed back, restoring the money.
3. “One of the real tragedies here is that collecting data effectively at this site was a huge engineering challenge, and it’s not the kind of thing where you can just leave your notes for the next person who comes in,” Dr. Palevsky said. “There’s a lot of expertise that has the potential to be lost.”
The administration is, as I understand it, in violation of the constitution by shutting this down. It was funded by Congress, twice. The executive branch cannot just legally not spend that money.
thelastgallon 3 days ago |
How much money do you think the United States has spent since 1945 on the Cold War? $10 trillion (in 1990).
nixass 3 days ago |
1970-01-01 3 days ago |
contubernio 3 days ago |
insane_dreamer 2 days ago |
This is about removing the ability to measure in order to undercut the claims of global warming ("we don't have sufficient evidence")
In the future historians will look back at this administration the way we look at the Roman Inquisition who persecuted scientists for challenging their accepted dogma.
bondolo 3 days ago |
SubiculumCode 3 days ago |
iqp 3 days ago |
Climate Activist: The oceans are getting warmer & global currents are threatened by imminent collapse - we must do something!
Big Oil: Prove it!
Climate Activist: Data gathered between 2016 and 2026 shows ...
Big Oil: That's old news! Do you have more recent data?
Climate Activist: Well, no, because Trump2 dismantled the ocean observation system in 2026 ...
Big Oil: So you have no data to back up your claims?
Climate Activist: Not recent data, no, but ...
Big Oil: Case dismissed! Why should anyone take action based on subjective opinion, not backed up by hard data? For all we know the oceans could have miraculously cooled & the currents are fine!
newtwentysix 3 days ago |
euroderf 3 days ago |
sawjet 3 days ago |
cyberax 3 days ago |
rurban 3 days ago |
The EU? Russia? My bet is on China
internet_points 3 days ago |
Trump: If we stop testing right now, we’d have very few cases, if any.
Previously https://thehill.com/homenews/media/5733236-gallup-stops-pres...
fuckinpuppers 3 days ago |
But like the east wing I’m sure they’ll do it before there’s a chance.
Fuck this timeline
x-complexity 3 days ago |
...Why is Europe reliant on the US for monitoring oceans between Greenland & Iceland, i.e within European territory & therefore European monitoring? Shouldn't they have their own infra to work from?
snaking0776 3 days ago |
wnevets 3 days ago |
dotcoma 3 days ago |
dinosaur0001 3 days ago |
TesterVetter 3 days ago |
SilverElfin 3 days ago |
honeycrispy 3 days ago |
efitz 3 days ago |
cryptoegorophy 3 days ago |
Just to be clear I am against this as well, just the journalism is so filthy now.