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OPINION

Why this year's COP26 isn't going to deliver

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 30/10/2021

» 'The world is on a catastrophic pathway to 2.7°C of heating," said UN Secretary General António Guterres. "There is a high risk of failure of COP26." That's the global climate summit that meets every five years (but was postponed last year because of the pandemic) to plot a course away from climate disaster. And it really isn't looking good.

OPINION

Lebanon quickly sinking in more ways than one

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 21/10/2021

» Off the Lebanese coast about 60 kilometres north of Beirut a 104-metre battleship stands vertically, with her bow and some 30 metres of her length plunged into the mud. The seabed is 140 metres down, but you can even scuba-dive on the stern if you are a technical diver. The ship is a bit like Lebanon, for reasons I'll explain later.

OPINION

It's volcanoes, tsunamis and risk at La Palma

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 09/10/2021

» 'Don't bother your pretty head about it" is the prevailing media take on the risk of the volcanic eruption on La Palma in the Canary Islands turning into a mega-tsunami disaster. The media definitely over-hyped that risk when it was first suggested 20 years ago, so now they have to work the other side of the street.

OPINION

Sept 11 didn't change the world forever

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 11/09/2021

» 'Changed the world forever' is the most hackneyed phrase in journalism, and if you can get through this week (the 20th anniversary of the Sept 11 attacks) without hearing it half a dozen times you'll be very lucky.

OPINION

Do we need more rockets in the stratosphere?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 27/08/2021

» If you're worried about your "carbon footprint" -- a concept foisted on the world in 2004 by British Petroleum to persuade people that their own behaviour, and not giant oil companies like BP, is causing the climate problem -- then you definitely should not sign up for a sub-orbital space flight. Besides, you probably can't afford it (US$250,000 -- about 8 million baht -- per person).

OPINION

Democracy is default mode of civilisations

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 30/07/2021

» At first I was going to write about the "Arab Problem", because there is not a single functioning democracy in the Arab world. This week's presidential coup in Tunisia has probably ended democracy in the one country that actually achieved it during the "Arab Spring" of 2010-11.

OPINION

Today it's Zuma, tomorrow it could be Trump

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 17/07/2021

» Sooner or later ex-president Donald Trump is bound to be indicted for some crime. It doesn't matter which -- it could be a fraud or corruption charge, or a sexual offence, or incitement to violence, or even just tax evasion. (That's what finally got American gangster Al Capone.) And it doesn't matter whether he's convicted, either; the real drama will come before that.

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OPINION

Killer 'Wave-7' heat getting far more common

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 09/07/2021

» First the "heat dome", with temperatures in the mid-to-high forties Celsius in many parts of western North America for up to a week (49.6°C in Lytton, British Columbia). Then, when the forests were tinder-dry, came the wildfires (which wiped Lytton out). From northern California to northern British Columbia, the records were being broken every day.

OPINION

Napoleon and world history: What if...?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/05/2021

» Napoleon Bonaparte doesn't come up much in conversation these days, which is hardly surprising given that he has been dead for two centuries. On the other hand, today will be exactly 200 years since he died, so maybe we could make an exception just this once.

OPINION

Genocide in Armenia: Call it what it was

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 28/04/2021

» Following in the path of 31 other countries including Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Russia, and Brazil, the United States on Saturday at last "recognised" the Armenian genocide. Not that the United States ever denied it, but it officially avoided the word "genocide" for 106 years for fear of angering the Turks.