
COP a load of this
Feedback has been watching bemusedly from a distance as the latest round of international climate negotiations, COP29, struggled along in Azerbaijan. In a previous life, we covered a few COPs, and are still on most of the relevant mailing lists. Hence we know that on 18 November, when we were writing this, Climate Action Networkās Fossil of the Day was South Korea, because it was single-handedly blocking a deal that would end subsidies of oil and gas by high-income countries. Yep, that would do it.
Having a conference dedicated to cutting greenhouse gas emissions in a country like Azerbaijan, which is heavily reliant on fossil fuel exports, was always likely to backfire. Feedback thought diplomacy was about understanding othersā motivations, but apparently nobody twigged what the Azerbaijan government might want. On cue, President Ilham Aliyev described oil and gas as a āā in his opening speech, and the countryās chief negotiator was filmed a meeting to discuss fossil fuel deals.
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Then the conference actually started ā or rather it didnāt. On day one, the works became gummed up within the first hour, after several countries objected to the agenda for the rest of the conference. The first day was then spent , while the delegates sat around with nothing to do. Still, itās not like climate change is an urgent problem.
Feedback would like to think things can only go uphill from here, but the experience of the past decade suggests otherwise. Besides, we still twitch when we remember the last night of one COP we attended. It was well into the evening, so the agreement should have been signed and the party started. But then we saw a parade of junior diplomats carrying towering stacks of takeaway pizza boxes into the negotiating room ā and we realised we were going to be there, even in a best-case scenario, until the early hours of the morning. Feedback doesnāt recommend this experience, or the accompanying case of caffeine poisoning.
Find your inner badass
Assistant news editor Alexandra Thompson draws our attention to a paper on the psychological research repository PsyArXiv, with the glorious title āā. Its authors, Breanna NguyĖĆŖn and Michael Prinzing, set out to explicate what we mean when we say that someone is a badass. It isnāt obvious, they say, because both Genghis Khan and Malala Yousafzai could be described as badasses, but āthese two people are about as different from each other as one could imagineā. Well, quite.
The researchers used a series of online surveys to clarify what sorts of people did and didnāt count as badasses. This revealed, they say, that ābadassā is a concept with two layers. There is a superficial meaning, which relates to being physically strong or having a āformidable presenceā. But there is also a deeper, inner meaning relating to āmoral resilience and courageā.
According to the authors, Yousafzai exemplifies this inner badassness, while Khan is more about external badassery. Feedback isnāt so sure: we have read John Manās biography of Khan and he displayed remarkable courage in tight spots. Still, the inner/outer badass distinction sounds plausible.
In our quieter moments, Feedback sometimes enjoys research like this that digs into the subtle meanings of everyday terms. The classic example is Harry Frankfurtās book . Frankfurt was a philosopher who drew a distinction between lying ā telling untruths for the purpose of explicitly misleading someone ā and bullshitting, or telling untruths without regard for truth or falsehood in order to serve oneās own purpose.
On Bullshit is a useful thing to read because it takes something we all implicitly understand and makes it explicit. With the concept clarified, it becomes easier to spot examples, hence the June paper bluntly titled āā. Also, it is nice to have a word that is both a precise piece of terminology and an enabler of prolific swearing. Frankfurt, we think, was a badass.
Emus in flight
On 15 November, CBS News reported that two āā emus (is there any other kind?) were on the run in South Carolina. They had apparently escaped three months earlier, but their flight hadnāt garnered any attention ā until 43 monkeys escaped from a medical research facility in the same state. As of 18 November, . Faced with a horde of marauding monkeys on the run, journalists started looking for similar stories and found (or rather, didnāt find) the rogue emus.
Feedback would never stoop so low as a local police department, which posted that they were āā. But we do want to echo the point made by on Bluesky: āā? It is a good question, because, you see, the emus are called Thelma and Louise.
If the US authorities are unable to recapture the birds, they could take notes from the Australians, who against wild emus in 1932. True, , but failure is the best teacher.
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