Climate crisis is happening now.
We must overcome our problems concerning the economic, weather, drought, pandemics, violence, hunger, drug addictions and homelessness situations.
Here's a look at downtown Phoenix, Arizona's homeless crisis.
Homelessness. Let’s start there.
A place to live, clean water to drink... it's time to stop pretending not to know what's going on and that we have the ability to fix this.
Did you know that the world’s already experiencing what Columbia University calls “Climate Migration: An Impending Global Challenge?”
The UN is saying “All of these circumstances - conflict, natural disasters, and climate change - pose enormous challenges for the international humanitarian community.”
As the ocean
level rises, coastal residents are migrating inland. Today’s fortune can be rendered worthless in the blink of a
market, currency, health crisis or the loss
of a password.
According to climate.gov “In the United States, almost 30% of the population lives in relatively high population-density coastal areas.”
Here's a deeper look at rising ocean levels.
Now is a good time to implement solutions.
Arizona is one of the places climate emergency refugees are already moving to. Since 2016 just Maricopa County's homeless population has nearly tripled. Habitat For Humanity 3D printed its first house in Tempe recently. It’s already sold.
Meet the new home owners.
We must adjust our thinking and tools. LET’S PRINT SOLUTIONS!
Printing housing is fast and economical. With ever greater self-sufficient, environmentally conscious design possibilities, we can build enough housing, greenhouses and water sources.
This radical change in construction techniques was covered on CBS Sunday Morning.
This leg of the journey involves earning, a $2.5 million grant to build a commercial greenhouse here plus, buy a 3D house printer for training and future mission-funding.
So Solutionist - Leave A Comment Below!
About the author
Hi! I’m J. Nayer Hardin, a patent holding inventor, researcher, environmentalist, legalization activist and conductor on the Underground Railroad.
In 1984 I began a grass roots division, CURE, Computer Underground Railroad Enterprises. We’ve trained 3,000+ how to use a computer as a freedom tool. CURE helped make environmental / social changes that dramatically reduced Harlem’s infant mortality and crime rates.
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