عاجل
Newsgather
BackThe billionaire death cult has humanity by the throat
The billionaire death cult has humanity by the throat
عاجل
Guardian Business23.04.2026Opinion4 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

The billionaire death cult has humanity by the throat

The collapse of the Atlantic circulation system is now more likely than not – yet the public is kept in the dark

نظرة سريعة

  • Scientists now believe there's over 50% chance the Atlantic circulation system (AMOC) will collapse by mid-century, causing catastrophic climate impacts across Europe, the Americas and Antarctica.
  • Yet this existential threat remains underreported, as billionaire-owned media and climate models downplay catastrophic risks while promoting minimal climate action.

ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي

لماذا يهم

The AMOC is a crucial ocean current system that transports heat from the tropics to the North Atlantic. Climate change is altering seawater temperature and salinity, potentially triggering collapse. Previous research categorized AMOC collapse as 'low probability, high impact' but recent studies now suggest over 50% probability by mid-century.

حجم الخط

The poor and middle pay taxes, the rich pay accountants, the very rich pay lawyers – and the ultra-rich pay politicians. It’s not an original remark, but it bears repeating until everyone has heard it. The more money billionaires accumulate, the greater their control of the political system – which means they pay less tax, which means they accumulate more, which means their control intensifies. They reshape the world to suit their demands. One of the symptoms of the pathology known as “billionaire brain” is an inability to see beyond their own short-term gain. They would sack the planet for a few more stones on the pointless mountain of wealth. And we can see it happening. Last week delivered the biggest news of the year so far, perhaps the biggest news of the century. But partly because billionaires own most of the media, most people never heard it. We might find ourselves committed to a civilisation-ending event before we even learn that such a thing is possible. The news is that the state of a crucial oceanic circulation system has been reassessed by scientists. Some now believe that, as a result of climate breakdown changing the temperature and salinity of seawater, it is more likely than not to collapse. This system – known as the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc) – delivers heat from the tropics to the North Atlantic. Recent research suggests that if it shuts down, it could cause both a massive drop in average winter temperatures in northern Europe and drastic changes in the Amazon’s water cycles. This could help tip the rainforest into cascading collapse and trigger further disaster. Amoc’s shutdown is likely also to cause an acceleration of sea level rise on the east coast of the US, threatening cities. It could also raise Antarctic temperatures by roughly 6C and release a vast pulse of carbon currently stored in the Southern Ocean, accelerating climate catastrophe. Even when the countervailing effects of generalised global heating are taken into account, a further paper proposes, the net impact in northern Europe would be periods of extreme cold – including events in which temperatures in London fall to -19C, in Edinburgh to -30C and in Oslo to -48C. Sea ice in February would extend as far as Lincolnshire. Our climate would change drastically, with the likelihood of far greater extremes, such as massive winter storms. Rain-fed arable agriculture would become impossible almost everywhere in the UK. This shift, on any realistic human scale, would be irreversible. Its speed is likely to outrun our ability to adapt. Amoc shutdowns, driven by natural climate variability, have happened before. But not in the era of large-scale human civilisation. The first paper proposing that Amoc might have an on-state and an off-state was published in 1961. Since then, many studies have confirmed the finding and explored potential triggers and likely implications. Until recently, Amoc collapse caused by human activity fell into the category of a “high impact, low probability” event, devastating if it happens, but unlikely to occur. Research over the past few years prompted a reassessment: it began to look more like a “high impact, high probability” event. Now, in response to last week’s paper, Prof Stefan Rahmstorf – perhaps the world’s leading authority on the subject – says the chances of a shutdown look like “more than 50%”. We could pass the tipping point, he says, “in the middle of this century”. So why is this not all over the news? Why is it not the top priority for the governments that claim to protect us from harm? Well, in large part because oligarchic power has championed a model of climate impact that bears little relation to reality: that is, they have a hypothesis about how the world works that is completely detached from scientific findings. This model underpins official responses to the climate crisis. It began with the work of the economist William Nordhaus, who sought to assess the economic effects of global heating. His modelling suggests that a “socially optimal” level of heating is between 3.5C and 4C. Most climate scientists see a temperature rise of this kind as catastrophic. Even 6C of heating, Nordhaus suggests, would cause a loss of just 8.5% of GDP. Climate science suggests it would look more like curtains for civilisation. As the eminent economists Nicholas Stern, Joseph Stiglitz and Charlotte Taylor have argued, the mild effects Nordhaus forecasts are merely artefacts of the model he has used. For example, his modelling assumes that catastrophic risks do not exist and that climate impacts rise linearly with temperature. There is no climate model that proposes such a trend. Instead, climate science forecasts nonlinear impacts and greatly escalating risk. The likely impacts of high levels of heating include the inundation of major cities, the closure of the human climate niche (the conditions that sustain human life) across large parts of the globe, the collapse of the global food system and cascading regime shifts – that is, abrupt transitions in ecosystems – releasing natural carbon stores, potentially leading to a “hothouse Earth” in which very few survive. Never mind a few points off GDP: there would be no means of measurement and scarcely an economy to measure. Bizarrely, the modelling also applies discount rates to future people: their lives, it assumes, are worth less than ours. In other words, it has taken a method used to calculate returns to capital and applied it to human beings. As the three economists point out, “it is very difficult to find a justification for this in moral philosophy.” Moreover, climate impacts disproportionately affect the poor – but under the models, their lives are also priced down. Unsurprisingly, models of this kind, Stern, Stiglitz and Taylor note, have been seized on by “special interests” such as the fossil fuel industry to argue for minimal responses to the climate crisis. And it’s not just the oil companies. Bill Gates, who claims to want to protect the living planet, has given $3.5m (£2.6m) to a junktank run by Bjorn Lomborg, who has built his career on promoting Nordhaus’s model, thus helping to downplay the need for climate action. Nordhaus was awarded the Nobel Memorial prize for economics for his pernicious nonsense – and it is deeply embedded in government decision-making. A billionaire death cult has its fingers around humanity’s throat. It both causes and downplays our existential crisis. The oligarchs are not just a class enemy but, as they have always been, a societal enemy: a few thousand people can destroy civilisations. It’s the billions v the billionaires, and the stakes could not possibly be higher.

أسئلة مفتوحة

  • Will governments take meaningful action once the public is informed?
  • Can billionaire influence on climate policy be counteracted?
  • Is there still time to prevent AMOC collapse?

مواضيع ذات صلة

This article was originally published by Guardian Business.

أخبار ذات صلة

Britain's Falling Healthy Life Expectancy Is a National Scandal
يتطور·03.05.2026

Britain's Falling Healthy Life Expectancy Is a National Scandal

Analysis from the Health Foundation reveals a devastating two-year decline in healthy life expectancy in Britain, with the UK now ranking 20th out of 21 high-income countries, just above the US. Worsening mental health among younger adults shows the sharpest deterioration, while the pandemic is not to blame. By 2028, when retirement age rises to 67, the average person will be in poor health over six years before stopping work. Huge geographical disparities exist, with London improving while Blackpool and Hartlepool see steepest declines.

Guardian Business
Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances
Opinion·03.05.2026

Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances

Princeton professor Tom Griffiths argues that human intelligence will remain special despite AI advances because our cognitive abilities evolved in response to specific biological constraints – finite lifespans, limited brain capacity, and communication through speech. While AI systems can process more data and scale their capabilities, they lack the breadth of human experience and struggle with tasks humans find simple. Griffiths contends that intelligence isn't a single scale like height, but rather encompasses many different ways of being smart, and AI will ultimately be better at some things and worse at others rather than universally superhuman.

Guardian Tech
The price of exposure: how Britain's dependence creates vulnerability
يتطور·01.05.2026

The price of exposure: how Britain's dependence creates vulnerability

The Bank of England's warning that food inflation could reach 7% exposes Britain's systemic vulnerability to geopolitical shocks. An analysis argues that UK key sectors run on thin margins with no resilience reserves, while digital infrastructure and energy dependence on the Strait of Hormuz create critical exposure. Former Trump official Fiona Hill warned the UK homeland is 'back on the pitch' as Russia conducts sabotage and cyber-attacks, urging a political narrative linking security to everyday life that British politics currently lacks.

Guardian Business
The case for an AI slop tax
يتطور·30.04.2026

The case for an AI slop tax

With 57% of voters believing AI risks outweigh benefits and 74% thinking government isn't doing enough to regulate it, the political moment for AI legislation is ripe. The author argues for a 1% "slop tax" on AI companies to combat the flood of low-quality AI-generated content that threatens human creativity and cultural institutions. The revenue would fund grants for artists, researchers, and cultural institutions—the very groups whose work trained these AI models.

Guardian Business
The unwinnable race: How the manosphere's logic is destroying Luka Dončić
يتطور·29.04.2026

The unwinnable race: How the manosphere's logic is destroying Luka Dončić

This opinion piece examines how the toxic masculinity ideologies of the manosphere have infiltrated sports culture, using Luka Dončić as a primary example. The article argues that NBA players, like Dončić, are now subjected to the same impossible body standards that have long plagued female athletes. Despite Dončić's Hall of Fame-level talent and championship success, media and fans obsess over his conditioning and weight rather than his court performance. The piece connects this to a broader societal shift where worth is seen as conditional—something that must be earned through visible performance—leaving even elite athletes unable to meet unrealistic standards.

Guardian Sport
المزيد حول هذا الموضوعamoc collapse