A Heads-Up on Posting, Study Focus, and Climate Tribe Social

A note to followers and the public


I want to share a brief but important update about my posting schedule, the direction of my study work, and the continued preparation of Climate Tribe Social.

I am not going to stop posting to ClimateChangeCommunity.com or the other sites under the Climate Change Community umbrella. That work continues. However, I will be decreasing my posting a small bit while I concentrate on preparing Climate Tribe Social for a new format, a clearer function, and a stronger community-centered purpose.

A shift in the study section

The study section at cCcmty.com will cease for a specific reason. My personal study focus is moving elsewhere for now. This may be one of the only times I mention Adaptive-Resiliency.info in this public way, but my study work around adaptation, resiliency, critical thinking, influence, listening, climate reality, and AI-assisted learning will continue there.

If that changes, I will update it there through a blog post. Adaptive-Resiliency.info is different from the public-facing sites connected to Climate Change Community. It is much more personal, reflective, and journal-based. Anyone interested should first read the Home and About pages there to understand its purpose before assuming it functions like the rest of the Climate Change Community network.

Climate Tribe Social is still moving forward

Climate Tribe Social will still include a public community-based Adaptive Resiliency space. It will also function as part of the broader Control Center direction, including an 11-person dialogue session function designed to support deeper discussion, practical learning, and serious climate-related cooperation.

That matters because the Climate and Ecological Emergency is not only a science issue, a policy issue, or an energy issue. It is also a communication issue, a preparedness issue, a community issue, and a reality-facing issue. We need places where people can ask questions, study together, build adaptive capacity, and speak with each other in ways that are honest but still grounded in respect.

On climate science, denial, and public pressure

Sometimes I honestly wonder if I am the unreasonable one, because the number of people who deny, dismiss, or willfully argue against climate science can appear very high. But appearance is not always reality.

Some people are loud because they are confident. Some are loud because they are misinformed. Some are loud because their ideology gives them permission to ignore evidence. Others may understand more than they say, but remain silent because they are fearful, exhausted, pressured, or unsure whether speaking up will matter.

I respect people having personal faith. What I do not respect is the use of religious or political ideology to reject climate science, attack those who take it seriously, or make preparation harder for everyone else. The physical world does not pause because a belief system finds the evidence inconvenient. Heat, flooding, drought, storms, food-system stress, ecological decline, public-health risk, and infrastructure vulnerability do not require public agreement before they arrive.

This is one reason I keep returning to adaptation and resiliency. We need to reduce emissions, but we also need to prepare for what is already unfolding. Denial does not protect families. Delay does not protect communities. Misinformation does not protect infrastructure. Only serious learning, planning, cooperation, and action can move us in the right direction.

The fossil-fuel narrative and the pace of change

The political narrative in the United States has been heavily shaped by fossil-fuel influence, industry messaging, culture-war framing, and the constant effort to make clean-energy progress seem either unrealistic or threatening. Meanwhile, many other places around the world are moving with far more urgency in renewable energy, electrification, and related clean-energy progress.

That does not mean nothing is moving here. Progress is happening. Renewable energy is growing. Electric vehicles, batteries, heat pumps, grid modernization, and climate policy are all part of the transition. But the pace is still not what it should be, especially when the need is so urgent and the evidence is so clear.

One example is the constant advertising and cultural reinforcement around new gas-powered vehicles. It is everywhere. That matters because many consumers are being encouraged to keep investing in technology that may become increasingly expensive, restricted, or difficult to align with future low-emissions requirements. People deserve honest information before they make major purchases that could affect them for many years.

This is not about pretending the transition is easy. It is not easy. It requires infrastructure, affordability, reliability, charging access, better public policy, and stronger consumer protection. But it is unjust to keep delaying the truth while ordinary people are left to carry the cost of confusion.

Why I am adjusting my focus

With fossil-fuel interests, ideological resistance, and other unethical forces still shaping so much of the public conversation, I believe it is important to focus my energy where it can be most useful. For me, that means continuing to post across the Climate Change Community umbrella, but also making room to prepare Climate Tribe Social properly.

It also means protecting my own study process. I need a space where I can keep developing my understanding of adaptation and resiliency without every thought being shaped for public promotion. Adaptive-Resiliency.info gives me that space. Climate Tribe Social will serve a different purpose: public learning, dialogue, preparation, and community function. Both matter, but they are not the same.

A final note

So the message is simple: I am not disappearing, and the Climate Change Community umbrella is not stopping. I am simply adjusting the rhythm while I prepare the next phase with more intention.

For those who believe adaptation and resiliency are serious responsibilities, there will be more to come. For those who reject the need for adaptation and resiliency entirely, Adaptive-Resiliency.info is probably not the place for you. That site is not being built to argue with denial. It is being built as a record of study, reflection, and preparation.

Enough said. I think I got my message across.

Have a great day and Happy Fathers Day.

Mr. Alvarez — Personal Thoughts, AI Enhanced


A father’s love is a steady light that helps his children find their way. 🌟👨‍👧‍👦
Dad: the first hero, the quiet teacher, and the lifelong protector. 🦸‍♂️🛡️❤️
A great father doesn’t just give advice—he lives the example. 🚶‍♂️✨📘
Behind every strong child is a father who believed in them first. 💪👶🙌
A father’s wisdom echoes long after his words are spoken. 🧠💬🌊
Dad’s hands build, guide, protect, and lift us higher. 🛠️🤝⬆️
A father is someone who teaches courage by showing up every day. 🦁📅❤️
The best dads turn ordinary moments into lifelong memories. 📸🏡✨
A father’s heart is a home his children can always return to. ❤️🏠👨‍👧‍👦
Real fatherhood is love in action—patient, strong, and always present. 💙🔥🤲


Source notes used for factual grounding:
U.S. Energy Information Administration: U.S. energy facts and consumption data.
International Energy Agency: Global Energy Review 2025 and Renewables reporting on renewable electricity growth.

Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑

empowerment & inner transformation...

__________________________________

Bryan Parras

An experienced organizer and campaign strategist with over two decades working at the intersection of environmental justice, frontline leadership, and movement building. Focused on advancing environmental justice and building collective power for communities impacted by pollution and extraction. Skilled in strategic organizing, coalition building, and leadership development, managing teams, and designing grassroots campaigns. Excels at communicating complex issues, inspiring action, and promoting collaboration for equitable, resilient movements.

NJTODAY.NET

Your neighborhood in print since 1822

Global Justice Ecology Project

Global Justice Ecology Project (GJEP) explores and exposes the intertwined root causes of social injustice, ecological destruction, and economic domination.

WP Tavern

WordPress News — Free as in Beer.

Raw Soul Food Lifestyle by Sistahintheraw

African, Caribbean & Asian Inspired Flavours for a Raw & Living Plant-Based Food Lifestyle

mydandelionmind.wordpress.com/

Going off on tangents since 2015

Cloak Unfurled

Life is a journey. Let us meet at the intersection and share a story.

alltherawthings

...happily, naturally active...

SGI-UK Bristol, Buddhism

Nichiren Buddhism in Bristol, Nichiren Buddhists in Bristol, Soka Gakkai in Bristol

Zero Creativity Learnings

In Design and Arts

Life is an exhibition

Sarah Rose de Villiers

indigolotusnavigators

Just another WordPress.com site

DER KAMERAD

Για του Χριστού την Πίστη την Αγία και της Πατρίδος την Ελευθερία...!

Auroras Blog

Personal blog about the topics business, marketing, Wordpress, the Internet, and life in general.

The Journey of A Soul

A blog by Chad Lindsey

LWC

is one with unbounded love