I’m pretty sure they would. It’s not like they’d like to see their seaside properties go underwater within their lifetimes.

  • Achyu@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    Why?
    They’d just need to get property in the safer places.

    I think they’d improve research in automation and AI. So that they can have their stuff, without having to rely on regular people who’d be wiped out or affected by climate change in the long run.

  • eee@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    You wish.

    If I were a sociopathic billionaire I would love some degree of global warming. The more you make part of the world unliveable, the more I can charge people for living conditions.

    I can create bio domes that have clean cool air and charge people to live in there. I’ve now successfully monetized clean air.

  • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    No, it is not the individual action of billionaires but the profit driven nature of capitalism that is killing us. If billionaires were immortal they would simply move to more livable places, kill and impoverish large groups of us to reduce the environmental load or create ecospheres to house themselves while we burn.

    The problem is not that all billionaires are bad people (they are), its that the economic system they uphold necessitates infinite growth on a finite planet. If these billionaires don’t constantly grow their empires then a more evil capitalist willing to exploit others and the environment more efficiently will outcompete them and take their place.

    Being shortsighted isn’t inherent to a billionaire but it is inherent to the system that justifies their existence

  • IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Not at all. Those billionaires will still have massively huge egos that will prevent them from recognizing their own futures will be incredibly shitty.

    They’ll use their wealth in the short term to build bunkers, etc. where they think they’ll be able to continue to live in luxury while the rest of the world burns around them. But no matter how good the bunker and how many supplies they squirrel away, they’ll eventually be forced to return to the real world, and won’t be prepared for the fact that their piles of money will be worthless if the planet is largely uninhabitable.

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    1 month ago

    Lol nope.

    Immortallity is not what drives billionaires.

    One thing over everything else matters.

    The highscore.

    As long as it increases they don’t care about anything else.

  • thirteene@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I’m surprised that no one has mentioned this is essentially the plot of fallout. The billionaires will solve climate change by culling the poor “destroying the world”.

  • trolololol@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I think not, we would just get bigger boats at the sea.

    And maybe they’d build some pyramids or something else crazy rich people do.

  • BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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    1 month ago

    Well, it’s becoming a genuine concern because of the advances of medicine and the growing understanding of the aging process. Imagine a guy like Musk living for a 100 or 200 years, imagine the accumulation of wealth.

    • j4k3@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      That kind of understanding is centuries away from now. There is a lot of hype about medical junk, but it is just that. In the real world, the medical field is a commercial enterprise. It has a 3 sigma standard when all real science requires 5 sigma results to publish or make a claim. The vast majority of medical research is cherry picked which is absolutely unscientific. Go through a major traumatic injury like I have with my spine and you’ll learn just how little humans actually know how to diagnosis and work on.

      Most of the hype is to get and justify grant proposals and to promote dubious commercial endeavors. We still can not even explain or synthesize life, and we’ve barely started to document a sizable chunk of our DNA. Like all the claims about fully mapping the human genome are crap. It is because they call a MASSIVE chunk of it junk DNA even when there is plenty of evidence otherwise.

      Biology is actually the ultimate technology. Once fully understood and mastered it will displace nearly every piece of industrially produced technology of our stone age of silicon. Such a future is inevitable, if we survive, because it is the only way to be long term sustainable and in balance with the environment. When that happens, it will be a time when people live the longest lives possible for a human.

      • BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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        1 month ago

        Of course it’s not a 10 years from now thing, but it’s probably going to happen someday, and a dude like Musk or Trump with an artificially extended lifespan could be absolutely devastating.

  • mydude@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    You think Jimmy Carter would be 100years if he was a homeless person. The age-gap between rich and poor will only get bigger. Don’t know if immortality is possible, but extending life is definitely possible. Extending life to 150 or even 200 is within our grasp, even today.

    • treefrog@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      In older mice the best telomere therapies are increasing lifespan by ~15%. Max human lifespan is currently ~120. So, if those same therapies work on old billionaires they still wouldn’t live past 150.

      Models for extending life in young mice and mice zygotes hit around ~25%.

      200 isn’t within our grasp currently. 150 is if the animal models work on humans. But the treatments work better the younger the animal. Working best on embryos.

      Tldr: It’s unlikely today’s billionaires will live past 150 without a breakthrough in telomere research.

      • mydude@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Telomere therapies is but one path. There are many different paths that each contribute to a longer life in better shape. I’ve seen at least four different therapies, all very promising. I don’t have article links at hand. Point being, that these therapies are so close that they might already be available, for the exploitation-class.

  • Ogmios@sh.itjust.works
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    1 month ago

    Even if they did, they’d never publicly admit it. There’s far too much money invested in the industry.