2026年5月25日 星期一

大烤箱:當地球按下「關機鍵」

 

大烤箱:當地球按下「關機鍵」

如果你想知道文明崩潰是什麼滋味,看一眼溫度計就夠了。2026 年的今天,中東、印度與巴基斯坦的大部分地區已成了名副其實的壓力鍋。當濕球溫度突破 35°C,人體便徹底喪失了自我降溫的功能。這時候,躲在陰涼處、狂喝水都救不了你;沒有冷氣,就是死刑。這已經不是什麼氣候變遷的政治辯論,這是地球在發出宣告:某些土地,不再適合人類生存。

與此同時,曾經的「世界糧倉」美國,正經歷 1890 年以來最嚴重的旱災。這簡直是場恐怖的惡作劇:南方熱到人無法站立,北方的農田卻乾成了粉末。農業與畜牧業,這些支撐我們生存的文明基石,正如骨牌般倒下。過去幾十年,我們忙著爭論碳排放的數據,卻忽略了糧食供應鏈的脆弱性。如今,飢荒不再是預言,而是進行式。

歷史其實就是人類不斷向溫帶遷徙、逐水草而居、囤積穀物的過程。我們總天真地以為,就算天氣變壞,也能靠資本運作來解決。但你沒辦法吃下鈔票,也不能靠「投資」讓枯萎的作物起死回生。人性中最幽暗的一面就是:我們永遠只在超市貨架空空如也時,才會想起危機感。長久以來,我們將氣候惡化視為「遠方的瑣事」,現在,烈日已至,飢餓就在家門口。

我們打造了一個追求永恆增長的文明,卻忘了增長的前提是環境的穩定。我們把地球當作一間永遠不會倒閉的子公司,肆意揮霍。現在,環境的利潤率已歸零,自然正在對人類這個物種進行「清算」。當氣溫動輒突破 50°C,當糧食停止生長,那些精密的全球供應鏈、那些冠冕堂皇的政治談判,都會像空氣一樣蒸發。剩下的,只有人類對熱量最原始、最卑微的渴求。歡迎來到「大烤箱」時代,希望你手邊還有足夠的水。


The Great Oven: When the Planet Hits the "Off" Switch

 

The Great Oven: When the Planet Hits the "Off" Switch

If you ever wanted to know what the end of civilization feels like, look at the thermometer. It’s 2026, and large swathes of the Middle East, India, and Pakistan have become literal pressure cookers. When the wet-bulb temperature hits 35°C, the human body loses its ability to cool itself. It doesn't matter if you're in the shade or how much water you drink; without air conditioning, your internal organs simply begin to cook. We aren't just talking about climate change anymore; we’re talking about the planet deciding that certain regions are no longer compatible with human life.

Meanwhile, the "breadbasket" of the world, the United States, is enduring its worst drought since 1890. It’s a convenient, if terrifying, coincidence: just as the heat makes it impossible to work outside in the Global South, the soil in the West has turned to dust. Agriculture and livestock—the very pillars of our species' survival—are grinding to a halt. We have spent decades debating the politics of temperature while ignoring the reality of the food chain. Now, the famine isn't a prediction; it’s a logistics report.

History is the story of humans migrating toward temperate climates, building empires around rivers, and hoarding grain. We’ve always assumed that if the weather turned, we could just buy our way out of it. But you cannot eat money, and you cannot "invest" your way out of a dead field. The darker side of our nature is that we only panic when the grocery store shelves go bare. For years, we ignored the warning signs because they were "distant." Now, the heat is global, and the hunger is local.

We built a world optimized for eternal growth, forgetting that growth requires a stable environment. We treated the earth like a disposable asset, a corporate subsidiary that would never go bankrupt. Now that the margins have evaporated and the climate is demanding a massive write-down of our species, we are realizing that our sophisticated global supply chains are incredibly fragile. When the heat hits 50°C and the wheat stops growing, the fancy technology and the political debates disappear. All that’s left is the primal, desperate scramble for calories. Welcome to the era of the Great Oven—hope you brought enough water.



AAA級的幻覺:為什麼聰明人總是不長進?

 

AAA級的幻覺:為什麼聰明人總是不長進?

2008 年的美國,全世界都瘋了。當金融機構開始在街頭物色流浪漢,給他們一點錢讓他們簽名買房時,這場荒謬劇就已經注定以悲劇收場。當時的頂尖金融菁英們,深信自己透過諾貝爾獎等級的複雜公式,能將借給遊民的錢包裝成「AAA頂級信貸」。這不只是貪婪,這是一種集體的精神錯亂。

當時,所有「金融專家」都信誓旦旦地說,次貸不過是 3,000 億美元的小事,絕不會衝擊整體經濟。結果呢?結局是數十萬億美元的崩盤,差點讓全球經濟直接陪葬。人類歷史不斷地重演著同樣的劇本:當我們自以為能繞過常理,用數學模型凌駕於現實之上時,我們通常距離毀滅也就不遠了。

這種拒絕接受現實的病態,在美國頁岩油的發展史上又上演了一次。2011 年,當我說美國即將開發頁岩油、並轉型為能源淨出口國時,所有人都在嘲笑我。當時的「主流共識」像宗教一樣堅定:他們說開採一桶頁岩油至少要 300 美元,在當時的油價下根本不可能。

但現實永遠比模型更有趣。你根本不需要什麼高深的經濟模型,只需要親自走到港口,看看那些天然氣港口的吃水線,看看船隻是在卸貨還是裝貨,一切就一清二楚。我去加州北部的港口看過了,碼頭吃水線顯示它們正在出口。數據可以造假,理論可以過時,但物理現象從不說謊。

歷史的墓地裡埋葬的,全是那些自以為比現實聰明的人。我們太過迷戀複雜的公式,卻忘記了最簡單的觀察力。從給遊民貸款到忽視能源革命,人類最黑暗的本性就是:我們寧願被自己的聰明才智所欺騙,也不願承認常識的珍貴。當我們對「專家意見」的迷信超過了對實體世界的觀察時,我們就已經把自己送上了祭壇。


The AAA Delusion: How the "Smart" Money Learns Nothing

 

The AAA Delusion: How the "Smart" Money Learns Nothing

In 2008, the world economy didn't just stumble; it threw itself off a cliff while convinced it was flying. The subprime mortgage crisis remains the ultimate monument to human arrogance. Financial institutions, operating on the assumption that they had "solved" risk with Nobel Prize-winning formulas, were literally hunting for vagrants on the street, handing them a few dollars to sign mortgage agreements, and classifying these "investments" as AAA-rated gold. It wasn't just incompetence; it was a mass hallucination funded by greed.

The "experts" insisted the subprime market was a manageable $300 billion rounding error. They were wrong by tens of trillions. When reality finally set in, the global financial architecture folded like a house of cards. It’s a recurring theme in human history: the moment we think we’ve engineered a way to bypass basic common sense, we’re usually about five minutes away from total catastrophe.

We see this same pathological inability to accept physical reality in the story of shale oil. Back in 2011, when I pointed out that the U.S. was on the cusp of becoming a net energy exporter, the "intellectual" establishment labeled me a lunatic. The consensus was a religious dogma: extraction costs were allegedly $300 a barrel, so shale was economically impossible.

But here’s the lesson the ivory tower refuses to learn: you don’t need an algorithm to know if a boat is loading or unloading. You don't need a PhD to see the water line on a tanker. I went to the import terminals in Northern California and saw them being retrofitted for export. I saw the ships riding high because they were taking product out, not bringing it in. The math of the "experts" was a fantasy; the physical reality at the dock was undeniable.

History is a graveyard of "brilliant" people who preferred the comfort of their own complex models over the simplicity of looking out a window. Whether it’s loaning money to homeless people or ignoring the shale boom, the darker side of human nature remains constant: we love to be deceived by our own cleverness. We treat common sense as an obsolete relic, only to find that when the music stops, it’s the only thing that could have saved us.



法庭上的荒謬劇:當「同情心」成為犯罪的共犯

 

法庭上的荒謬劇:當「同情心」成為犯罪的共犯

英國法庭正在上演一場令人作嘔的荒謬劇。三名強姦兩名13歲少女、並將過程放上網炫耀的少年,最終竟毋須入獄。法官的理由冠冕堂皇:他們有ADHD、智商低、是「未成年人」。在法官那柔軟的判辭中,原本殘暴的集體輪姦,被簡化成了「成長過程中的誤入歧途」。

受害少女形容法官的判決「像一塊大石直接砸向我的臉」。這不只是對犯罪事實的輕判,這是對受害者尊嚴的二次、甚至三次凌虐。當法官說出「你們今天無人需要入獄」時,他實際上宣告了:在法律的天平上,少女破碎的靈魂,遠比這三名施暴者的「前途」輕得多。

這正是現代法律體系走火入魔的終局。當體系將過多的心力放在拆解罪犯的心理成因——例如他們多無知、多容易受朋輩影響,甚至診斷出什麼心理缺陷——時,我們其實是在無意中抹除了罪犯的「主體性」。我們把這群有預謀、有拍攝、有慫恿的施暴者,變成了被環境所害的「受害者」。這種過度「覺醒」的司法判決,正在將正義變成一場表演,一場完全忽略了受害者真實痛苦的表演。

首相Keir Starmer的反應,更是政治操作的典型。如果沒有BBC的專訪,如果沒有排山倒海的輿論,他大概會繼續裝聾作啞。政客永遠不在乎正義,他們只在乎風向。等到民憤沸騰到壓不住了,才急忙出來裝作正義使者,這一切顯得如此虛偽且令人厭倦。

歷史無數次證明,一個社會如果無法分辨「真正的弱勢」與「披著弱勢外衣的掠食者」,它就離崩潰不遠了。我們現在正在做的事,就是用醫學術語來為邪惡開脫。這不是進步,這是集體的道德失能。當少女們挺身作供後,換來的是司法對她們受難經驗的否定,我們其實是在告訴所有受害者:你們的清白、你們的痛苦,在體制眼中根本一文不值。

如果法律保護的是加害者,而不是那些被奪去童年的孩子,那麼這台巨大的司法機器,不僅僅是失靈,它根本就是社會契約的毀滅者。


The Judicial Theater of the Absurd: When Empathy Becomes an Accomplice

 

The Judicial Theater of the Absurd: When Empathy Becomes an Accomplice

There is a grotesque sort of performance art occurring in the British courtroom. Three teenage boys—who treated the sexual violation of two 13-year-old girls as content for their social media feeds—walked away from a rape conviction without spending a single day behind bars. The judge’s reasoning? They are "children," they suffer from ADHD, and they have low IQs. In the eyes of the law, the horrific reality of gang rape has been smoothed over by the soft, padded language of rehabilitation and "youthful indiscretion."

The victim’s words are chilling: "The words hit like a rock straight in my face." She is not just mourning the loss of her innocence; she is mourning the death of justice. When a judge tells a convicted rapist, "None of you need to go to prison today," he isn't just delivering a sentence; he is delivering a verdict on the value of the victim’s life. He is signaling that a girl’s trauma is secondary to the "potential" of her abusers.

This is the logical endpoint of a legal system that has replaced the cold, hard administration of justice with the performative, "woke" obsession with the offender's psyche. We are told to focus on the "systemic disadvantages" of the perpetrators—their ADHD, their upbringing, their "lack of consent awareness." But in doing so, we have completely erased the agency of the victim. We have created a world where it is structurally easier to account for the neurodivergence of a rapist than the shattered reality of the girl he assaulted.

The Prime Minister’s late, reactive response to the public outcry is just as predictable as the verdict itself. He waited for a BBC interview to validate the victim's pain before deigning to suggest an appeal. It confirms that the system does not care about the crime; it only cares about the optics.

History is filled with societies that lost their way because they stopped distinguishing between the truly vulnerable and those who are merely predatory. When we start using medical and developmental labels to excuse acts of profound evil, we aren't being "progressive." We are participating in the third victimization: the judicial erasure of the crime. If we continue to prioritize the "future" of the predator over the basic right to safety of the young, we aren't just failing our children—we are inviting a collapse of the very social contract that makes life in a civilized society possible.



善良的貨幣:拉麵店裡的靈魂重構

 

善良的貨幣:拉麵店裡的靈魂重構

我們習慣透過宏大的政治變局或經濟數據來解讀歷史,但真正支撐人類文明存續的,往往是那些發生在街角巷弄裡、微不足道卻又深刻的互動。那個關於「一碗拉麵」的故事,之所以讓人讀來心緒難平,不僅是因為母子三人的堅韌,更因為那對老闆夫婦展現了一種近乎本能的、高貴的善良。

在故事的背景裡,充滿了現代社會最殘酷的元素:父親早逝、債務纏身、社會的冷眼。面對這些,母子三人為了僅剩的一點尊嚴,只能縮衣節食,甚至卑微地共點一碗麵。這是一個典型的「體制外困境」。然而,老闆夫婦並沒有將他們視為拉低人均消費的麻煩,反而透過隱密的「加量」,編織了一個讓孩子們相信自己依然是被愛、是被這個社會所包容的幻象。

這不僅是救濟,這是對「自我認同」的重構工程。

人性中有一種深層的渴望:我們希望自己是有價值的。在最艱難的時刻,如果有人能給我們一個「你沒問題」、「你值得更好」的暗示,那往往就是支撐我們走出泥淖的唯一支點。老闆夫婦那句誠懇的「新年快樂」,比任何政府的救濟補助更具力量,因為那是一份平等的尊重。他們沒有讓那個家庭感覺到「被施捨」,而是讓他們感覺到「被期待」。

我們生活在一個精密計算的時代,企業精算利潤,政府精算補助。我們習慣將人簡化為數據,將生活簡化為交易。但在這個故事裡,我們看到了一種反制這種「精緻利己」的邏輯。老闆夫婦投入的不過是幾團麵條,收穫的卻是兩代人對於生命的敬畏與報答。

在這個充滿算計的世界裡,我們常因為恐懼虧損而變得吝嗇。但歷史告訴我們,最頂級的策略,往往不是掠奪,而是賦能。當你願意在自己的店裡留下一張「預約席」,為那些被世界遺忘的人留一個位置時,你其實是在為一個更溫暖的社會播種。這不是廉價的雞湯,這是最深沉的社會學法則:善良,是我們能在這混亂世道中,彼此取暖的唯一貨幣。