Since 1993, Europe's butterfly population has dropped 51%
First the butterflies… then the white children. All very sad.
Is this the butterfly effect?
>>220985837good, fuck 'em. very homosexual type of bug. plus they eat your clothes.
>>220985837I typed in "butterfly" in my files to see if I had a relevant reaction image and found this meme I apparently saved in 2020 but hadn't opened since and forgot about. Does it hold up? Does it make you lol?
>>220985867This. There is a pattern for those who notice.
>>220985837fuck butterflies
>>220985882>>220985889>>220985998Jerks! I miss seeing these guys everywhere when I was a kid.
>>220986013>oh yeah im a butter fly I got all the brightest colors mmmm let me sip this nectar>*wings get touched 1 (one) time*>AAAAACCCCKKKKKKKK... MY HECKIN MAGIC POWDERINO... NOW I CANT FLY ANYMORE IM FINNA DIE AAACCCCKKKKKKthey are pretty though thats true
>go driving with parents in the 90's/early 2000's >car covered in dead bugs when we get home >go driving in 2026 >two dead bugs on the windshield
>>220986221you have to drive faster
>>220986241Drive a lot faster today than my parents ever did in our old shitbox that barely reached 100km/h.
>>220986221>In 2004 the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) asked 40,000 motorists in the United Kingdom to attach a sticky PVC film to their number plate. One insect collided with the plate for every 8 kilometres (5 mi) driven.[2][3][4][8][11] No historical data was available for comparison in the UK.[12]>A follow-up study by Kent Wildlife Trust in 2019 used the same methodology as the RSPB survey and resulted in 50% fewer impacts. The research also found that modern cars, with a more aerodynamic body shape, killed more insects than boxier vintage cars.[13]>Another survey was conducted in 2021 by Kent Wildlife Trust and nature conservation charity Buglife, which showed the number of insects sampled on vehicle number plates in Kent decreased by 72% compared to the 2004 results.[14]>In 2025, the now-annual survey conducted by Buglife in Kent found a decline of 66% in flying insects since 2021.[15]Unironically tho what are the implications of this?
>>220986325Increased use of pesticides probably
>>220986358Yeah but what will the short and long term effects be?
>>220986325Well basically insects are one of the foundation stones of the entire global ecosystem. They spread pollen, they are the prey for countless species of animals. Massive chain reaction throughout the entire system. It affects everything. Many local lakes where I live have seen a drastic decline in water quality and fish population due to lack of insects for example. >https://www.umu.se/en/news/extinction-of-insects-affects-water-conditions_5825834/And this affects animals that rely on the fish, they move away, that affects nature which affects other animals....So on. It's bad.
>>220986380>long term effectswho cares? you will be dead anyway.
holy shit I just realized I havent seen a butterfly in years
>>220986458I'm a zoomer, I'll be alive in 50 years (probably) and that is a long term
>>220986325below a certain critical level plants will die off en masse without pollinators and much of the world will desertify for hundreds of thousands of years
>>220986479why do you even want to live that long? there is nothing to look forward to. best case scenario you're a worthless underclass prole in a neo-feudal society ruled by jews, managed by jeets and slowly replacing its base population with negroes. worst case AI tortures us all to slow excruciating death for funsies.
>>220986473good FUCK EMI always hated these faggot bugs the male animal of the species should be strong and violent not a prancing little drag queen butt slut
>>220986519Are you not even slightly interested to see how history progresses? Just look how massively different 1900 was from 1950 from the 2000s. Even if I'm a frail old man I feel like I'd want to live as long as possible just to see what happens next.
>>220986380>short termLess bugs on your windshield and cheaper food on your plate>long termLess wild plants near cropfields and maybe fewer birdsFarmers already use domesticated bees for pollinating their crops, any of those headlines that say if wild bees die out we're gonna starve are bogus
>>220986490If we stop or reverse pesticide use can it reverse the trend?
we've mastered automated bug farms, we're never gonna starve again bros
>>220986490Nah humans will artifically breed tons insects and let them loose before any of that happens
I have observed Cecropia moths on two occasions throughout my life.
>>220986553I can already see the future, it is written in stone. The wave of jeets followed by wave of negroes cannot be stopped or slowed. The civilization I grew up in is already dead and I despise what comes next. Of course for me none of this matters because I will die soon in the war. But even if I could get out the future is bleak and worthless.
Forgot the picture. You really need the picture for this one. They're exactly like this, it's mental
>>220986490not my problem
>>220986604Hitler explicitly warned about this in Mein Kampf. Once it's gone, it's gone forever (or as close to forever as makes no difference for us). And then there will be no possible way to get it back.
>>220985837Is it a 'there are no birds in China' situation? Are their states simply mowing down all insects with pesticides?
>>220986536So why are you still around?
It's climate change. White genocide and the destruction of white industrial goods demand will bring them back. Give your lives to the Jews for the butterflies, white man.
>>220986013Some fucking chink insects ate their food source and now we don’t have them here anymore.
>>220985837We paved over their habitats to house infinity pajeets
virtually no fire flies either