Get an Early Warning for the Apocalypse

If you’re worried about an impending apocalypse then this is the app for you! The Apocalypse Early Warning System is an art project created by Kyle McDonald that is a commentary on the inequities of wealth. The ultra-wealthy tend to have insider information on global events so Kyle figured that if there were to be an apocalypse then the ultra wealthy would be amongst the first to know. And what would the wealthy do? They would flee to their bunkers using their private jets, so the early warning system simply uses private jet flight data to let commoners know that the elite are up to something.

It’s a neat art project that makes wealth inequality clear in a way that we can all understand.

In the event of an imminent nuclear apocalypse, we suspect that many people who have access to private jets will immediately take to the skies and escape city centers. This site tracks this indicator in realtime. The current emergency level is reported on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being an indicator of a likely imminent apocalypse.

For this app, business jets are a fixed aircraft cohort selected from public aircraft metadata by ICAO hex. The filter looks for jet records whose manufacturer, model, or ICAO type matches common business-jet families such as Citation, Gulfstream, Falcon, Global, Challenger, Learjet, Phenom, Praetor, HondaJet, PC-24, Hawker, Beechjet, Eclipse, and Vision Jet. It excludes aircraft marked military and obvious airliners or regional airliners such as Boeing 7xx, Airbus A3xx/A2xx, CRJ airline variants, ERJ/EMB regional jets, MD/DC aircraft, and other large transport categories. It is a practical type-based cohort, not proof of private ownership, passenger identity, or trip purpose.

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Lets’ Ban Private Jets

private jet during sunset

A forward-looking individual decided to start a campaign to ban private jets and it’s gaining steam. The movement to get rid of private jets is growing and now celebrities like Elon Musk and Taylor Swift are getting lambasted in the press about their planet-destroying transportation options. Given how much damage the air industry does to the planet, focussing on banning private jets, which are used by a very tiny percentage of people, should be socially acceptable by everyone.

Maybe we should start championing private trains instead 😉

The argument in favor of banning private jets is a simple one. If you were trying, for whatever reason, to have as large of a carbon footprint as possible, the first thing you would do is fly in a private plane. You would especially do so for very short flights, because taking off is the most energy-intensive part of any flight. A common model of a private plane burns 226 gallons of jet fuel an hour on average. And jet fuel—which is typically not taxed—emits more toxic gasses than gasoline.

Not only is flying in a private plane just about the worst thing one can do for the planet, it is also one of the habits with the easiest substitutes. Private jets emit approximately seven times as much greenhouse gasses as a business class ticket on a commercial airliner, 10 times as much as an economy seat, and some 150 times more than an electric train journey. Although “ban private jets” sounds like a radical argument, it is really quite modest, since rich people would still have any number of ultra-luxurious alternatives at their disposal and plenty of money to hire security guards to ensure the privacy they say flying private ensures.

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