The problem is people are expecting the asteroid impact, or the single point where "civilization is collapsed."
These aren't helpful and aren't realistic. Even historical societal collapses happen over periods of centuries, often.
It's foolish to simply dismiss threats because people make bad predictions. We can already see increases in rare weather events right now, and these have already had significant geopolitical consequences (e.g. Syria).
Or it's an ongoing cautionary narrative that we shouldn't take our civilizational accomplishments forgranted, and that government and civic works are ultimately a long chain of development and stewardship which depended on those before to keep going.
These aren't helpful and aren't realistic. Even historical societal collapses happen over periods of centuries, often.
It's foolish to simply dismiss threats because people make bad predictions. We can already see increases in rare weather events right now, and these have already had significant geopolitical consequences (e.g. Syria).