I'm currently looking for part-time or casual work; initially a day or two a week, rising to (optionally) anywhere up to four out of the customary seven over the coming months.
The reasons for this are twofold. Firstly, I have conducted an audit of the Katy coffers, and found some buttons, a 1956 ha-penny, a self-signed IOU, and a startled moth. Secondly, since bowing out of my last triumphant engagement, I have gained an average of a kilogram of weight per month. If I must go up a size, the required op-shopping will only further strain the fiscal situation. No, I'm afraid there is nothing else for it but to become once more a productive member of society.
Cory Doctorow recently cited this article which talks about how insurance is a terrible instrument for mitigating climate risk. The standard neoliberal patter on this runs that insurance will send a price signal that steers investment away from environmentally damaging activity and towards adaptive responses.
One problem with this is that the people doing the damage are not necessarily (or even likely to be) the people who will experience the worst of its' effects, so this will do little to prevent investment in — for instance — fossil fuel extraction. In fact, you'll likely see investment flowing away from the uncertain business of keeping populations alive and secure, and directed towards digging up minerals and sludge.