While melting is a very high levels historically and a very real concern, your comment is hyperbole.
While we do lose ice every year and do so at rate much higher than the historical average, we don't actually set a new record every year.
> Melting peaked in 2019, when the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets lost a staggering 612 billion tonnes of ice.
It doesn't seem like we will end up with no polar caps (at least not in our lifetimes), but they will be greatly reduced in size and lead to very significant rises in ocean level.
While we do lose ice every year and do so at rate much higher than the historical average, we don't actually set a new record every year.
> Melting peaked in 2019, when the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets lost a staggering 612 billion tonnes of ice.
It doesn't seem like we will end up with no polar caps (at least not in our lifetimes), but they will be greatly reduced in size and lead to very significant rises in ocean level.