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Regardless of the underlying issue, evidence etc, I think it would be very hard to argue with the notion that the skeptics are certainly becoming a lot more visible.One thing I can say, it seems to me the skeptics are increasing in number.
A lot of things concerning the environment have followed that same basic pattern over the years - nucelar, waste disposal, dams, logging, pollution in general. Ignored at first, then ridiculed and claimed not to be a problem, then accepted as fact and often as a "good thing" and then later the subject of a divisive battle by an increasing group of dissenters. It's all cyclical this stuff...
Yay, I officially have a stalker now, how cool is that!
Flannery et al have nothing more than a hypothesis. One that fails to predict anything at all, therefore, not qualified as theory.Ummm ... without raiding my book collection and searching the net for things I have read, I can 'refer' to a couple of books that come to mind:
1. The Chaos Point, The World at the Crossroads. Ervin Laszlo. (Good read by the way, not just climate, yet on all aspects of how we should think of creating a better place to live - that’s if you think we need it).
2. The Weather Makers. Tim Flannnery - A VERY BIG alarmist.
3. Hot, Flat, and Crowded. Thomas L. Friedman. (Great book).
Without having to read them again to find the page and exact quote, there are references to the 'effect' of global warming as being something that has occurred in the past - many times, and that it will happen as a natural consequence of how 'things work'. Earths rotation, environmental factors, etc.
However, if I recall, this is a natural process which occurs over time, and that it is gradual.
From their, and others I have read, their point is that we are polluting so much that we are speeding up this natural process, and while it cant be stopped when it occurs naturally, it could be planned for. So, given we are speeding this process up by many 10's of thousands of yrs we are bringing something forward that is more rapid and possibly doesn’t give us time - if we ignore it, to make plans, try and effect the outcome, or effect the consequences.
Let’s just say the polar caps do melt. If we had time, recognised it, and prepared for it we could better understand who (places by the water) would be effected, and thus make plans for those who would be displaced to be relocated.
My point is not to either agree or disagree, yet I think there is a reasonable amount of 'evidence' to suggest we as a people are doing a pretty crap job for the environment on the whole, so we should, where possible make changes to either stop, or slow down - even halt (if we could somehow), what is apparently inevitable in nature.
The notion of a global problem I can accept even though I'm unconvinced as to the severity (open mind there).While I agree broadly with this, the one thing that does worry me is that this is - if you believe it - a true global problem, with very real global consequences. If you believe there is a problem of course.
Don't flatter yourself that I would stalk an easybeat like you. I just like exposing frauds, especially those who claim to be university educated and yet admit they have no credibility, pretend to be clever and have a poor grasp of English.
Boys, boys, boys. Let's focus on the weather and not each other PUHLEASE!
Flannery et al have nothing more than a hypothesis. One that fails to predict anything at all, therefore, not qualified as theory.
How we pollute this earth is a disgrace. This should be addressed. It isn't in any substantive way.
The focus on co2 and AGW detracts from the real factors and is a red herring. Yes, we should urgently address general pollution, waste and LAND USE. But the co2 argument is fallacious, it is a minor player in CC and it's role in climate change has been VASTLY overstated and misrepresented to policy makers.
http://climatesci.org
I am not even sure that those so called alarmists doubt that this is a "normal occurrence". The one thing I have taken away from the whole Climate debate over the years is that it is not the fact that this does happen naturally, it’s that we have accelerated a process by 10's, of not 100's of thousands of years.
Do you think this is being caused by CO2 emissions?
Regardless of the underlying issue, evidence etc, I think it would be very hard to argue with the notion that the skeptics are certainly becoming a lot more visible.
1988 it was accepted as fact, the only questions being how bad it would be, when it would happen and what we could do about it.
21 years later there's a lot more visible dissent on the basic notion that CO2 is a problem, suggesting that the greenhouse effect / global warming / climate change is following the same basic path as do many things. Ignored, ridiculed, accepted as fact and then challenged.
A lot of things concerning the environment have followed that same basic pattern over the years - nucelar, waste disposal, dams, logging, pollution in general. Ignored at first, then ridiculed and claimed not to be a problem, then accepted as fact and often as a "good thing" and then later the subject of a divisive battle by an increasing group of dissenters. It's all cyclical this stuff...
They will be gratified to learn that they have the blessing of someone called Knobby22, providing they follow his advice.
Sure, this might be a little simple when things like pollution from mining etc need to be considered, yet what is the approach to take when there are so many vested interest groups?
Do you think this is being caused by CO2 emissions?
Serious question here.We don’t need plastic bags from shops, so stop them being made. It’s very simple. Don’t ask companies to apply for piss-ant $3 and $5 million grants to develop ways for cars to run clearer, pass a law that makes them do it from their own money and give them 10 yrs, and I bet pounds to pennies there will be a solution in 5 yrs, not 10.
Sure, some will be hurt, some jobs lost; maybe a few things might cost more, yet so what? There will be new jobs created, and for a few extra cents, I'm happy to pay if it means that the air I breathe is clean.
Serious question here.
What is the effect on:
1. land use / salinity / water
2. CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions
From a ban on plastic bags. It would seem to me that any such ban will fix one problem whilst increasing both of those two.
ALL power pollutes. Coal, oil and gas spew out CO2. Hydro floods the wilderness. Nuclear is dangerous beyond belief when you consider the risks of war or natural disaster over the next 100,000 years. Wind turbines kill the birds. Solar panels need lots of energy-intensive and polluting materials to make. Large scale biomass starts with old growth logging to clear the land. And so on...
ALL power pollutes in some way, the only question is what form we'd prefer the pollution to take. As I've said many times here, I'd rather a flooded river (the damage from which is reversible in a few decades at most) or the scenery blighted by wind turbines or solar thermal plants (easily reversible - - just dismantle them and plant trees on the land) than have a 10,000+ year problem with CO2 or nuclear waste. But I won't argue that the non-fossil non-nuclear power sources don't pollute because in a way they certainly do.
No Calliope, I think the C02 emmissions are coming from the "GRASS" that stocksontheblock smokes.
It also affects how the brain operates. You know what I mean---- all FUSSY-FUSSY. A lot of those Uni students get hooked on the stuff.
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