hmmm, how interesting that the US media is not picking up the reports coming out of London and Australia. Wonder why... *cough*AlGore*cough*
8/3/2008 5:26:08 PM
oh, alarmist claims aren't going awayhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/aug/01/climatechange.carbonemissions
8/4/2008 12:15:46 PM
i'm just trying to figure out how they figure we are approaching a "tipping point," when temperatures haven't risen in the past 7 years...and, the guy who wrote that is an idiot. He calls the term "positive feedback" an example of "scientific humour." Umm, no, dumbass. It's an accurate term that refers to one action leading to more of the same action.[Edited on August 4, 2008 at 10:02 PM. Reason : ]
8/4/2008 9:57:58 PM
yes, clearly you only joke that they call it something if you've never encountered the concept before.sometimes i wonder if there are any articles on this that aren't extreme on one side or the other.
8/5/2008 12:49:40 AM
are you trolling me, or the author?
8/5/2008 12:55:59 AM
yes, clearly you the author only jokes that they scientists call it something if you've the author has never encountered the concept before.Sorry, that was not perfectly clear before.
8/5/2008 11:19:20 AM
When Joe Biden said last night in the debate that there is no debate about global warming it really bothered me. Whereas Palin said almost word for word how I feel about it.I've been leaning towards McCain but hadn't completely closed the door on Obama. But that comment from Biden was all I needed to hear. No way my vote for a leader of this country is going to someone with that viewpoint
10/3/2008 7:46:58 AM
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2008/10/03/cold_on_climate_warming/
10/3/2008 8:42:17 AM
I didn't say Palin won the debate, I don't think she did.But to me there's a big difference between someone saying that man may have some effect on climate change and someone saying that without a doubt we're the cause, i.e. Joe Biden.(and thanks for pulling up the transcript)
10/3/2008 8:52:28 AM
Palin:-We are causing climate change-There are also natural climate changes (cyclical?)-We need to do something about itBiden:-It is manmade (i.e. Climate change is caused by us --> We are causing climate change)-We need to do something about itCase in point.
10/3/2008 9:26:39 AM
Well I don't interpret her quotes quite that way, but saying thats how it is...I totally disagree with Biden, and partially disagree with Palin. So its still preferred for me.
10/3/2008 9:40:20 AM
I disagree with Biden insofar as the notion of total human perpetuated climate change. There is no question as to the contribution from natural forces. We must, however, be responsible for what we know we are putting into the atmosphere, land and oceans. Any attempt to obfuscate our part out of sheer ignorance is unacceptable.
10/3/2008 4:33:41 PM
Scientific evidence doesn't matter. These are the same people that think dinosaur bones were put in the ground by God as a test of faith. Science just doesn't apply to them.
10/3/2008 4:39:26 PM
10/3/2008 4:52:21 PM
Biden said "It is manmade".You could make a host of statement regarding the natural element to weather fluctuations that I would agree with, and many of those would correctly modify Biden's statement. But with a 3-word sound bite, I would not be so quick to punish him for neglecting to qualify his statement.Technically, yes, he should have qualified his statement. Did he? No. Would he, if pressed, admit a significant natural element to recent weather behavior? Of course he would.In terms of the science, and largely the social responsibility, I think that you could turn this into an issue that Biden and Palin would 'agree' on.
10/3/2008 4:53:13 PM
Theres statistical scientific evidence that is much more viable than a simple hypothesis. An equation can be fitted for the cyclic nature of earth's temperature and long term climate. The amplitude of this wave function after being constant for all of the several periods we have plotted has skyrocketed into an exponential function coincidentally at the same time as the industrial revolution. Is it 100% sure? No. There is no way to be 100% sure but current the evidence of anthropogenic warming is OVERWHELMING.
10/3/2008 4:59:05 PM
10/3/2008 5:00:06 PM
I won't vote for a candidate who's VP pick doesn't acknowledge the raging debate still going on between literally dozens of internet forum posters.
10/3/2008 5:08:30 PM
10/3/2008 5:13:33 PM
you know most people try to analyze data and then form a conclusion, and not come up with a conclusion and then find data to support it and say things like "there's really no way around it"that 650,000 years of "pure, unmolested data"...were those ice cores taken globally to give an accurate representation of the earth as a whole? or were they taken from a few localized areas?]
10/3/2008 5:26:59 PM
Actually, for many reasons obvious and non obvious, the polar regions are the best places to make these measurements. The data was taken before the conclusion was formed and from then it was a hypothesis which has been further and further supported by subsequent data. The latest being from 2005 and dating back 650k years. O and
10/3/2008 5:41:13 PM
you're lolling but you are missing my pointhow come when i say "hey look it snowed in iraq today" or "it was hot as shit in canada today" you will point out that thats a localized observation and the issue is global warming, not a local phenomenon...but then when i point out that your "raw, unmolested data" was all taken from antarctica, you are fine with assuming its representative evidence of the entire planet?
10/3/2008 5:44:14 PM
Mainly because the poles are vital to global climate. The temperature gradient created by the poles drives global climate. If you significantly increased the temperature in Iraq and left everything else the same not nearly as much would change relative to a similar hypothetical situation where you incrdased the temperature of a polar region. The latter would change EVERYTHING. Also keep in mind the shape of the planet and % latitude of a given area near the poles to the same size area near the equator. Like I said, theres a bunch of reasons why it needs to be taken from the poles. In fact there are so many that even I, holder of a BS in the field, don't remember them all. Also keep in mind the direct, non-atmospheric implications of warming the poles thus melting ice and increasing the amount of water in the ocean/rising sea levels.
10/3/2008 5:57:42 PM
but completely relying on polar samples is implying that the atmosphere is globally homogeneous, which its obviously not
10/3/2008 6:00:33 PM
10/3/2008 6:12:58 PM
10/4/2008 1:01:47 AM
We know how CO2 and other greenhouse gases increase temperature. Regardless of current and historical readings, pumping a bunch of carbon into the atmosphere should make it hotter.
10/4/2008 9:54:36 AM
10/4/2008 10:52:23 AM
10/4/2008 12:41:12 PM
I guess it's possible some interaction is stopping the carbon from heating the atmosphere.But if the greenhouse effect didn't exist, we'd be a whole lot colder.
10/4/2008 12:42:57 PM
no one denies the greenhouse effect, silly. People do, however, deny that it is responsible for the alleged warming we have experienced recently. And, again, there is no greenhouse signature, so it would seem CO2 can't be responsible... but nah, fuck scientific evidence if it doesn't fit your agenda, right?
10/4/2008 12:45:27 PM
the planet isn't warmingwe don't know for sure that the planet is warminghuman activity isn't warming the planetwe don't know for sure that human activity is warming the planetwe don't know for sure how much human activity is warming the planet...
10/4/2008 1:49:49 PM
10/4/2008 2:18:11 PM
^^ way to address anything I've posited. good work...^ meh, you want me to believe yours, so I'm happy to call bullshit when it is blatantly obvious
10/4/2008 2:37:35 PM
10/4/2008 2:55:45 PM
well, that's already happening, so good work
10/4/2008 3:48:32 PM
10/4/2008 6:46:29 PM
The argument you will get is that the oceans will come in a save us by absorbing anything we could possibly put into the atmosphere. The argument that you will not hear from those same people is how when oceans absorb that volume of CO2 in a short period of time it causes rapid acidification that kills marine life. But hey, humans don't live in the ocean so why should we care, right?
10/4/2008 8:19:44 PM
By the way, the greenhouse signature of stratospheric cooling has been measured.
10/4/2008 8:35:06 PM
^^ Yes, that is true. But that's not even all.The more acidic the oceans get the less CO2 they can absorb. Some scientists have claimed to already detect a slowed rate of absorption by the ocean. One way or the other, this will continue to have a smaller and smaller effect.Then there's the question of how effective it was to begin with. With just some simple calculations of adding the estimated (recorded) CO2 emissions every year, then you'll get something like 530 billion tons. Then take the change in concentration in ppm, multiply by the volume of the atmosphere, and you don't get less than 500 billion tons. It may be appropriate to say that the difference was primarily absorbed by the ocean. But it's not much, even when you include all carbon sinks. What we put up there stays for hundreds of years, everybody needs to realize that.
10/5/2008 8:17:19 AM
10/5/2008 1:25:41 PM
The paper someone was quoting a few pages back about the "signature" was BS. Good data, completely misplaced interpretation.The temperature profile of all the atmosphere isn't going to look exactly like we predict it (epically when we're measuring it with lesser quality weather balloon quality). And it wouldn't take but a few button clicks with the simulations to produce and "expected" profile that looks different. The bottom line is that the upper atmosphere is cooler - which is what we should expect.For those of you who missed it last time:http://icecap.us/images/uploads/Evans-CO2DoesNotCauseGW.pdf
10/5/2008 3:14:21 PM
i like it. all of the data points to something completely different. but we'll ignore it. now THAT is science, my friend.
10/5/2008 3:21:15 PM
10/5/2008 4:23:27 PM
hmmm. even if we buy that bullshit, it doesn't address the fact that the rest of the atmosphere does NOT fit the profile. thanks for playing.only liberals would look at all of the evidence and discard that which doesn't fit their agenda, and claim such a process to be "scientific."
10/5/2008 4:50:23 PM
10/5/2008 4:53:34 PM
maybe true. but they pretty much hold a monopoly on it right now w/ global fearmongering
10/5/2008 5:07:57 PM
10/5/2008 6:03:09 PM
Humans construct science. Like anything else we do, it's a messy process. Even if I felt like ignoring the majority of folks in the field, I don't see anything wrong with eliminating primitive, unpleasant technologies. Maybe CO2 isn't really a greenhouse gas. Maybe the whole greenhouse effect doesn't exist. I can imagine alternative explanations. Hell, who cares? I'd still happily oppose smoke-spewing coal power plants and the like. If the global warming hoax merely gives me extra leverage against capitalism, that's fine. The ends justify the means.
10/5/2008 6:11:26 PM
nice. let's fuck over our entire economy, our entire livelihood in the name of being tree-huggers. w00t. Or, in your case, in the name of a fucking lunatic who believes that machines will replace us. And you make fun of Christians for believing in nonsense...
10/5/2008 11:56:19 PM