The real inconvenient truth

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pk500
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Post by pk500 »

wco81 wrote:Didn't the Mississippi overrun some small towns in Iowa or Illinois just this past summer?
Flooding along the Mississippi is nothing new. There were horrible floods along the river in the mid-90s, yet no one attributed those to global warming.

I guess we weren't exposed to Al Gore's brilliance at that time. Therefore, we didn't know that those floods were our result of climate change.

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Post by bdoughty »

macsomjrr wrote: It's probably a little bit of all three:) Honestly my initial outrage was in response to people going far to the opposite side of this issue calling it a scam. Just crazy.

Not that it matters but I grew up in Europe and have travelled a lot during my life. Does that make my opinion less "asinine" to you now? Didn't think so. Never been to China though...

I would love to see some evidence from the anti-climate changers that man isn't having any effect of the world's atmosphere. Legitimate evidence. Go google crazy! Let's have an intelligent, well-reasoned discussion on the topic instead of just pointing fingers and getting personal.
Some of it is a scam. I don't think anyone here thinks that everything is a scam but to think that there are not people out there misleading the public seems a tad bit naive. There are plenty of environmental zealots, as there are religious zealots and plenty other types of zealots.

Again, the rest of the world comment was a tad bit disingenuous. There are many people who travel the world, it does not give them the right to speak in behalf of it.

I have no problems with intelligent, reasoned discussion. I can google with the best of them. Just remember that you were part of the problem, in regards to taking it personal. If you want to partake in a civil discussion, you need to heed your own advice.
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Post by bdoughty »

pk500 wrote:
wco81 wrote:Didn't the Mississippi overrun some small towns in Iowa or Illinois just this past summer?
Flooding along the Mississippi is nothing new. There were horrible floods along the river in the mid-90s, yet no one attributed those to global warming.

I guess we weren't exposed to Al Gore's brilliance at that time. Therefore, we didn't know that those floods were our result of climate change.

Take care,
PK

If only Gore was around in 1927, the world would be a better place today.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Miss ... od_of_1927


The Mississippi River broke out of its levee system in 145 places and flooded 27,000 square miles or about 16,570,627 acres (70,000 km²). The area was inundated up to a depth of 30 feet (10 m). The flood caused over $400 million in damages and killed 246 people in seven states.

The flood affected Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee. Arkansas was hardest hit, with 14% of its territory covered by floodwaters. By May 1927, the Mississippi River below Memphis, Tennessee, reached a width of 100 km (60 mi).
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wco81
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Post by wco81 »

Never claimed the Mississippi flooded in the past because of climate change.

Obviously the areas around it has seen several periods of torrential rain.

Question is, could it flood from climate change in the future, as rising sea levels inundate many coastal cities.

Is there some geological or hydraulic principle which says water can only flow down a river out to the ocean but never flow back the other way?
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Post by Teal »

JackB1 wrote:
Teal wrote: The earth has been around for millions of years. People? Not so much. How in the hell the earth can survive some of the mammoth asteroids, global floods, ice ages, herculean volcanic activity, and yet not be able to withstand a puny human is beyond me.
Of course the Earth will survive. But what's wrong with trying to leave the Earth as is for our grandchildren's granchildren? I'm sure Planet Earth's not too worried...but we as human's should be.

Dismissing it as some partisan b.s. is just wrong. Is it the most pressing issue at the moment? Not unless you are a polar bear in the Artic. Why should we ignore it until it is nipping at our heels? The longer we do nothing, the harder it will be to reverse our damage.
Jack, THERE'S NOTHING TO DO. There's no looming environmental threat that we either created, nor have the power to stop. Hell, one of the 'symptoms', so called, of the whole GW shenanigans is a hurricane. How much luck have we had stopping one of those? Tornado? Earthquake? Flood? And, though we can't come CLOSE to eliminating or even slightly hindering one of the SYMPTOMS, we're going to do something about the "underlying cause"?!? Really?!

I don't litter, don't burn hairspray into the atmosphere, and am not too keen on anyone trashing this big blue ball we live on. But none of those things are going to wipe out the inhabitants of this place. Neither is running my air conditioner, using more than 1 square of toilet paper (thank you, Sheryl Crow, for that particular gem), firing up a campfire, driving my pickup, letting someone pull my finger, or any of the other nutty things people attribute 'global warming' to. Some of the things we do make the place look less beautiful, but they aren't going to do much more than that. The polar bears are fine; if you believe in evolution, you've gotta believe that they'll adapt even in climate change. You've also gotta believe they've done it before. And they did it before chloroflourocarbons, carbon monoxide, and gas engines could make a peep.

It's all much ado about nothing, and, if I may add another Shakespearian reference, is 'full of sound and fury, signifying nothing'.
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Post by GTHobbes »

Teal, it amazes me how you can be so certain of your opinion. What if you're wrong?

I wouldn't want to be Bill Maher if he's wrong in his opinion about religion. And I wouldn't want to be living on this planet in 100 years if you and Bush are wrong in your opinion about the causes and effect of global warming.
Last edited by GTHobbes on Sat Dec 20, 2008 11:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by XXXIV »

The bogeyman has no political or religious affiliation.

Fear mongering comes in all shapes, sizes, guises and political parties.
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Post by bdoughty »

GTHobbes wrote: I wouldn't want to be Bill Maher if he's wrong in his opinion about religion.
Dude is on the Board of Directors for PETA. If there is a hell, the guy already reserved himself a front row seat, with this alone.

hey XXXIV, speaking of Bogeymen...

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Post by fsquid »

wco81 wrote:Never claimed the Mississippi flooded in the past because of climate change.

Obviously the areas around it has seen several periods of torrential rain.

Question is, could it flood from climate change in the future, as rising sea levels inundate many coastal cities.

Is there some geological or hydraulic principle which says water can only flow down a river out to the ocean but never flow back the other way?
Water has only gone back up the MIssissippi once and that was caused by an earthquake.
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Post by Feanor »

pk500 wrote:I guess we weren't exposed to Al Gore's brilliance at that time. Therefore, we didn't know that those floods were our result of climate change.

Take care,
PK
I know Al Gore is a pompus ass, but he's not the only person in the world who thinks that global warming is a threat we can and should do something about. This is a report card by two NSIDC scientists on how accurate or inaccurate the science used in Gore's movie was:

http://www.nsidc.org/news/press/2006070 ... iefaq.html
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Post by bdoughty »

Feanor wrote: I know Al Gore is a pompus ass, but he's not the only person in the world who thinks that global warming is a threat we can and should do something about. This is a report card by two NSIDC scientists on how accurate or inaccurate the science used in Gore's movie was:

http://www.nsidc.org/news/press/2006070 ... iefaq.html
Plenty of links on accuracy of his movie. A google search for "Inconvenient lies" only yielded - Results 1 - 10 of about 1,800,000 for inconvenient lies. (0.14 seconds)

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-shepp ... ient-truth

http://scottthong.wordpress.com/2007/10 ... ent-truth/

Hey we can link to anything on the internet to disprove/prove anything we want. i doubt it will change anyone's mind around here.

Did get a giggle from this - Wiki is supposed to be all knowing, all seeing.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Are_there_lie ... ient_Truth

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Post by Teal »

GTHobbes wrote:Teal, it amazes me how you can be so certain of your opinion. What if you're wrong?

I wouldn't want to be Bill Maher if he's wrong in his opinion about religion. And I wouldn't want to be living on this planet in 100 years if you and Bush are wrong in your opinion about the causes and effect of global warming.
This thought process is what drives the global warming craze. This 'what if you're wrong?' scenario. It's the only thing that gives this nutty junk science any legs at all. Well, that, and a healthy dose of science fiction.

And I can be certain because we're fleas on a much bigger dog. :wink:
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Post by Rodster »

Obama names 4 top members of science team :P

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081220/ap_on_el_pr/obama

"WASHINGTON – President-elect Barack Obama's selection Saturday of a Harvard physicist and a marine biologist for science posts is a sign he plans a more aggressive response to global warming than did the Bush administration.

John Holdren and Jane Lubchenco are leading experts on climate change who have advocated forceful government action. Holdren will become Obama's science adviser as director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. Lubchenco will lead the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which oversees ocean and atmospheric studies and does much of the government's research on global warming.

Holdren also will direct the president's Council of Advisers on Science and Technology. Joining him as co-chairs will be Nobel Prize-winning scientist Harold Varmus, a former director of the National Institutes of Health, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Eric Lander, a specialist in human genome research."
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Post by Feanor »

Teal wrote:This thought process is what drives the global warming craze. This 'what if you're wrong?' scenario. It's the only thing that gives this nutty junk science any legs at all. Well, that, and a healthy dose of science fiction.
The only reason you think it's a craze is because the policy implications of global warming go against your political ideology.

The overwhelming majority of scientists who work on global warming agree with the IPCC's main conclusions about human influence on global warming, but every last one of them is a nutty junk scientist? Dear oh dear. Only in America.

http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/f ... /5702/1686
Policy-makers and the media, particularly in the United States, frequently assert that climate science is highly uncertain. Some have used this as an argument against adopting strong measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. For example, while discussing a major U.S. Environmental Protection Agency report on the risks of climate change, then-EPA administrator Christine Whitman argued, "As [the report] went through review, there was less consensus on the science and conclusions on climate change". Some corporations whose revenues might be adversely affected by controls on carbon dioxide emissions have also alleged major uncertainties in the science. Such statements suggest that there might be substantive disagreement in the scientific community about the reality of anthropogenic climate change. This is not the case.

The scientific consensus is clearly expressed in the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Created in 1988 by the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations Environmental Programme, IPCC's purpose is to evaluate the state of climate science as a basis for informed policy action, primarily on the basis of peer-reviewed and published scientific literature. In its most recent assessment, IPCC states unequivocally that the consensus of scientific opinion is that Earth's climate is being affected by human activities: "Human activities ... are modifying the concentration of atmospheric constituents ... that absorb or scatter radiant energy. ... [M]ost of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations".

IPCC is not alone in its conclusions. In recent years, all major scientific bodies in the United States whose members' expertise bears directly on the matter have issued similar statements. For example, the National Academy of Sciences report, Climate Change Science: An Analysis of Some Key Questions, begins: "Greenhouse gases are accumulating in Earth's atmosphere as a result of human activities, causing surface air temperatures and subsurface ocean temperatures to rise". The report explicitly asks whether the IPCC assessment is a fair summary of professional scientific thinking, and answers yes: "The IPCC's conclusion that most of the observed warming of the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations accurately reflects the current thinking of the scientific community on this issue".

Others agree. The American Meteorological Society (6), the American Geophysical Union, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) all have issued statements in recent years concluding that the evidence for human modification of climate is compelling.
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Post by GTHobbes »

Rodster, that's good news...thanks for posting.

Teal, funny you should use the phrases "nutty junk science" and "science fiction.". Again, I've heard Maher and George Carlin say the same thing about religion, so it seems like you're in some pretty select company when it comes to people who are sure of their opinion.

I'm sure there were also people who were similarly sure of their opinion when it came to the world being flat, civil rights, etc. Sometimes there's just no convincing people otherwise.
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Post by Leebo33 »

JackB1 wrote:
JRod wrote:And it sounds people are just arguing global warming along partisan lines. Like it's even a partisan issue.
It is a partisan issue. Find me one republican that thinks it's a pressing issue or one democrat that thinks it's nonsense.
The year that Al Gore uses less than 5 or 10 times the energy of my family is the day I'll take it seriously as a pressing issue.
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Post by Teal »

GTHobbes wrote:Rodster, that's good news...thanks for posting.

Teal, funny you should use the phrases "nutty junk science" and "science fiction.". Again, I've heard Maher and George Carlin say the same thing about religion, so it seems like you're in some pretty select company when it comes to people who are sure of their opinion.

I'm sure there were also people who were similarly sure of their opinion when it came to the world being flat, civil rights, etc. Sometimes there's just no convincing people otherwise.
Oh, I could be convinced, if only someone would show something CONVINCING for a change, rather than all this circumstantial 'evidence' that proves precisely nothing.

And I don't mind your opinion on religion; in fact, in large measure, I share Carlin and Maher's opinions on organized religion. So nice try at an attack, but no biscuit. :wink:
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Post by Teal »

Leebo33 wrote:
JackB1 wrote:
JRod wrote:And it sounds people are just arguing global warming along partisan lines. Like it's even a partisan issue.
It is a partisan issue. Find me one republican that thinks it's a pressing issue or one democrat that thinks it's nonsense.
The year that Al Gore uses less than 5 or 10 times the energy of my family is the day I'll take it seriously as a pressing issue.
Very true, Leebo. And Jack, thanks for proving my point. :wink:
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Post by Leebo33 »

I don't even mean it as an attack on Gore. It's just that if the world's most notable spokesman on climate change can rack up $30k in home utility bills then it CAN'T be that dire can it?
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Post by XXXIV »

Leebo33 wrote:I don't even mean it as an attack on Gore. It's just that if the world's most notable spokesman on climate change can rack up $30k in home utility bills then it CAN'T be that dire can it?
Yeah but he buys carbon credits.

You can stack those on the shore to hold back the impending floods.
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Post by Leebo33 »

XXXIV wrote:
Leebo33 wrote:I don't even mean it as an attack on Gore. It's just that if the world's most notable spokesman on climate change can rack up $30k in home utility bills then it CAN'T be that dire can it?
Yeah but he buys carbon credits.

You can stack those on the shore to hold back the impending floods.
This Christmas my wife bought me calorie credits so I can fit into my clothes next year.
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Post by pk500 »

Climate change is an issue, one of many issues facing our society today. But it's not the pressing issue that is being depicted by the media and global warming disciples.

Global warming is the latest in a long line of pet causes for celebrities to hang their hat on and appear to be contributing to society more than just entertainment.

Al Gore's movie is no different than the "We Are The World" song and Dionne Warwick's "That's What Friends Are For." They're all celebrity-driven PR tools that helped raise awareness and some money but did little to solve any problems.

P.S.: I've never voted Republican in a presidential election in my life, so I guess I don't fit the partisan mold.

Take care,
PK
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Post by wco81 »

So really, you're going to decide on the issue based on the behavior of one particular individual?
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Post by Leebo33 »

wco81 wrote:So really, you're going to decide on the issue based on the behavior of one particular individual?
No, I'll throw in all the Hollywood types living in mansions as well.

Actually, I'll decide right now like almost everyone else does that is for the cause. I'll look cool because I care, appear scholarly, but yet I won't have to change a single thing about my lifestyle...just blame Bush or someone else for the problem. I can go on wasting resources, but since I have some money I will buy some carbon credits to make myself feel better.
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Post by GTHobbes »

Teal wrote: And I don't mind your opinion on religion; in fact, in large measure, I share Carlin and Maher's opinions on organized religion. So nice try at an attack, but no biscuit. :wink:
I was raised Catholic and still believe in God, so I'm not saying I share their opinion (that God is science fiction). But I guess we can agree to disagree on the whole global warming thing.
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