2/27/2007 11:32:05 PM
If we can transcend the left and right to and fro for a moment, I do believe in efficiency and sustainable human development; I have taken and am taking coursework in these areas and others. Professor Will Hooker-NCSU--and I've never met the man--promotes an interesting model for urban ecosystems referred to as "permaculture"--I like the philosophy of taking responsibility for one's own needs. http://www.technicianonline.com/media/storage/paper848/news/2006/08/03/Features/Creating.Urban.Ecosystems-2143125.shtml[Edited on February 28, 2007 at 12:13 AM. Reason : .]
2/28/2007 12:11:46 AM
Yes, you can spend 20 hours a week tending your own garden with animals. Or, at least you can if you are a professor and have a "flexible schedule". Personally, I believe in efficiency and sustainable human development. So stop wasting resources on your 1/4th acre that barely feeds you and put your effort towards something much more beneficial to society: teach more classes, take a second job at Wal-Mart, volunteer at a homeless shelter. Now, this is just me. I don't enjoy raising chickens (loud ass creatures). But maybe that is how you get your jollies. But just realize that you are raising 25% of your food because it makes you feel good, not because it is making society any more "sustainable" than it otherwise would be.
2/28/2007 1:42:33 AM
^ Notice I didn't post global sustainable human development. I think relatively small urban ecosystem models and their rural counterparts make sense in some geographic areas and probably don't make sense in others--it is the smaller ecosystems collective power that could make some meaningful difference. But make no mistake, we will always need large operations and their capital goods to input, transform, and output agricultural products to feed the masses in an effective and efficient manner. And don't knock "25%" too much, LoneSnark. If you removed a constraint and increased production by 25 percent at a facility that you managed, you would probably get a bonus. I was actually hoping for a respite from the debate in this thread. Alas, it is not to be.
2/28/2007 4:01:23 AM
But he didn't just increase production, he took on a second job. So, doubling the workforce and only getting a 25% boost in production would not earn me any praise. I supposed I should have just said it: you are making an assumption which has yet to be demonstrated: That modern society is in any way unsustainable.
2/28/2007 8:39:13 AM
^ I didn't say. . .nevermind, goddammit.
2/28/2007 11:03:18 AM
Alright, I did some searching for sources and while I didn't find (or feel like looking hard enough) sources for all my statements, here is what I have.My comment regarding the worthlessness of the Kyoto Protocol: Thomas Wigley "The Kyoto Protocol: CO2, CH4, and Climate Implications" Geophysical Research Letter 25 (1998: 2285-88)I'm not sure of his qualifications, but looks like he's a climate researcher.In regards to my statement about saving lives through milder winters:"If the Southern UK is warmed by 3 degrees C by the 2050s, 2,000 more people would die in the summer heat waves each year, but 20,000 fewer would die of cold in the winter" Source is the UK Department of Health.US Benefits of a warmer climate: Yale professor Robert Mendelson testifying to the Senate.http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/0718men.pdfHere are a few other tidbits I ran over while looking for sources:"The greenhouse effect must play some role (in global warming). But those who are absolutely certain that the rise in temperatures is due solely to carbon dioxide have no scientific justifcation. Its pure guesswork" ~ Henrik Svensmark, director of the Centre for Sun-Climate Research, Danish National Space Center, from the Copenhagen Post Oct 4th, 2006"Gore's circumstantial arguments are so weak that they are pathetic. It is simply incredible that they, and his film, are commanding public attention." ~ Professor Bob Carter, Marine Geophysical Laboratory, James Cook University, Australia.
2/28/2007 1:08:58 PM
2/28/2007 1:12:43 PM
someone needs to buy them some space heaters
2/28/2007 1:13:38 PM
but quiet guy said
2/28/2007 1:19:48 PM
the uk isn't a particularly warm place on earth
2/28/2007 1:21:14 PM
so we should believe quiet guy? ok thanks for your vote
2/28/2007 1:22:18 PM
I'm just shocked that so many people die because of the cold in the UK. If 20,000 per year is the reduction in death...
2/28/2007 1:28:50 PM
^^^ So, we shouldn't be worried and Al Gore's full of shit, right? WTF?![Edited on February 28, 2007 at 1:29 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2007 1:29:10 PM
I wouldn't be surprised if the UK Dept of Health estimated cold weather's indirect death toll via illness and the like. I'm sure that tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of Britons die of the flu and pneumonia every winter. That number would go down some if it weren't so cold.
2/28/2007 1:29:13 PM
2/28/2007 1:33:30 PM
Uh, global warming might actually freeze the UK.If you had seen the movie, you might know this.
2/28/2007 1:35:34 PM
global warming might actually not do shit eitherif you didnt believe everything you saw in MOVIES you might know this
2/28/2007 1:36:30 PM
2/28/2007 1:47:23 PM
^^^ Yeah, it was called The Day After Tomorrow. [Edited on February 28, 2007 at 1:50 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2007 1:50:23 PM
http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/thousands_of_barges_could_save_europe_from_deep_freeze_9961.html
2/28/2007 1:52:18 PM
^^^at least i'm not oblivious to the fact that scientists have agendas, scientist vote, scientists' funding depends on how govt views them, scientists are imperfect people tooomg a scientist said it so its a factscientists only dont know shit when they're paid by exxon![Edited on February 28, 2007 at 1:55 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2007 1:55:07 PM
You've convinced me, Twista. I'll never trust a scientist again.
2/28/2007 1:56:50 PM
no you've convinced me...i will trust all scientists...even ones with vastly opposing viewpoints to other scientists]
2/28/2007 1:57:14 PM
2/28/2007 1:58:14 PM
lolnerd
2/28/2007 1:59:00 PM
It seemed apropos.
2/28/2007 2:07:48 PM
I mean, I lolledand I know it's from one of those "nerd" gamesbut thats all I got
2/28/2007 2:08:51 PM
Well, Twista and I had just exchanged positions... This one also kind of works:[Edited on February 28, 2007 at 2:20 PM. Reason : star city sucks]
2/28/2007 2:13:09 PM
ah yes, the ever popular (in political debate) redx hominem
2/28/2007 2:15:41 PM
Stop making things up, Twista.
2/28/2007 2:21:48 PM
Dennis Miller had the best lines about this: "Other than the Tennessee Valley Authority, nobody uses more power in that state than Al Gore! And I saw him at the Oscars, so I know he's not using it on the treadmill!" Ha!
3/1/2007 12:41:02 AM
http://www.powerlinefacts.com/Sciam_article_on_lobbying.htm
3/2/2007 9:12:14 PM
http://www.lse.co.uk/ShowStory.asp?story=CZ434669U&news_headline=global_warming_is_lies_claims_documentaryLies! All lies!
3/4/2007 10:13:29 PM
Remember Steve Buscemi's character in Billy Madison? That's how I picture Wlfpk4Life, with Al Gore on his hit list.Putting on lipstick.
3/4/2007 10:20:31 PM
^^ [Edited on March 4, 2007 at 10:25 PM. Reason : ]
3/4/2007 10:24:52 PM
People who deny global warming are fucking adorable. Much like the people who think Elvis is still alive in a bomb shelter. If they tell themselves something enough times- they eventually believe it.
3/5/2007 12:27:54 AM
Who is denying global warming in this thread?Honestly?Who?
3/5/2007 11:59:18 AM
3/5/2007 12:55:12 PM
The science that I have seen from skeptics does not discredit global warming. Most skeptics argue that warming and cooling are natural phenomenon, which is true. The global warming debate is not focused around that, that is pretty much conceded by all parties. It is focused on the fact that anthropogenic (human generated) emissions are accentuating the natural warming trend. I listened to a lecture by Professor Eban Goodstein on his explanation of the problem as "a carbon blanket". As we have burned trillions of gallons of fossil fuels within the last 100 years or so, the law of conservation of matter dictates that this material just does not disappear. A lot is absorbed by plants and the ocean, but what we are in effect doing is creating a thin but noticeable carbon blanket around the earth. It makes it a bit easier to understand this when you put it in these terms. You can find it on I-Tunes under Yale School of the Environment.
3/5/2007 1:06:53 PM
3/5/2007 1:10:44 PM
But since we know how much green house gas and pollutants into the atmosphere shouldn't we be responsible for that much?
3/5/2007 2:03:22 PM
Yeah I guess...but we don't exactly know what that amount is doing...if it is doing something that is helping the temperatures rise faster then we should address it...if it is not really contributing to global temperature trends, then doing anything would be a waste...its easy to look at a temperature/time graph and notice temperatures have risen...from there on it gets a lot more complicated
3/5/2007 2:09:34 PM
BUT TWISTA, THINK OF THE CHILDREN!!!oh, and I like how quiet_guy said solar cycles "start it, but CO2 finishes it." that's about as big of a cop out as I can imagine.[Edited on March 5, 2007 at 3:21 PM. Reason : ]
3/5/2007 3:13:09 PM
3/5/2007 3:26:52 PM
^the primary problem with your thinking there is that you are stating it is a fact that increased C02 causes an increased temperature in the atmosphere. There is no proof to back that up.[Edited on March 5, 2007 at 7:34 PM. Reason : k]
3/5/2007 7:33:32 PM
^ ARE YOU INSANE?Do you think we have gotten 15 pages into this thread without addressing that very simple fact?Wow. I'm absolutely shocked that you even said that.
3/5/2007 7:47:24 PM
3/5/2007 7:54:40 PM
^ thats like saying we can't exactly predict how much it's going to rain during a hurricane, so we might as well not prepare for it.We might know that for example, the storm is coming that is going to dump 4-6 inches of rain and that will cause flooding. We can't say that exactly 5.3821 inches are going to fall, but we know that a significant enough amount is coming to create some major problems.
3/5/2007 8:02:49 PM
^^^you've got to be kidding man. or maybe I wasn't clear. sorry, how about "the addition of manmade CO2 to the atmosphere." B/c you can't find anything conclusive there.
3/5/2007 8:27:55 PM