5/19/2009 7:16:58 PM
^ you obviously don't know much about the "science" of global-fearmongering, do you? Practically all of its predictions are based on models.
5/19/2009 7:31:24 PM
5/20/2009 12:02:05 PM
Hey its all good. You can just buy your 12mpg SUV from a foreign manufacturer.
5/20/2009 12:14:20 PM
OH NO's Jeff Masters a Ph.D in meterology at Michigan is once again spread lies as part of the Liberal Hippy Global warming Conspiracy.
5/20/2009 1:38:27 PM
Here's some peer-reviewed stuff for you guys to read:Decade-long cooling trends can occur within long-term global warminghttp://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/highlights/highlights.cgi?action=show&doi=10.1029/2009GL037810&jc=glIs the climate warming or cooling?http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2009/2009GL037810.shtmlHow much climate change can be avoided by mitigation?http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2009/2008GL037074.shtmlGlobal warming due to increasing absorbed solar radiationhttp://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2009/2009GL037527.shtml
5/20/2009 2:42:34 PM
http://businessandmedia.org/articles/2009/20090520141935.aspx
5/20/2009 3:46:34 PM
Why does it not surprise me that the CEO of General Electric favors the option (cap and trade over carbon tax) that's more complicated and less transparent?
5/20/2009 3:53:15 PM
plus, cap and trade only make nuclear power more desirable. not bad news for GE
5/20/2009 4:13:32 PM
5/20/2009 8:46:35 PM
Please enlighten us Dr. Hansbury; I am open to your latest dissertation as an expert in this field of research.
5/20/2009 8:51:16 PM
5/21/2009 6:02:29 AM
All models require some set of assumptions that can often dramatically change outputs when changed. For example, financial models that assumed a Gaussian distribution would have predicted a nation-wide fall in housing prices to be close to nill. I am not as familiar with climate models, but if their assumptions are as subjective as those in macroeconometric and risk models, the end result is simply the quantification of one's own opinions. I am always extremely skeptical of conclusions drawn primarily from models with subjective assumptions.[Edited on May 21, 2009 at 8:44 AM. Reason : .]
5/21/2009 8:42:55 AM
^ I'm not sure what you mean by "subjective." The Gaussian copula models that were used by folks working the CDO markets were estimated using objective historical data. The bigger problem was that housing prices had only been going up during the time period of the data being used. I think everyone realized that if housing prices suddenly turned negative that the models would turn out to be wrong, but that seemed like remote possibility considering how long housing prices had been going up. The decision to ignore that possibility was not a modeling error. As far as climate models go, they are also estimated using actual data from a wide variety of sources. And contrary to arronburro's impression, these models actually are tested over more data after they have been estimated in order to determine whether they are any good or not. For example, I remember reading somewhere that models estimated using historical data on earth have actually fit data we have collected for other planets like venus fairly well (at least in terms of the correlation of the concentration of ghgs in the atmosphere to surface temperature). I looked for a link, but am drawing a blank on where i saw it. I suppose you could say there is some subjectivity in the model being selected, but it isn't subjective in the same way that liking apples over oranges is subjective. If climate modeling is anything like modeling in economics (and I assume it is), the model you use will largely be dictated by what theory tells you. And if you think there might be better models out there, there are statistical tests to help you determine whether some models fit the data better than others.[Edited on May 21, 2009 at 9:49 AM. Reason : ``]
5/21/2009 9:43:28 AM
The problem with risk and valuation models is not the data, but rather the assumptions, such as assuming asset prices follow a Gaussian distribution. Doing so will understate tail events as we have seen. This is one of the major pitfalls of value-at-risk models that the SEC institutionalized. For an example of some assumptions used in climate-change scenarios, below are those used in the US National Assessment of Climate Change. Imagine what estimates for population growth we may have generated 50 years ago. In 1972, the Club of Rome projected that economic growth would come to a grinding hault due to population growth. Projecting population growth, economic growth, fossil-fuel usage, CO2 concentrations and the the rate of technological change (as implied by the estimates of alternative-energy sources) is nearly impossible to do over a century, let alone a quarter century.
5/21/2009 12:19:52 PM
I know its long but this is an excellent opinion article:
5/21/2009 4:56:41 PM
See now, this is where I believe dissent can play a useful role; there is plenty of rent-seeking going on in the policy debate surrounding AGW. I don't agree that every proponent of AGW is somehow a rent-seeker, but there are certainly very "interested" players out there pushing a very specific policy agenda that benefits them. For example: cap 'n trade, where already we see the rules being twisted in favor of politically connected interests.This is why we need alternative proposals on the table. Simply sitting this one out and calling the whole thing a hoax basically plays right into the behavior of the rent-seekers - there thus exists no viable policy alternative on the table.
5/21/2009 5:06:56 PM
5/21/2009 5:29:17 PM
what's up, troll?
5/22/2009 5:33:19 PM
Good article about how any efforts to reduce CO2 emissions on our part makes little to no impact worldwide, despite massive taxes and changes in lifestyle potentially being forced upon us.
5/27/2009 3:09:02 PM
nice link, lady.
5/27/2009 3:11:01 PM
5/27/2009 3:47:14 PM
^^^That should not be an argument against efforts in the western hemisphere to reduce carbon emissions. That is defeatist. It should be an argument in support of working towards helping/forcing them to reduce carbon emissions.
5/27/2009 6:07:07 PM
And people wonder why we said we wouldn't sign Kyoto if China and India wouldn't sign itUsing a plastic cup to bail water out of a boat isn't going to stop it from sinking if other people are pouring gallon buckets of water into the boatAssuming the boat is even sinking anyway]
5/27/2009 6:12:40 PM
5/27/2009 6:40:34 PM
People have been pointing out the China/India scenario for years, including myself, on TWW...this is not some newfound stance by the GOP whatsoever]
5/27/2009 6:45:30 PM
Yeah, we Americans clearly have no responsibility to reduce emissions. It's those damn poor countries.
5/27/2009 6:45:58 PM
your map makes no sense. I see red and white on a map and some obscure abbreviations p.a. p.c.
5/27/2009 6:47:33 PM
thats fairly misleading...lets say (based on that map) the average american emits 30 units of CO2, whereas the average person in China only emits 15 units of CO2...China is still emitting twice as much pollution, since they have such a large population...despite the coloration of the map]
5/27/2009 6:48:57 PM
It's carbon emissions per capita.^ Actual numbers would be roughly 20 for American and 4 for China. As global warming affects the entire planet, I don't see why anyone should have the right to emit more carbon than anybody else.[Edited on May 27, 2009 at 6:53 PM. Reason : ^]
what this map tells me is that china and india's Billion rice pattie workers water down all the huge smoke factories and pollution emitting places
5/27/2009 6:50:57 PM
The statistics are dated (2004), but we still have dramatically higher emissions per capita.[Edited on May 27, 2009 at 7:01 PM. Reason : higher]
5/27/2009 6:56:29 PM
5/27/2009 6:58:09 PM
5/27/2009 7:06:42 PM
5/27/2009 7:06:48 PM
5/27/2009 7:07:27 PM
5/27/2009 7:11:18 PM
5/27/2009 7:18:57 PM
no. because PER CAPITA doesn't matter. how many times do I have to say it? PER CAPITA DOESN'T MATTER!!!GETTHISTHROUGHYOURTHICKFUCKINGLIBERALDOUCHESKULL
5/27/2009 7:21:52 PM
It doesn't affect the effect on the climate, sure. That's not the only thing I care about.
5/27/2009 7:22:57 PM
ok, then. if you care more about the climate, then, why make such a big deal solely about CO2's effects on the climate? It is disingenuous to get your panties in a wad about CO2 emissions if you will willingly promote policies whose net effect is the generation of more CO2 than the status quo.if, however, you want to further the agenda of socialism, communism, liberalism, whatever, then, please, state it, so we can discount whatever else you have to say.
5/27/2009 7:28:49 PM
The same amount of pollution is less harmful to the health of the population if its spread over a large area than if its all concentrated in a small area, so wouldn't a cap per square area make more sense than a per capita cap?]
5/27/2009 7:30:55 PM
5/27/2009 7:33:38 PM
5/27/2009 7:34:17 PM
5/27/2009 7:36:30 PM
5/27/2009 7:40:32 PM
^^ I think we can deal with it without engaging in even more privileged jackassery than usual.
5/27/2009 7:41:42 PM
5/27/2009 7:42:02 PM
anyone above the age of 6 can picture a big white haired god in the sky to punish them for their moral life decisions
5/27/2009 7:43:32 PM
5/27/2009 7:44:59 PM