5/27/2009 7:50:45 PM
and yet, how is it equitable to allow China to emit 5000 times the same substance as us, to the detriment of our economy?
5/27/2009 7:52:00 PM
5/27/2009 7:53:50 PM
5/27/2009 7:55:08 PM
Greenland? maybe, maybe not. But, to put one country's economy at risk while trying to allegedly solve a problem, in a way that won't work, doesn't really make sense, does it? We don't even need to get to the "equity" argument at that point. It doesn't work. at all. and it wrecks one side's economy. How is that equitable?
5/27/2009 8:04:16 PM
5/27/2009 8:12:36 PM
come on. the multiplier would be far more than 4, and you know it. Hell, if we take the article above at face value, we see China expanding its emissions by a factor of 4 every year compared to our expansion. Given the fact that a far greater majority of China's power comes from coal, and dirty-ass coal, let's be honest about this: China is a far-greater polluter than we are, and some people want to give them a free-pass!
5/27/2009 8:15:04 PM
5/27/2009 8:24:51 PM
do you dispute that China has a greater percentage of coal-supplied electricity than the US? Because fact begs to differ with you.
5/27/2009 8:32:12 PM
5/27/2009 8:33:22 PM
Perhaps you didn't understand my initial claim. If the US and China had the same per capita carbon emissions, the difference would then match the difference in population. This is mathematically indisputable.Now, you may be correct that Chinese emissions per capita will eventually exceed US levels. Total Chinese emissions are supposedly increasing at eleven percent per year. They've a long way to go, but that's serious growth. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/03/080318-china-warming.html
5/27/2009 8:38:08 PM
or perhaps you are moving the goalposts...
5/27/2009 11:18:42 PM
GoldenViper, the main flaw of your argument is that you're making points based on the assumption that CO2 is harmful. Find me DIRECT evidence of that and I'll concede you to. Too bad none exists.
5/27/2009 11:27:50 PM
^ Without the greenhouse effect, the planet would be a hell of a lot colder. John Tyndall demonstrated carbon dioxide's ability to hang on to heat about a hundred and fifty years ago. We the know mechanism. We've tested it in a lab. Carbon dioxide absorbs and emits infrared radiation. Thus, more carbon dioxide should raise temperatures. Now, whether increased temperatures are good or bad for the species remains an open question.
5/28/2009 1:28:58 AM
5/28/2009 8:38:38 AM
^^glad to see you comparing the atmosphere with lab tests that isolate CO2. Tell me why when there was over 2000ppmv CO2 concentration hundreds of thousands of years ago, why didn't the earth kill itself? I mean, the evil humans weren't there to burn CO2 but the CO2 was there anyway. And if I recall nothing bad happened.
5/28/2009 9:28:27 AM
Obama's green guru calls for white roofs President Obama's energy adviser has suggested all the world's roofs should be painted white as part of efforts to slow global warming.http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthnews/5389278/Obamas-green-guru-calls-for-white-roofs.html
5/28/2009 12:49:53 PM
Early researchers did think the coming climate shift would be beneficial. These days, experts predict that the relatively sudden change will cause more harm than good. Increased agricultural production may not offset millions of environmental refugees and so on.
5/28/2009 12:52:16 PM
^^don't forget the idiots in CA that are trying to outlaw dark painted cars.^What sudden climate change are you talking about? There's nothing strongly pointing to that happening. Climate cooling (especially quickly) would be much worse. What "environmental refugees"? Any sea level rise we've been having is below the historical average (4 ft/century) from the last few hundred thousand years. And the Sahara desert has been shinking, not that I've seen anything recently about any other deserts.[Edited on May 28, 2009 at 1:05 PM. Reason : k]
5/28/2009 1:03:27 PM
5/28/2009 1:17:52 PM
You do know anything about the history of this planet? Like how we've had CO2 levels greater than 10 times current levels. From a historical point of view the Earth is currently carbon starved.After 900ppmv CO2 has no effect on the atmosphere either. Do us a favor and stop relying on "climate models" that have never accurately predicted anything.[Edited on May 28, 2009 at 1:40 PM. Reason : stick to your "singularity" rants]
5/28/2009 1:37:35 PM
5/28/2009 3:56:46 PM
5/28/2009 5:06:42 PM
5/28/2009 7:19:36 PM
^^^don't be a complete fool.
5/29/2009 11:54:49 AM
5/29/2009 3:13:05 PM
Umm, yeah. There are these things called ice ages, that killed them off...
5/29/2009 3:58:43 PM
5/29/2009 7:33:54 PM
5/29/2009 7:38:03 PM
humans CAN exist under those conditions. And furthermore, a productive biosphere of the Earth CAN exist under those conditions.However, the present ecological balance CAN NOT continue to exist under those conditions. The Earth of the past evolved to cope with some pretty nasty stuff and got over it, it'll get over this too, but that isn't relevant to the discussion since it will take millions of years. Since the industrial revolution was in 100s, it makes since to change us versus change the Earth.Some republicans might just be fine with the fact that we're currently causing the 6th mass extinction event of the planet, but it will affect us drastically. We are bugs on the windshield on those time scales.
5/29/2009 7:40:24 PM
5/29/2009 7:59:00 PM
^please to provide links. You keep saying it, but I don't see anything. And regardless, if you weren't so busy trying to disagree with me you'd see that I said larger vegetation led to larger mammals.
5/29/2009 11:18:14 PM
^ *face palm*
5/30/2009 4:03:53 AM
set em up
5/31/2009 3:26:12 AM
5/31/2009 10:37:27 PM
I used to wonder why we would need a Renewable Portfolio Standard after we set up a cap-and-trade program. I used to think it was redundant at best and do-gooder meddling at worst. I was wrong:http://www.grist.org/article/2009-05-07-mandate-renewables-carbon-cap/
5/31/2009 11:22:08 PM
6/1/2009 12:36:06 AM
6/1/2009 8:00:05 AM
6/1/2009 8:01:30 AM
^You seriously used a Washington Post article for your rebuttle? LOLAcademics at NCSU is appearantly going down the shitter. I bet you use Wikipedia as reference material for classwork
6/1/2009 9:25:10 AM
You're calling me out for linking Washington Post? Of all the links to eccentric one-sided journals and nut-job speculators, you're going to complain about Washington Post? Is this your first time in the soap box? Here's the same federally-funded study being reported by msnbc and, *gasp* FOX NEWShttp://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15828892/http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,181438,00.html
6/1/2009 10:03:29 AM
^LOL. I wonder how many species Global Warming killed off during the Roman Warm Period. Or how many species perished during the Little Ice Age?Tell me how it's humans fault now, but not back then?
6/1/2009 11:50:47 AM
My point was that global warming IS causing extinctions; to counter someone else's claim that it wasn't. I wasn't making any point about the cause of global warming, so save your roll-eyes for relevant snarkery.
6/1/2009 12:02:41 PM
I apologize. I will agree with you that global temperature change can kill off species. But this is nothing new, and not human caused.
6/1/2009 1:00:05 PM
^^ Yes, but had the planet not warmed a different set of species would be extinct right now. The question is which pile of species is higher, which is prohibitively difficult to discern.
6/1/2009 2:03:52 PM
Hey! I found a website that lists extinctions.http://extinctanimals.petermaas.nl/
6/1/2009 2:17:26 PM
What makes you think as many species would go extinct when temperature stays the same?
6/1/2009 2:18:45 PM
Well, if you believe the hype, temperatures were supposed to be dropping before manmade global warming. But, far more likely, species on the verge of extinction are often not there alone, but because they are in competition without other species for scarce niches which have been made even more scarce by the presense of humans. Now, a warmer planet is also a greener planet, as we have watched the world forests expand ever further toward the poles. As they did so, they expanded the habbitat available for forest dwelling species, many of which are endangered thanks to the enchroachment of humans into forrest lands. As such, had this expansion of territory not taken place, confronted with human enchroachment these species may have already died off. Especially if you factor in the impacts of fighting global warming, as non-carbon intensive sources tend to have larger footprints, causing more of scarce habbitat to be gobbled up for farmland, solar and wind installations, and housing/transportation for a more rural population.
6/1/2009 2:52:55 PM
^^^the corals are doing just fine, which has already been argued in this thread.^^I'm confused. Which nonexistant point in the Earth's history are you referring to?^Glad to see your levelheadedness in this thread.
6/1/2009 3:21:12 PM
In the next chapter of the Liberal Hippy Global Warming Conspiracy turns out that Big Energy is actually in on the big secret. Luckily our conservative heroes continue to risk their life day in and out to provide willing listeners with the truth so that they will not be deceived by the travasty of lies that the big corporations and stoner hippies spread about climate change.
6/1/2009 9:57:06 PM