when have i argued "against science"?[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 1:07 PM. Reason : questioning findings is not "arguing against science"]
3/6/2007 1:06:33 PM
you take a SCIENTIFIC ISSUE and make it a POLITICAL ISSUEfor example, you choose not to even address the SCIENTIFIC CONTENT of what HockeyRoman and I have been recently discussing, instead making some claim about Exxon and insinuating that the only skeptics have political reasons to act skepticalyou take a scientific issue and try to make it political, when we're talking about the scientific side
3/6/2007 1:08:57 PM
no. i question findings when they are funded by people who have a direct stake in the findings. THAT IS ALL. it's not very difficult.jesus. if someone is ON EXXON'S PAYROLL (or similarly biased businesses) their findings should be questioned.[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 1:11 PM. Reason : .]
3/6/2007 1:10:07 PM
so when an alternative solar power company provides funding...they dont have a direct stake in the findings?you question findings based on your personal politics without any regard to the sciencethe problem with your entire premise in this thread and on this topic if you think its all political
3/6/2007 1:11:42 PM
why does anyone bother to discuss the issue with treetwista? its clear that he's the expert on the subject.
3/6/2007 1:12:09 PM
i don't. i think it's capitalistic.^^c'mon. i've addressed science plenty. unlike some others[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 1:13 PM. Reason : .]
3/6/2007 1:12:15 PM
so you dont see the obvious financial ties when alternative energy companies fund research?when oil companies fund research, its biased as shit...but when an ethanol or solar or wind company fund research, "its for the good of mankind"?
3/6/2007 1:14:40 PM
i never said that. i think the funding of research should always be looked at.
3/6/2007 1:15:17 PM
3/6/2007 1:16:00 PM
^^Well maybe I'm wrong, but I doubt you're one to criticize any funding sources if they're not an oil/petrol company^I just mostly dislike the stigma of being unsure about something...the public perception of anyone who is not completely sold on humans ruining the earth is some kind of redneck who works for Exxon...the issue is not as cut and dry as some would lead you to believe...just 7-8 years ago when I was in college it was a lot more balanced as far as explanations...you could spend a 90 minute class just bouncing ideas back and forth...now if you come from the skeptical side you seem to be painted as some kind of retard...oh well
3/6/2007 1:19:29 PM
i'm glad that you make completely unfounded personal conclusions about me.
3/6/2007 1:20:52 PM
wow you really add nothing productive to this thread do youand i'd love to see where you've EVER dismissed a data source as biased because it was funded by an alternative fuel company...if that has ever happened, please cite it...if not, the conclusions arent that unfounded...cause you've criticized scientists and research dozens of times based on oil company funding...i cant ever recall you criticizing any scientists or research based on alternative fuel source company funding...if you've done it even once I would be shockedwhich goes back to you arguing science with politics[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 1:34 PM. Reason : .]
3/6/2007 1:30:54 PM
TreeTwista10
3/6/2007 1:35:17 PM
what happened to your willingness to actually discuss the issue? was i wrong about you in that quote or have you just proven me wrong so far in this thread in the last few posts?
3/6/2007 1:39:29 PM
i'm sorry maybe i was the one who brought up (and kept bringing up) gore's actions instead of talking about climate change.
3/6/2007 1:43:39 PM
alright well if you'd like to comment on the science of the 3% / 97% CO2 concentration topic, please feel free to do so
3/6/2007 3:13:20 PM
a minor change in the balance in our atmosphere can impact the world climate drastically.maybe it won't be a huge problem. but i really don't see making changes just in case it does negatively impact our environment.
3/6/2007 3:16:35 PM
3/6/2007 3:29:15 PM
for instance funding alt. energy, tightening emissions standards for vehicles, decreasing our use of coal plants, increasing nuke plants (given that there is due consideration for safety and disposal of waste), etc.
3/6/2007 3:48:24 PM
I don't have a problem with any of those suggestions as long as they are implemented in a way that is amenable to business and consumer interests.
3/6/2007 4:16:27 PM
Why are human economic ambitions more important than the rest of the world? (I can see it now. "Why is the rest of the world more important than human economic ambitions?") Blah. [Edited on March 6, 2007 at 4:43 PM. Reason : t != n. ]
3/6/2007 4:18:50 PM
3/6/2007 4:26:33 PM
^^But that question assumes that the rest of the world will suffer if we dont do something[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 4:27 PM. Reason : ^^]
3/6/2007 4:27:21 PM
^^ Why not? And how do you gather that I am a "hippy"?^Does it? Maybe I am not understanding what the something is that we should or should not be doing. I am not trying to be difficult just making sure that we don't talk past each other by accident.
3/6/2007 4:43:07 PM
When you ask about human economic ambitions being more important than the rest of the world, that implies that human economic ambitions cant be strong without hurting the rest of the world...over the last 100 years or so they have been both able to coexist to some extent...now granted something like the economic ambition that seeks cheap labor could outsource but we havent had any huge environmental disasters since the Valdez spill that I can recallI guess I'm hopeful that people can continue to grow society and have a strong economy without trashing the earth
3/6/2007 4:49:37 PM
3/6/2007 4:53:34 PM
well in one sense humans are a part of the environmentbut at the same time, would you rather have a bunch of humans on a crappy planet, or a beautiful planet with all humans deadbecause the earth is going to be here long after people areIts just tough to prioritize anything over your life and the lives of your loved ones, however a "environment>humans" argument is interpreted
3/6/2007 4:57:50 PM
3/6/2007 5:01:43 PM
3/6/2007 5:08:55 PM
You tell me. You love the environment so much. Does it love you back?
3/6/2007 5:11:03 PM
HockeyRoman...regardless of how much you value the environment...dont you think personal/human survival is the most basic instinct? I mean that goes deep into every human's core...nobody wants to die
3/6/2007 5:11:23 PM
the health and survival of humans (and their ancestors) is potentially in danger from environmental change.
3/6/2007 5:33:58 PM
how is the survival of anyone's ancestors in danger?is that like the joke if a plane crashed on the US/Canada border, where would they bury the survivors?
3/6/2007 5:34:59 PM
oh. oops. wrong word. "descendants" is what i meant
3/6/2007 5:37:15 PM
3/6/2007 5:41:31 PM
3/6/2007 6:28:53 PM
I'd like to see you disprove it.
3/6/2007 6:32:39 PM
Arguing doesn't work like that. If somebody is gonna make a statement, they need to back it up. You don't have to disprove a baseless assertion.
3/6/2007 6:34:06 PM
Sure it does, others have been doing for the duration of this thread. I'm not going to write a long, well thought out and researched response so some idiot like Twista can some in here and give a one sentence response that doesn't address anything. I put the burden of proof on TKE-Teg.
3/6/2007 6:45:52 PM
3/6/2007 7:04:29 PM
3/6/2007 8:01:08 PM
^so you're saying the last Ice Age was caused by a varying level of C02 in the atmosphere. Interesting...[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 8:16 PM. Reason : k]
3/6/2007 8:12:50 PM
[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 8:29 PM. Reason : nm]
3/6/2007 8:28:54 PM
3/6/2007 8:29:12 PM
fwiw, "letters" of a particular journal are generally not reviewed in the same way that articles are
3/6/2007 8:40:09 PM
While the Greenland thing is a good start, remember that analyzing one location is not representative of the entire planet. I'm sure the drought and dust bowl conditions in the 1930's were probably not caused by global warming either but that doesn't mean much, as it was of a relatively small spatial extent.
3/6/2007 9:10:37 PM
I just saw this movie. there were some parts that were clear jabs at republicans, but other than that, it was pretty good. the science he presented obviously was dumbed down a LOT for the typical american, but it did a good job with that.
3/6/2007 9:13:16 PM
^^agreed. But that just proves one of my points. One of Gore's main points is that the "90s was the hottest decade ever". Only problem with that is that a large majority of the data points used in previous data have been unavailable since the early 90s (1000s of USSR weather stations went offline). And in case you were wondering, Gore didn't use any satellite data for his "documentary".^
3/6/2007 11:12:45 PM
Lets see, in his movie Gore:-says the increased hurricane activity is due to global warming. Any hurricane expert will disagree, citing that hurricanes are following their normal 40-50 year cycles of activity-says that glaciers are melting all over the world. Indeed, many are, well many others are growing-says that the poles are heating up. However, they're getting colder and the ice is getting thicker-says that Kilimanjaro's snow is fading away. It is, and has been for over a hundred years (b/c of a decrease in moisure in the air)-states that 2005 was the hottest year since measurements began in the late 1970s. However, NASA satellite data will show that 1998 was, and that temperatures have been stable since 2001. (http://www.uah.edu/News/newsread.php?newsID=291)-states that increased CO2 causing warming. However, many notable scientists disagree. For example, Carleton Univ paleoclimatologist professor Tim Patterson states that "There is no meaningful correlation between CO2 levels and Earth's temperature over this [geologic] time frame. In fact, when CO2 levels were over ten times higher than they are now, about 450 million years ago, the planet was in the depths of the absolute coldest period in the last half billion years."Its a wonder anyone thinks of Gore as credible.[Edited on March 6, 2007 at 11:38 PM. Reason : wrong link]
3/6/2007 11:34:25 PM
What he effectively said is that people are going to go into the movie skeptically. Hes basically saying that its not a super intuitive process, and had to focus heavily on establishing credibility with his audience on the validity of the problem so that they would be receptive to the solution. He didn't make the movie to silence critics or engage the scientific community. He did it to raise awareness to everyday Joe Sixpacks. I think there could have been much more extreme examples he could have used, such as how shifting climate patterns could render Americas breadbasket a permanent dustbowl.
3/6/2007 11:35:14 PM