^^ That's one of the most stunning comments I've seen here--ever. Just wow.Would you care to look again?
12/2/2009 10:16:03 AM
I know what it looks like and I know what you will fixate on ad nauseam. I'll go ahead and save you the trouble by directing you towards the words I put in quotes and not "exactly like" or "carbon copy of" which is how you read it.
12/2/2009 10:22:45 AM
12/2/2009 10:29:54 AM
I meant "Looking 'more like' North Korea wouldn't actually be all that bad."Would you like to defend the egregious waste of energy from light pollution that leads to the deaths of millions of birds?
12/2/2009 10:33:04 AM
As long as people are paying for power, they should be able to keep the lights on whenever they want. I don't even know how millions of birds are dying because the lights are on, but who cares...they're birds.
12/2/2009 10:40:26 AM
Wow. . . Now that, hooksaw, is a stunning and very disturbing comment.
12/2/2009 10:49:50 AM
No, dude, it's not. You're suggesting that people be forced to turn their lights off at night in order to save birds. I agree that it would be a good idea for people to turn their lights off, but they shouldn't have to.
12/2/2009 10:53:38 AM
^^ Are birds more important than people? You act as though people are simply running lights to kill birds--and that there is no benefit from the lighting. Hospitals, schools, and emergency services all use lights--and some of those lights are even used to help animals.[Edited on December 2, 2009 at 10:59 AM. Reason : .]
12/2/2009 10:58:42 AM
Yes, I said that. Totally. . . What I am saying, however, are that people are extremely wasteful with their energy usage to the detriment of wildlife and as ^^ has already admitted there is a wide spread ignorance of the problem. While I don't necessarily feel that birds are more important that people, I don't believe that people are more important than birds. More aptly to this discussion I don't feel that someone running a parking lot full of lights or huge ass unoccupied office buildings with lights ablaze is a prudent use of energy resources especially when they cause profound harm to the environment.
12/2/2009 11:10:50 AM
12/2/2009 11:28:14 AM
12/2/2009 11:33:15 AM
12/2/2009 11:47:22 AM
^ All this talk of birds--is it okay if I have a chicken sandwich for lunch?
12/2/2009 11:59:13 AM
12/2/2009 12:22:23 PM
"Eduardo Zorita of Germany’s GKSS...a senior US scientific official"
12/2/2009 1:54:37 PM
12/2/2009 2:07:44 PM
12/2/2009 3:11:32 PM
I'm not a big fan of birds. Nasty little dinosaurs. They had it coming.
12/2/2009 3:22:49 PM
we are neither a benefit nor a detriment. we just are. the sun will supernovae in a billion or so years anyway.
12/2/2009 3:36:30 PM
^actualy it won't. it will however 'burn out' enough to the point where it's unable to support earth native life though.^^leftist nazis want all humans to die. see.[Edited on December 2, 2009 at 3:42 PM. Reason : d]
12/2/2009 3:40:44 PM
^^you forgot to mention helping plants with increased CO2 concentration
12/2/2009 3:42:24 PM
Plants destroyed the earth first. (oxygen catastrophe)Indeed, we are neither a benefit or detriment in the big picture. I don't care about endangered whales, something will grow back to take their place eventually. But in terms of the most important metric, mainly our own species' ability to survive, we are most certainly a detriment to our habitat. That we can support more of ourselves for a short period of time is delaying the inevitable. [Edited on December 2, 2009 at 4:01 PM. Reason : leftist nazis want all other humans to die ]
12/2/2009 3:56:05 PM
the only thing i have problems with the left wing is that it isn't ENOUGH left wing. you claim all this bullshit nonstop about protecting the environment but take literally the most retarded steps or meaningless ones to 'fix' it according to your totally unscientific explaination to fix it.spit in the ocean as far as i'm concerned. (and china keeps laughing!)conservatives take the opposite approach. turn loose society to a major extent and lets see how far we can take it till we push the envelope industrially and technologically. hey there might be a hiccup along the way in terms of pollution, but in the process we want the same goal of a clean earth that humans can share properly with nature. it's just gonna take a hundred or so years. and yes we might 'rape' the earth according to your definition, but after that is done, we will have figured out the best way to make do with this planet.liberals plan is like only trying to hit the brakes on ours but barely. like i said, spit in the ocean. you are just being a pest on our lives at this point.[Edited on December 2, 2009 at 4:14 PM. Reason : d]
12/2/2009 4:12:56 PM
^ holy shit, it's like watching rush limbaugh's ass cheeks flapping back and forth after a prolonged fart
12/2/2009 4:42:14 PM
"Climate change denial is the new article of faith for the far right":http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/cif-green/2009/dec/02/climate-denial-far-right
12/2/2009 5:05:59 PM
no it's not. they knew it all along. now they just have proof
12/2/2009 5:15:35 PM
12/2/2009 5:15:42 PM
^ That's why you fail. You aren't interested in reading anything that runs counter to your worldview. Try using that college education your daddy paid for, and THINK, instead of spouting off RNC talking points.
12/2/2009 5:16:51 PM
they are all in a big pissy wad about this b/c they are finally getting a chink in their armor that is holding up this huge propaganda machine for world domination. the leftists are getting shit on right and left. watch how defensive they get now....
12/2/2009 5:17:21 PM
Oh no, you've really got something on them now! Watch them use the same techniques to defend themselves that 'publicans use every time they get called out! Oh no!
12/2/2009 5:19:24 PM
prove to me that global warming is occuring. oh wait you can't!/thread bitch
12/2/2009 5:20:43 PM
^^^^I stopped reading after that because I've always been a skeptic, not a denier.Good to see that all the evidence of collusion and altering data isn't swaying you one bit from your own deadset opinion that AGW is definitely realAnd you tell ME to think?]
12/2/2009 5:22:07 PM
^^ oh this is fun. i know you are but what am i?^ Being a skeptic is fine, skepticism is healthy if it drives a real, honest, dispassionate discussion of the issue at hand. I'm telling pack_fudge here to think, because he's hell-bent on a quest to prove how awesome he is.[Edited on December 2, 2009 at 5:26 PM. Reason : .]
12/2/2009 5:22:12 PM
The problem is, all the skeptics have been silenced and criticized as there has supposedly been some huge consensus amongst the scientific community that warming is real and caused by humans. Its sad that it takes hacking into computers and stealing information to actually open up a real debate, instead of immediately silencing anyone who even doubts AGW with the premise that OMG YOU MUST WORK FOR EXXON, OMG YOU MUST KNOW MORE THAN 99.99% OF SCIENTISTS WHO AGREE THAT GLOBAL WARMING IS REALMy stance hasn't changed in 7 years. Peoples' reactions to my stance have recently changed though.]
12/2/2009 5:29:05 PM
^ I respect being a skeptic for the sake of having a real conversation about the issue. It's the partisan nature of some of the responses being shown here that cheapens said conversation.
12/2/2009 5:47:03 PM
12/2/2009 6:45:35 PM
I'm not gonna take issue with most of your post, but I will say that "blatantly stupid" is a pretty subjective term when it comes to how people perceive most science.
12/2/2009 6:49:24 PM
true. But, in what TT quoted, there was no discussion of science going on. It was just an attack on anyone the author deemed stupid enough to be a non-believer.
12/2/2009 6:52:48 PM
12/2/2009 6:52:54 PM
That allegedly tons of scientists think humans are making the earth hotter means nothing. Every scientist used to think that there was a "life force" that brought life from dead things. It took Pasteur's experiments to prove that it didn't exist. it took one person to disprove every one else.Besides, the claim of a "consensus" was a big lie the first time it was touted. Read this and learn why. http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/monckton/consensus.pdfBasically, since I know you won't read it, the claim of a "consensus" was first made by an article in the journal Science. There was no peer-review done on the article whatsoever. And practically all of the claims that could be objectively established one way or another were found to be false. The article was so poorly written, that the crux of the article, the search term used to search the scholarly records, wasn't even reported properly. What was the journal's response to the person who brought up this revelation? "Shut up." What was the response of the article's author? "Your information wasn't peer reviewed." Only, it had been.]
12/2/2009 6:54:03 PM
12/2/2009 6:59:20 PM
12/2/2009 7:01:50 PM
12/2/2009 7:10:51 PM
no. it's both. false dilemma FTL.do you really think that a consensus means anything in science?btw, I like how you haven't addressed anything I've said...]
12/2/2009 7:15:11 PM
12/2/2009 7:25:31 PM
I already did. Because every scientist could say it's true, and yet it still not be. Again, Pasteur.
12/2/2009 7:31:57 PM
Well, I'd put forth that consensus is generally what the scientific community should aim for. But that should be consensus backed up by verifiable, rigorously-tested data.IMO, we may have been keeping accurate temperatures for a hundred years or more in a lot of places, but we have more conjecture and inferred fact on things that are thousands of years old. Clearly some of this is logical conclusions taken to extremes.That said, there are other things going on in our environment that human beings have played a part in. I'd worry at least as much about trace amounts of antibiotics and other drugs ending up in the water table. I'd worry about the massive "islands" of trash floating in the oceans. I'd also worry more about trying to cut emissions of known carcinogens from industrial exhaust/effluent, because frankly that's a healthy thing to do.
12/2/2009 7:43:48 PM
You showed that a consensus NOT based on science means nothing in science. I would hope you think that a scientific consensus today means a lot more than it did during the time of Pasteur. Last I checked, scientists no longer accept life force as a leading theory, or any other magical phenomenon. The only thing close to that today would be found in the depths of theoretical physics.
12/2/2009 7:50:05 PM
^^I agree with all of that except the very first sentence. The scientific community should strive for what you say in the 2nd sentence. A consensus isn't something thats provable again in a controlled experiment, its the current majority opinion based on whatever.^studies will come out and say coffee is good for you then a year later a study will come out and say it gives you cancer...just because we're a lot more technologically and scientifically advanced than we were 150 years ago in Pasteur's time doesn't mean we can't be wrong nowadays or, perhaps according to the emails, that the consensus has been exaggerated[Edited on December 2, 2009 at 7:53 PM. Reason : .]
12/2/2009 7:50:07 PM
12/2/2009 7:57:18 PM