There was no argument to be made. Simply stating a fact.
10/23/2007 12:41:57 AM
Actually, saving energy and incorporating 'green' energy into energy use saves money. You know why? Because shit like solar is free and you have to pay an energy bill every month. Dumbasses. If you use a lightbulb that uses less energy... you use less energy and don't pay as much money. That shit is true. Don't try to discredit the fact that many environmentally friendly practices actually cost less money just because Erios blew his load all over your face. I don't know if you realized it. But oil has been hitting record highs for about 5 out of the past 7 trading days. When oil hits $120 a barrel, alternative energy becomes an economical player. And alternative energy keeps getting cheaper and cheaper while oil gets more expensive.
10/23/2007 1:17:24 AM
10/23/2007 1:21:07 AM
^ Ooo. . .suspend.
10/23/2007 1:23:00 AM
clearly tsb is cordial and well structured when i dont post
10/23/2007 1:23:14 AM
10/23/2007 1:39:25 AM
I am subscribed to a few technology and stock feeds. Solar is getting TONS of invest at the moment, AND not so surprisingly getting big breakthroughs in efficiency and as economies of scale begin to work, it is going to get cheaper and cheaper to make the panel.]
10/23/2007 7:53:14 AM
10/23/2007 1:58:55 PM
10/23/2007 2:02:57 PM
^^ STFU.
10/23/2007 5:42:16 PM
^^ Care to back any of that up.I'm just telling you what I see. The solar industry hasn't been "saying" anything. Industry blogs are reporting on the investments. I've been subscribed to these blogs for going on 2 years now, and it has been in the last few months that I am seeing TONS of activity regarding both efficiency improvements and investors apparently very interested in solar companies now.
10/23/2007 5:59:54 PM
WASHINGTON - The White House severely edited congressional testimony given Tuesday by the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on the impact of climate change on health, removing specific scientific references to potential health risks, according to two sources familiar with the documents.Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the Atlanta-based CDC, the government's premier disease monitoring agency, told a Senate hearing that climate change "is anticipated to have a broad range of impacts on the health of Americans."But her prepared testimony was devoted entirely to the CDC's preparation, with few details on what effects climate change could have on the spread of disease. Only during questioning did she describe some specific diseases that likely would be affected, again without elaboration.Her testimony before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee had much less information on health risks than a much longer draft version Gerberding submitted to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review in advance of her appearance."It was eviscerated," said a CDC official, familiar with both versions, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the review process.The official said that while it is customary for testimony to be changed in a White House review, these changes were particularly "heavy-handed," with the document cut from its original 14 pages to four. It was six pages as presented to the Senate committee. The OMB had no comment on Gerberding's testimony."We generally don't speculate and comment on anything until it is the final product," said OMB spokesman Sean Kevelighan. He added that OMB reviews take into consideration "whether they ... line up well with the national priorities of the administration."The CDC is part of the Department of Health and Human Services and its congressional testimony, as is normal with all agencies, is routinely reviewed by OMB.But Gerberding, who could not be reached late Tuesday for comment, was said to have been surprised by the extensive changes. Copies of the original testimony already had been sent to a number of associated health groups representing states, county and city health agencies that the CDC routinely coordinates with, a CDC official said.CDC spokesman Tom Skinner sought to play down the White House changes. He called Gerberding's appearance before the Senate panel "very productive" and said she addressed the issues she wanted during her remarks and when questioned by the senators."What needed to be said as far we're concerned was said," said Skinner in a telephone interview from Atlanta. "She certainly communicated with the committee everything she felt was critical to help them appreciate and understand all the issues surrounding climate change and its potential impact on public health."The deletions directed by the White House included details on how many people might be adversely affected because of increased warming and the scientific basis for some of the CDC's analysis on what kinds of diseases might be spread in a warmer climate and rising sea levels, according to one official who has seen the original version.Gerberding seems to have tried to address some of those issues during questioning from senators.Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., the committee's chairman, produced a CDC chart listing the broad range of health problems that could emerge from a significant temperature increase and sea level riseThey include fatalities from heat stress and heart failure, increased injuries and deaths from severe weather such as hurricanes; more respiratory problems from drought-driven air pollution; an increase in waterborne diseases including cholera, and increases vector-borne diseases including malaria and hantavirus; and mental health problems such as depression and post-traumatic stress."These are the potential things you can expect," replied Gerberding when asked about the items listed. "... In some of these areas its not a question of if, it's a question of who, what, how and when."Peter Rafle, a spokesman for Boxer, said the senator knew nothing about changes that might have been made to Gerberding's testimony by the White House.http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071023/ap_on_re_us/global_warming_health
10/23/2007 10:24:06 PM
^ if you don't love bush you're not american
10/24/2007 12:00:53 AM
10/24/2007 12:06:05 AM
Harry Reid blames California fires on global warming--then cuts and runs.
10/25/2007 2:22:09 AM
That's more desirable than dogmatically sticking to a belief, until it's too late, like a certain sitting president.
10/25/2007 2:26:40 AM
^ So, do you agree with Reid--yes or no?
10/25/2007 2:28:05 AM
Do I agree that many factors contributed to the fire? Yes.
10/25/2007 2:28:28 AM
ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT GLOBAL WARMING
10/25/2007 2:38:51 AM
^^ Yeah, you sound like a Reid devotee.
10/25/2007 2:42:17 AM
Haha, how does that make me sound like a devotee?You have no idea what my opinion of Reid is. AFAIK, i've never even hinted at one.In that little quote there, Reid sounds a lot like Bush though.[Edited on October 25, 2007 at 2:51 AM. Reason : ]
10/25/2007 2:51:35 AM
10/25/2007 6:48:44 PM
10/25/2007 10:39:23 PM
^^ I forgot to post the link to the wiki article regarding the oil reserves in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctic_Refuge_drilling_controversyAlso, I failed to include the % of oil imported to the US:
10/26/2007 12:38:32 PM
Climate Change and the 'Politics of Fear'
11/1/2007 12:29:22 PM
Oh wow, some authors talking about politics.Another crushing blow to science provided by hooksaw
11/1/2007 12:35:13 PM
^ Another meaningless Boone-Tard post that doesn't address the issue. GG!
11/1/2007 12:39:04 PM
11/1/2007 1:28:55 PM
^ So, your position is that the politics of the global warming debate is irrelevant?
11/1/2007 2:22:19 PM
ARE PEOPLE STILL TALKING ABOUT THIS SHIT??????????????
11/1/2007 2:27:18 PM
^ Obviously. Did you feel compelled to post here or what?
11/1/2007 2:31:30 PM
^ I just think it's ridiculous when 20 years ago, before global warming became a "political issue", 99% of scientists researching global warming would have agreed that it was a real thing. And now that there's government money backing half of them to find anything that will point towards the contrary, it's a giant issue. Regardless, when there's a democratic President and a democratic Legislature (in 2008), I'm sure we'll see a change in the government's stance.
11/1/2007 2:49:15 PM
11/1/2007 3:31:49 PM
^
11/1/2007 3:38:08 PM
11/1/2007 3:48:51 PM
To an extent, I actually agree with hookssssssss... with hookssssssssss... with that dude I normally can't fucking stand In fact, I think we've got another perfect example of this same phenomena:
11/1/2007 4:41:56 PM
But omg they flew planes into our buildings and are blowing up eachother zomg!!!1 So now let me oversaturate this thread with pictures of the USS Cole and dead babies to show that turrisms is fo REALS! You hate America first moonbat communist tree hugging hippy nutjobs are trying to equate a warming climate to turrists trying to steal our white womens so you can destroy our economy with your 'save the rainforest' leftest agenda!!!1
11/1/2007 5:27:55 PM
^ Yes--now you have it.
11/1/2007 5:34:34 PM
There actually is a very strong similarity between 9/11 and climate change...The lame arguments coming from the wingnuts who deny the facts about what actually happened/is happening.
11/1/2007 10:19:59 PM
^ Indeed, the similarities are striking. In each case the issue is either overblown or discounted entirely... to the detriment of course of the legitimate problems at hand
11/2/2007 11:04:04 AM
I remember when climate change killed 3,000+ American citizens...
11/2/2007 11:12:32 AM
Because that's what we were discussing.Way to be on the ball!
11/2/2007 11:26:33 AM
that is whats been discussed over the last few postsbut i appreciate you jumping in with no other reason than to troll me...flattering as usualalso nice strawman]
11/2/2007 11:29:09 AM
^^ 1. TreeTwista10 didn't initiate the global warming-9/11 comparison.2. Since the comparison had already been made, it was fair for him to point out the difference in lethality of the events at issue. [Edited on November 2, 2007 at 11:32 AM. Reason : .]
11/2/2007 11:31:34 AM
^ True, but that's why I said that "the similarities are striking."Differences aside, both issues are exceptionally controversial, so the extremes get the bulk of the attention. Global Warming - We are having an impact, but it's next to impossible to predict how much, and how bad the consequences are. In the short term we should focus on the better defined environmental issues with regards to energy. I think regulating the energy industry based solely on GW is a poor decision, b/c the justification can be debated ad naseum without a better understanding of how the climate works.Terrorism - 3,000 people dead, national icons destroyed, getting hit on your own turf... 9/11 shook the nation in ways we've not previously known in our brief history. The resulting emotional tidal wave however has been used to justify things like torture, suspending habeous corpus, unsupervised wiretapping and spying, and an unjust war. The problem - "You're either with us or against us." Either you support the war or you hate the troops. Lost in the conversation is the legitimate concern that staying in Iraq may be a poor decision, but that terrorism is a real threat that we cannot ignore.In both cases the extreme get the lionshare of the attention. The truth is muddled, and compromise becomes increasingly difficult. Both have seen a lack of progress for this exact reason.
11/2/2007 12:04:19 PM
We discussed how the politics were similar.We discussed how the deniers were similar.Never discussed how the causalities were similar, though.Huh, it seems Sir Twistalot jumped in with an unrelated low blow.how uncharacteristic
11/2/2007 12:08:37 PM
unrelated? you compare two things using multiple criteria...but when i compare THE SAME TWO THINGS with a different criterion its apparently not relevant...i mean why should it be relevant that one of the things being compared has tangible, concrete casualties as a direct result and the other doesnt...clearly theres no place to point out something as straight forward and impossible to misconstrue as direct casualtiesbut i guess calling me Sir Twistalot is your way of changing the subject since its clear you have no legitimate response for my point that terrorism is much more deadly]
11/2/2007 12:24:18 PM
11/2/2007 12:28:42 PM
clearly you wouldnt have had such a PMS fit if you didnt realize it WAS a comparison of the casualities of terrorism versus the lack of casualties of climate changebut since you are now choosing to change the subject to arguing the definition of 'comparison', its clear that you still have no legitimate response to my point
11/2/2007 12:32:45 PM
I don't need to change the subject. Sure, let's ignore that it was just a sarcastic remark. Let's pretend that it was an actual comparison.How was it at all relevant to the discussion of the politics of climate change?90% of your posts are not only cheap shots, but really dumb cheap shots that are not at all clever. Then you call us elitists when we mock you.
11/2/2007 12:40:14 PM