7/21/2011 7:09:17 PM
7/22/2011 1:54:04 PM
^I'm sorry you feel that way. I'm glad I don't have any stress from worrying about any of those things occuring.
7/22/2011 2:27:04 PM
7/22/2011 2:41:13 PM
7/22/2011 2:47:01 PM
7/22/2011 3:03:23 PM
7/22/2011 3:32:44 PM
And, for that matter, if the science is so good, then why do the proponents of these theories routinely deny requests to their data and methods? Why do they thwart FOIA requests, which they are legally required to respond to? Why is science, in this case, so secretive? The answer is simple: because the "science" is faked and bogus and wouldn't stand up to legitimate scrutiny, the kind of scrutiny you don't find by sending your work off to be reviewed by people who worked with you on what they are reviewing.as for the claim that climate science doesn't pay well, why does James Hansen, one of the leading fearmongerers, have $1.2m outside of his NASA salary over the past four years? Is that not "being paid well?" Well, if he and NASA would respond to legally binding requests, we might find outhttp://blogs.forbes.com/larrybell/2011/07/19/nasas-inconvenient-ruse-the-goddard-institute-for-space-studies/[Edited on July 22, 2011 at 3:52 PM. Reason : ]
7/22/2011 3:47:01 PM
7/22/2011 7:28:48 PM
7/22/2011 7:46:33 PM
7/22/2011 8:17:49 PM
7/22/2011 8:46:16 PM
Here is a map with zones representing different climate types. Well climates are shifting and moving all over the globe at a pace than many animals cannot move with (they move with the natural pace but not the manmade pace). Thats why we are entering a period of mass extinction.
7/22/2011 9:12:01 PM
7/22/2011 9:49:48 PM
heres your common knowledge sourcehttp://climate.nasa.gov/evidence/
7/22/2011 10:34:23 PM
7/23/2011 2:10:22 AM
No. The natural pace is much slower than the manmade pace.
7/23/2011 4:36:31 AM
No, the natural pace is for rainfall and temperature to fluctuate wildly one year to the next. El Nino anyone?
7/23/2011 9:42:09 AM
el nino is an event and not a long-term change. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IjN7tBL-3g
7/23/2011 10:31:30 AM
So what? Animals must survive the short term in order to see the long term. That they survive such drastic short term variation implies they should do fine with slow long term variation.
7/23/2011 10:36:33 AM
ENSO doesn't wipe out plant life. Its only a short term deal. When the climate changes for a long period of time, certain plants don't survive and any animal that relies on that plant is done for as well as subsequent animals that rely on that animal.
7/23/2011 10:55:07 AM
7/23/2011 2:54:19 PM
7/23/2011 3:02:01 PM
7/25/2011 9:49:32 PM
7/25/2011 11:54:36 PM
7/26/2011 12:10:53 AM
Yeah and you are crazy if you think that would be noticeable. The scales are not even close. Super earthquakes change the rotation of the Earth and that still isn't even noticeable.
7/26/2011 12:15:34 AM
7/26/2011 1:32:48 AM
7/26/2011 1:59:06 AM
It's barely nudged above 70 degrees here in the Bay Area all summer. You guys need to stop making such a big stink over nothing. The weather is just fine. In fact, its downright enjoyable.
7/26/2011 3:51:05 AM
Satisfied with current weather. So obviously no action needed.
7/26/2011 8:04:09 AM
^better than being forced by the government to spend hundreds of billions in the hope of lowering the temperature a few tenth's of a degree.The E Man, it's well documented that global cyclone (i.e. hurricane) activity is at a historic low. Of course this is a non-issue as there are no links between these storms and "global warming".Regarding droughts, the current Texas drought is bad, but it was worse in the 50s...and worse in the 30s. Both time periods where you could not blame CO2 emissions. Who should you blame for the current drought? Probably La Nina. On the whole however, global drought conditions have dropped considerable over the last 30 years.http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/07/23/the-texas-centered-drought-versus-1918-1956-and-1934/#more-43973[Edited on July 26, 2011 at 8:43 AM. Reason : k]
7/26/2011 8:42:24 AM
7/26/2011 9:08:40 AM
Well what exactly do I need a plan of action for? Why should a plan be conceived to ward off natural climate changes?Now, if you want to talk about a plan of action to offset things that affect local climates like the urban heat effect and deforestation that's another matter.Should a plan be formulated for how to deal with the end of the oil era? Most definitely, though we have plenty of oil to last quite a while and shouldn't discourage continual development of known oil reserves when equivalent technologies are nowhere near ready.[Edited on July 26, 2011 at 9:17 AM. Reason : d]
7/26/2011 9:16:26 AM
7/26/2011 9:34:17 AM
7/26/2011 10:01:33 AM
7/26/2011 10:32:29 AM
No, production has continued to increase, we continue to drill more and extract oil at a faster rate around the globe to keep up with demand.[Edited on July 26, 2011 at 11:09 AM. Reason : without prices going gold][Edited on July 26, 2011 at 11:12 AM. Reason : india and china will cause global demand to double in15 years][Edited on July 26, 2011 at 11:13 AM. Reason : poop]
7/26/2011 11:08:51 AM
http://freedom21.org/alternative/5a-1.jpgReally? Seriously? A 2002-ish projection from who knows where?Here is the EIA International Energy Outlook 2010.A good laugh altogether, but the OPEC conventional especially so.
7/26/2011 11:39:10 AM
Oil isn't finite. We can just crush more trees and grind them with bones under intense pressure to make more oil.
7/26/2011 3:38:43 PM
7/26/2011 7:41:47 PM
7/26/2011 7:55:29 PM
7/26/2011 11:44:42 PM
7/26/2011 11:48:04 PM
7/27/2011 12:47:34 AM
7/27/2011 12:51:59 AM
A single building would have 10x the impact on the weather that a windfarm would based on resistance alone. Your grasp of scale is severely lacking.
7/27/2011 1:06:38 AM
and your point?
7/27/2011 1:07:34 AM
Tidal turbines ftw.
7/27/2011 1:09:23 AM
yep, until we see how they fuck things up worse. DOH! all for a problem that doesn't exist
7/27/2011 1:17:16 AM