4/16/2008 9:35:11 AM
not what I'm saying at all. I think the video ultimately has merit in that it is a sane attempt at explaining why we should act against global warming.I also thought his second persona had merit. With anything that is unproven (ie global warming) we could go to the extreme to prevent it, but it would also be akin to spending resources to stop space hamsters. When he does the choices and presents as a lottery ticket and asks us to choose which one we would take (the option that he assumes we choose it take action because the risk is far less to take that route)... on the take action parts, he brushes over the consequences of expending resources as just one big if global warming isn't something we cause while the consequences of not taking action gets an entire expose.I would say that the consequence of taking action for the hell of taking action is quite large. If we spend finite resources fixing something we can't explain... what happens on the day that we can explain it and we have to take action against global warming but we've spent so many resources trying to fix something we dind't know how to work to begin with.That's why I subscribe to this guy's approach:That is basically his argument. Are we causing global warming? Verdict is out. What should we do about it? Lets figure it out first, then spend the resources accordingly in a sane and rational manner instead of scaring the masses to do something that is probably the incorrect approach to begin with.Also, encompassed in that one big under take action and global warming is false is the fact that we are basically damming millions of people to piss poor living conditions across the world because we say they shouldn't industrialize because of a myth. I think that's a pretty big consequence...but not if you're a science teacher in an air conditioned class room.
4/16/2008 9:44:51 AM
4/16/2008 10:25:35 AM
^ Points taken. I'm not saying that global warming/global cooling/climate change/climate destabilization/other monicker isn't necessarily false. I do, however, see a very real correlation between those who are hyping it (Gore) and the money they make. The proof is ultimately in the pudding. And if Gore has done his research as he says he has and he is 100% convinced that we are causing a worldwide epidemic, then why does he continue to live the way he does? Why doesn't he take personal actions to help the problem? I take issue to this in a large degree.However, being a hypocrite doesn't necessarily make you wrong. Smoking a cigarette in front of a classroom of children while offering the advice of "you shouldn't smoke" doesn't make you wrong. But it removes your legitimacy. And if there's anything global warming needs right now... it's legitimacy.I'm not anti-environment. I think we should all be proactive and mindful about what we put into the air, the water, and the land. However, the science is inconclusive and we have the unfortunate position of performing the experiment while we're in the test tube. Given that, the risks are certainly higher. However, I still think we can be sane about this and we shouldn't have to resort to scare tactics (an inconvenient truth) or fraud (carbon credits).We can take a sane and reasoned approach to this and act rationally. The Kyoto Protocol is the opposite of this. Al Gore is the opposite of this. Lets work it out first and figure out how to best spend our resources on a problem that we have figured out.[Edited on April 16, 2008 at 10:41 AM. Reason : .]
4/16/2008 10:41:07 AM
^ i agree very much with what you've said...i think our only disagreement lies in the timeline
4/16/2008 10:47:08 AM
Chit Chat is where TSB threads come to resolution.[Edited on April 16, 2008 at 10:52 AM. Reason : .]
4/16/2008 10:52:29 AM
4/22/2008 3:41:54 PM
is anyone really surprised? i mean, really?
4/22/2008 3:58:20 PM
http://www.weatherquestions.com/Roy-Spencer-on-global-warming.htmThere is some good info from a real climatologist
4/22/2008 3:59:51 PM
^ there are "real" climatologists on both sides...anyone who quotes al gore is an idiot, but anyone who pretends like there aren't scores of real scientists on his side (in that, global climate destabilization is a very real possibility) is also an idiot
4/22/2008 6:07:52 PM
i agree quagmire...i've said all along that its still up in the air...that some scientists believe in it, others dont, others still are on the fencethe problem has been, at least on TWW, that anybody who wasnt completely convinced that anthro co2 was causing warming was automatically an exxon shill or some spokesman for BP...essentially saying "there IS no argument" when there has ALWAYS been an argument/difference of opinionevery scientist can see the data...the conclusions they draw from that data are what vary tremendously
4/22/2008 6:21:28 PM