2/28/2006 5:18:17 PM
AIRSTRIP ONE?OH NOES BIG BROTHER
2/28/2006 5:25:09 PM
Insert fundamentals:#1 Carbon Dioxide is not a polutant, it is food for plants#2 Even the most draconian restrictions on CO2 use would have little impact#3 A warmer planet is not necessarily any worse than the current planet#4 Draconian restrictions on CO2 use would cost the global economy trillions, and only help the poor a little bit (their standard of living is just a shy above death as it is)#5 Everyone would be much better off if we simply cut the poor a check and ignored global warming
2/28/2006 5:48:00 PM
2/28/2006 5:58:50 PM
2/28/2006 8:12:56 PM
[Edited on February 28, 2006 at 8:30 PM. Reason : }]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
2/28/2006 8:29:57 PM
2/28/2006 8:34:05 PM
2/28/2006 8:38:48 PM
2/28/2006 8:42:35 PM
While this article kinda sucks, it makes valid points. Aircraft engines consume a LOT of fuel, and while they have improved, they still emit a ton of emmisions. I would wager that one continental flight is far more harmful than if the 100 passengers just drove to their destinations and back individually. And it is indeed true that the poor fly very little and for emergencies only while the rich will fly crosscountry at the drop of a hat.I don't see a solution though. A tax on air fuel would drive the airlines out of business, and the poor need the rich in order to keep flights regular and affordable.
2/28/2006 9:32:46 PM
^ this is information that exists. On average, a full plane consumes about the same amount of fuel as if the passengers had driven with two passengers per car (ignoring traffic and stop-lights). And these would be small cars. As many Americans own big cars, or even SUVs, it can easily be more fuel efficient for them to fly. Going down this "road" of reasoning, however, is purely for fun. Attempting to "implement" engineering truths by manipulating society rarely work out well. For example, what percentage of fliers are business travellers? What percentage of them would not go if they had to drive there? What percentage of them would have benefitted society had they gone? For example, some businesses rely on air-travel to cut down on labor duplication (employ one "fixer" and have him fly out to the number of sites under management when necessary) or increase colaberation efficiency (sometimes the blue-prints just don't cut it). Not to mention the businesses that rely upon air-freight (Fed Ex, UPS) to do business in the first place. In the end, outlawing airtravel "could" result in increased carbon emissions in the long run as economic advancement slows and economic adaptability erodes. Nevermind that it is unnecessary and idiotic:#1 Carbon Dioxide is not a polutant, it is food for plants#2 Even the most draconian restrictions on CO2 use would have little impact#3 A warmer planet is not necessarily any worse than the current planet#4 Draconian restrictions on CO2 use would cost the global economy trillions, and only help the poor a little bit (their standard of living is just a shy above death as it is)#5 Everyone would be much better off if we simply cut the poor a check and ignored global warming[Edited on February 28, 2006 at 11:26 PM. Reason : copied for those that missed]
2/28/2006 11:23:04 PM
While I'm all for warmer weather, saying that slight temperature increases are harmless is very dangerous. Catastrophic weather swings and global extinctions have been caused by far less in the past.And while I love to fly, it drives me a little crazy to hear about businesses flying people halfway around the world to accomplish something that could just as easily happen with a telephone or a computer.
2/28/2006 11:41:57 PM
2/28/2006 11:44:23 PM
3/1/2006 12:04:36 AM
3/1/2006 8:09:06 AM
dude shit isnt trash, its food for flys
3/1/2006 10:43:50 AM
"#1 Carbon Dioxide is not a polutant, it is food for plants"My astronomy professor said that ancient plants consumed a ton more of this stuff and pumped out way more of what we breathe than do modern much weaker plants, that they are what gave us our oxygen atmosphere (modern plants can maintain it somewhat, but couldn’t have created it on that level). Assuming this is correct, knowing massive conversion plants are in the realm of natures possibilities, all we need is a little playing god genetic engineering. Then we can have our planes and eat them too.
3/1/2006 10:53:46 AM
3/1/2006 10:56:10 AM
3/1/2006 11:42:58 AM
dont worry dihydrogen monoxide will save us.. i have faith...
3/1/2006 11:58:08 AM
HA HA! You fuck-off!Carbon Monoxide != Carbon Dioxide!The two act radically differently. Do ANY research and you would know that. You EXHALE Carbon Dioxide, you fucktard, if it did what Carbon Monoxide does that would be impossible and would kill you. The problem with Carbon Monoxide is that it cannot dislodge from your blood cells. Once a blood cell has absorbed carbon monoxide it is forever incapable of carrying oxygen, it might as well be dead. Carbon Dioxide is readily dislodged from blood cells, that is how you expell it by breathing. NO Amount of Carbon Monoxide is safe. The less there is the longer it takes you kill you, that is all. You blood stream is naturally about 5% Carbon Dioxide, about 40 Torr, of your blood stream. If you enter a room with .01% Carbon Monoxide, the concentration begins rising in your blood stream far above .01% and keeps rising (slowly) until there is no more Carbon Monoxide in the room! Your blood stream becomes incapable of carrying anything else and you die (the time depends on the concentration, but it is inevitable).[Edited on March 1, 2006 at 12:19 PM. Reason : value]
3/1/2006 12:11:54 PM
3/1/2006 12:20:00 PM
^ I appologize for the personal attack, I took what you wrote to be condescending, it was unbearable to me since every statement I made was correct... Carbon Monoxide is undeniably a poison. Any amount is harmful, just as cyanide. Breathing Carbon Dioxide is like drinking water, too much can kill. And just like Carbon Dioxide, as long as the subject is still breathing full recovery should be achieved simply by removing them from the environment in a matter of minutes. Should we call water a poison to?[Edited on March 1, 2006 at 12:45 PM. Reason : .,.]
3/1/2006 12:43:42 PM
no, too much water is poisonous, as is too much carbon dioxide. As far as I can tell, a small amount of carbon monoxide is no more dangerous than a small amount of carbon dioxide. There is some carbon monoxide in the air, too, especially in cities. http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_rec.php?id=1788the two basically cause the same problems - if there's too much of them, they displace oxygen, and you suffocate. Carbon monoxide is worse in parts per area, but the effect is similar.
3/1/2006 1:03:33 PM
^ DG? Why? Why are you doing this? Are you trolling or something?
3/1/2006 1:42:47 PM
as I said, carbon monoxide is certainly worse (and yes, the fact that it binds to hemoglobin makes a difference), but there is clearly a carbon dioxide toxicity, as pointed out by that medical article I posted.
3/1/2006 1:47:26 PM
And as your article demonstrates, Carbon Dioxide released into the atmosphere is not remotely dangerous, leaving us with what I originally stated: "Carbon Dioxide is not a polutant, it is food for plants"
3/1/2006 2:24:16 PM
Everyone just needs to die so we stop breathing out carbon dioxide. SAVE THE PLANET.And leave it to an idiot to bring up carbon monoxide poisoning in a conversation about the effects of carbon dioxide. [Edited on March 1, 2006 at 2:48 PM. Reason : ]
3/1/2006 2:47:39 PM
again with the personal attacks. the comparison is apt. I don't see why I'd be the idiot. You're the one who doesn't see the difference between normal organisms exhaling carbon dioxide vs. one organism producing more per amount of time than has ever been produced, leaving the earth's ability to process it completely impotent.[Edited on March 1, 2006 at 3:13 PM. Reason : .]
3/1/2006 3:12:41 PM
3/1/2006 3:16:54 PM
3/1/2006 5:23:35 PM
Wow, just wow.
3/1/2006 10:45:44 PM