GOP Rep. John Shimkus stated:"The planet won't be destroyed by global warming because God promised Noah" There is more facepalm worthy commentary by him in this article here:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1328366/John-Shimkus-Global-warming-wont-destroy-planet-God-promised-Noah.html?ito=feeds-newsxml#ixzz14tyG7z9QPerhaps the most frightening thing is he has a shot at becoming the chair of the powerful House Energy Committee. So does Joe Barton who apologized to BP.
11/11/2010 10:54:39 AM
11/11/2010 10:58:42 AM
11/11/2010 11:22:46 AM
Yay ... finally someone making sense in washington.Much rather have him than Al Gore in charge of it.
11/11/2010 11:34:20 AM
11/11/2010 11:48:39 AM
I'd say what they really don't get is that they're referring to a bunch of man-made desert myths.
11/11/2010 12:29:24 PM
Its one thing to elect idiots like Shimkus. The only real qualification for being a congressman is getting enough people to vote for you.Its an entirely different thing for committee appointments to go to unqualified members.
11/11/2010 1:19:04 PM
"God told me so" is almost as convincing as "this simulator I wrote told me what I wanted to hear!"
11/11/2010 2:08:26 PM
^hey look. an otherwise smart person is twisting themselves into a pretzel to toe the corporate line. how surprising!
11/11/2010 2:49:34 PM
Pot, meet kettle. The corporate sponsors for Cap & Trade are just as big as the corporate opponents. Global warming is big business, not that corporate sponsorship would matter in the face of proof, but proof is hard to come by in this debate.
11/11/2010 3:21:26 PM
11/11/2010 5:26:22 PM
11/11/2010 5:39:19 PM
^it's like the numbskull hasn't heard of "peer review" and "scientists who wanna become world-fucking-famous for proving the consensus wrong"
11/11/2010 8:10:42 PM
There are many aspects of Global Warming that are science based. We know higher CO2 concentrations should warm the planet. But there are also aspects, namely the simulators claiming to prove what percentage of past warming was due to CO2 and then using that to predict future climate changes, complete with feedbacks, that are not much better than dusty scrolls claiming to be the word of God.
11/11/2010 8:17:47 PM
^^ what good is peer-review when it's done by the same people who did the study in the first place, or when it's done by the close friends of those who did the studies. Look up the Wegman report if you want to see just how fucked up the peer-review process is with regards to AGW. Hell, the Climategate emails even showed how the bigwigs were manipulating the peer review process so that only pro-AGW reports would get out.
11/11/2010 9:55:36 PM
ITT we treat a subject with a scientific consensus supporting it the same as a subject with a scientific consensus against it
11/11/2010 10:04:48 PM
if you have to talk about a "consensus," it means you don't have the actual EVIDENCE to back it up.
11/11/2010 10:11:05 PM
11/11/2010 10:25:48 PM
wowThis thread was thrown off track pretty badly (thanks to LoneSnark...).The idea that some congressman thinks the Earth can't be destroyed because of one of the most blatantly figurative stories in the Bible is SOOOOOO far removed from the level of uncertainty that there is in climate research.There's a thousand reasons why delusional religious people are worse than some scientists who suck at math.
11/11/2010 10:43:42 PM
Yea, but delusional religious people in Congress is not news. Neither is delusional climate doomers in Congress.
11/11/2010 10:56:04 PM
even if it's not news it's still importantit represents a threat to the republic
11/11/2010 11:03:41 PM
^ Only when they start passing legislation based upon it, otherwise it is just a lovable foible making them electable. Last I heard, neither side had any legislation on the table.
11/12/2010 1:02:43 AM
just waitthe agents of intolerance will not rest until we are all enslaved by the strictures of fundamentalist Christianity
11/12/2010 1:22:20 AM
So what is a delusional climate doomsayer? Someone who thinks climate sensitivity is 2-4 degrees C? Someone who thinks positive feedbacks will bump it up to 4-10 degree C? Or someone who proposes any sort of regulation whatsoever to combat greenhouse gases?
11/12/2010 2:33:48 AM
11/12/2010 7:19:55 AM
11/12/2010 10:29:47 AM
ITT Lonesnark compares pro-global warming scientists to Christian creationists[Edited on November 12, 2010 at 11:05 AM. Reason : or is it "anti-global warming"? the ones that believe global warming exists]
11/12/2010 11:03:15 AM
good carbon regulation: flat carbon tax enforced equally.bad carbon regulation: carbon credits given to friends of legislatorsCarbon credits are a huge scam and you're really a huge idiot if you dont understand why. Carbon credit based regulation is a great way to encourage nepotism, corruption, and enforcement holes. Another example of retard legislation is highly specific bullshit feel good stuff (ex: ban on gulf coast drilling or ban on specific financial tools).A retard will look at those and say "DURR THEY WERE A BAD THING LET BAN IT!!" because they dont understand that its a specific instance and wont solve anything in the future. An example of proper regulation would be to remove the caps on liability for gulf coast drilling. If someone fucks up, you can make them responsible for fixing the entirety of the mess. Not just one specific thing you regulated against. You wont see that kind of regulation because no legislator would be willing to risk their income from the folks it would regulate. What you will see is horrible feel-good regulation that wont have any impact.[Edited on November 12, 2010 at 11:11 AM. Reason : .]
11/12/2010 11:10:22 AM
^^ I do. They both want to use non-evidence as proof they need to make their friends rich. In the face of the actual uncertainty that pervades the GW science, one should stick to regulations that do no harm. A carbon tax is just another regressive tax, offset it by cutting some other regressive tax and society is no worse off while the very real possibility that GW is a problem is satisfied. Instead, they want to bootlegger/baptist their way to corporate welfare that doesn't actually cut carbon emissions, causing real damage to society based upon non-proof.
11/12/2010 12:33:50 PM
11/12/2010 12:44:56 PM
^^I agreee, but you don't see me comparing one side of the scientific debate to religious fantasy.
11/12/2010 1:15:45 PM
I did not make myself clear. There is a very real possibility that God exists and will send us all to hell for not passing laws in his name. Not quite as possible as the Earth warming a whole bunch, but they are in the same "Do this or bad things could happen, no way to prove either way." Well, just as with the GW nuts, the religious nuts should stick to regulations that do no harm until they find proof.
11/12/2010 1:31:06 PM
I don't really want to get into the specifics of global warming science since there is already a beasty thread on that but my question is:"how much proof is needed?"This really goes for any science debate where legislation in the interest of the public health is on the table (chemicals, air standards, etc).The best example I can think of is cigarettes. People had been calling cigarettes "cancer sticks" since before WWII but tobacco companies were able to deny the link between cigarettes and lung cancer because most of the evidence was simple correlation between smokers and lung cancer incidence. Not until 1998 was science able to actually establish a definite link and mechanism between chemicals in cigarettes and tumor suppressing genes (and eventually win settlements). Thats 60+ years of mounting evidence!So in these scientific questions, where there is always room for doubt (since that is the nature of science), how much evidence is needed before we can act?
11/12/2010 1:56:57 PM
The answer to your question is "Depends on the costs of acting." In the case of global warming, acting sensibly (carbon taxes coupled with elimination of, say, the payroll tax) costs almost nothing, so although the evidence is poor, we should go ahead and act. But, for something else, such as smoking, the evidence is much stronger (double blind studies say yes) but you must consider the costs of acting rashly. High taxes or bans produce bad outcomes (fuel organized crime, penalize the poorest among us, etc) so even though the evidence is good, "acting" in terms of legislation should still probably stop at modest taxation, nothing more. Similarly, if all an angry god asks of us is hanging a donated copy of the ten commandments on the courthouse wall, we should do that too. Yes, the evidence is terrible, but odds are someone would even volunteer to hang it for us, so it costs us nothing to head off a possible apocalypse, until definitive proof can be found that there is no God. We'd be stupid not to.
11/12/2010 3:48:34 PM
11/12/2010 4:19:39 PM
im the angry god itt[Edited on November 12, 2010 at 4:23 PM. Reason : t]
11/12/2010 4:23:46 PM
^^ Murder is a pretty high cost to bear. For that level of demand, the nuts would need quite a lot of proof, more evidence than currently exists for global warming nuts. Hell, more than currently exists for the smoking and cancer link.
11/12/2010 4:48:32 PM
Demanding evidence is not exactly a trademark of religious fanaticism.
11/12/2010 4:50:34 PM
^ But just as we are not global warming fanatics, neither are we religious fanatics. As such, we should demand proof before we either wreck the economy or execute a virgin.
11/12/2010 5:00:12 PM
Not if the alternative is global catastrophe (in either case), per your cost/benefit reasoning. Once you've conceded that the apocalypse is on the horizon, there really aren't many actions that could be deemed "too costly" if thought to stand a chance at holding it off.
11/13/2010 9:49:56 AM
Except the benefit of such actions is 0 so any amount of cost into them is sunk and useless.This is one of the reasons why religion sucks and is bad for our species' long term survivability. Praying = doing nothing. Worse than doing nothing, because it encourages other people to do nothing.
11/13/2010 9:55:54 AM
11/13/2010 9:57:41 AM
Ok, praying in the attempt to avert global disaster = doing nothing.Also, I'll find you the study where heart patients that were prayed for did worse than the ones that were not. There is almost certainly a placebo affect for people that pray for themselves, but there is absolutely no evidence that prayer does more than dick for reality beyond yourself.[Edited on November 13, 2010 at 10:11 AM. Reason : .]
11/13/2010 10:10:48 AM
11/13/2010 10:12:16 AM
11/13/2010 10:23:27 AM
If someone honestly believes that God is going to answer their prayers, and cure their cancer, or put food on the table, or help them find a job, it will surely make them feel better. The problem is that the prayers won't actually do anything, and the person is less likely to search for real solutions. The same thing applies here. Some Christians really do believe the prophecies, so when reality comes into conflict with that, we run into problems.I encounter people arguing that religion is a necessary institution, or that the benefits gained from prayer/belief in God are worth having. Usually, those same people are the ones that reject "pulling yourself up by your bootstraps" as pure absurdity. That is to say, they reject individualism. According to them, some people need God, or a God-like state, to empower them.
11/13/2010 10:44:44 AM
11/13/2010 10:48:12 AM
Hardwiring implied that it's ingrained in your way of thinking. That can't be true, because many of us don't believe in the supernatural. Belief in the supernatural is a product of some knowledge gap. When you see or experience something you can't understand, you seek an explanation.
11/13/2010 10:56:35 AM
11/13/2010 11:40:29 AM
What's the difference between the ability to believe in the supernatural and the ability to believe something untrue?
11/13/2010 11:53:52 AM