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DoomYoshi wrote:Test it on me. Tree stump is my favorite role anyway lol. Next time I am picking Wispy Woods as my character.
Basically that if Global Warming turns out to be crap and we act to prevent it that it could cause a global economic depression, whereas if we do nothing then nothing changes. However, if Global Warming is real and we don't act, the impact of the change would lead to social, economic, political, and other catastrophes.alex_white101 wrote:my internet is too slow to bother loading a videomaybe u cud give me an overview?

Heard that the Ice Caps on Mars are melting(no proof) bet the Martians are panicing.Predictions have it that were at the beginning of a new ice Age. Also enviromental friendly products are becoming a major industry(proffits) which will only encourage more global warming threats.IccleJim wrote:There seems to be solid evidence (though I'm yet to see proof) that the surface temperatures of our neighbour planets, Venus and Mars, have increased in the last 200 years, with a similar pattern as Earth; i.e. when the Earth heated quickly, so did they, when it didn't heat so much or even cooled, (e.g. during the 1940s and 1950s) they did so also.
If such is true, then the only conclusion can be that the heat emitted by the sun has varied (a scientific fact which is widely accepted) and the recent sudden increase in global warming is only due to the changing temperature and emissions of the sun.
I think the difference is that there is zero scientific evidence that we might engender God's wrath (and indeed, that there is a God at all), so if you made a graph for that eventuality, you wouldn't take the "second row" into consideration at all.Iz Man wrote:Some of the comments responding to the video on the web page are right. This is not an argument, the same "block diagram" can be used for anything.
Like one reply said:
"This logic applies to ANY argument. Replace "Global Climate Change" with "Displeasing God and engendering his Holy Wrath", and the logic holds. Do we have any reason to believe "Engendering God's Wrath" is a reason to change our entire economic and political sytems, on a global scale? How about substituting the idea that "eating pasta makes the moon shrink"? The chart works the same way. The difference is that enviros want you to change your lifestyle in the way that THEY want you to change it. Think
The depletion of the ozone layer is a separate issue from global warming (although they are linked), so I don't know what relevance your paragraph here has. So I haven't bothered to check if it's correct.IzMan wrote:There is no credible evidence that man is causing climate change. The eruptions of Mt. St. Helens & Mt. Pinatubo put more ozone depleting elements in the atmosphere than every car on the planet since the invention of the internal combustion engine.
The link below addresses this better than I could.IccleJim wrote:There seems to be solid evidence (though I'm yet to see proof) that the surface temperatures of our neighbour planets, Venus and Mars, have increased in the last 200 years, with a similar pattern as Earth; i.e. when the Earth heated quickly, so did they, when it didn't heat so much or even cooled, (e.g. during the 1940s and 1950s) they did so also.
If such is true, then the only conclusion can be that the heat emitted by the sun has varied (a scientific fact which is widely accepted) and the recent sudden increase in global warming is only due to the changing temperature and emissions of the sun.
CFC's (chlorofluorocarbons) contribute to ozone depletion, which contributes to the greenhouse effect. There were more CFC's produced in those 2 eruptions than what has been produced by man since man has been producing CFC's.Stopper wrote: The depletion of the ozone layer is a separate issue from global warming (although they are linked), so I don't know what relevance your paragraph here has. So I haven't bothered to check if it's correct.
http://www.badastronomy.com/bablog/2007 ... r-induced/

Now that you've changed it, do you have a credible source for this? Also, assuming this is correct (which I don't think it is), why compare the eruptions with just every car there has ever been on the planet, when there are also boats, factories, aeroplanes, trains, and all manner of other carbon dioxide-emitting things?Iz Man edited to wrote:There is no credible evidence that man is causing climate change. The eruptions of Mt. St. Helens & Mt. Pinatubo put more greenhouse inducing elements in the atmosphere than every car on the planet since the invention of the internal combustion engine.
If climate change isn't induced by human beings, why do we need to continue to develop more efficient means of producing energy? Is this the first sign of a grudging admission on your part that, perhaps, human-induced global warming might be dangerous after all?Iz Man wrote:We need to continue to develop more efficient means of producing energy, which we are doing. We should also continue to be responsible in recycling, and make a conscious effort in to keeping the environment clean.
What we don't need are massive government regulations that could cripple the economy based on an Al Gore movie.

Simple.Stopper wrote: If climate change isn't induced by human beings, why do we need to continue to develop more efficient means of producing energy? Is this the first sign of a grudging admission on your part that, perhaps, human-induced global warming might be dangerous after all?

Show me proof. Cite me actual scientifically proven evidence that man is causing climate change more so than the sun or the earth itself.heavycola wrote:I can't believe anyone is still dismissing human-caused climate change. Take some fucking responsibility for yourselves and the ridiculous lifestyles we all lead. Or don't, but just come out and say you don't give a shit what happens after you're dead instead of hiding behind whichever degree-mill exxon-sponsored 'expert' has held the chart the wrong way up this time.

http://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn11088Iz Man wrote:Simple.Stopper wrote: If climate change isn't induced by human beings, why do we need to continue to develop more efficient means of producing energy? Is this the first sign of a grudging admission on your part that, perhaps, human-induced global warming might be dangerous after all?
We should always look for more efficient supplies of energy for simple cost savings to the public.
We should strive for cleaner energy for the same reason you don't want to go swimming in a mucky pond. Because its cleaner. Just because I'd like to see cleaner products doesn't mean I concede that man is destroying the planet.
Show me proven scientific data that shows man is the cause of global warming. You can't, because its not there.
Funny, the cleanest & most efficient means right now for supplying energy is nuclear power. Yet I don't hear the environmental wackos calling for more nuclear plants? Why, because it doesn't fit the agenda: big government & big regulations.


Ah, consensus, the favorite word of the apocalypse crowd....heavycola wrote:1,200 climatologists agree - there is a 90% chance that humans are causing climate change. Climate change itself is a certainty.
A consensus of this order between 1,200 scientists from 113 countries - that is pretty fucking huge. Or is that still not enough proof? if not, what would it take to convince you?

are you saying global warming isnt occuring? well even if it isnt i totally agree with the point that we should strive for cleaner energy sources simply for cleanliness. i mean have u been to a city when theres a smog? simply for human development we should find cleaner sources and more efficient sources to help our earth rather than add problems to it.Iz Man wrote:Ah, consensus, the favorite word of the apocalypse crowd....heavycola wrote:1,200 climatologists agree - there is a 90% chance that humans are causing climate change. Climate change itself is a certainty.
A consensus of this order between 1,200 scientists from 113 countries - that is pretty fucking huge. Or is that still not enough proof? if not, what would it take to convince you?
Consensus is NOT science, nor is it proof.
The apocalypse crowd? Soundbites like that are just laziness, you can do better.Iz Man wrote:Ah, consensus, the favorite word of the apocalypse crowd....heavycola wrote:1,200 climatologists agree - there is a 90% chance that humans are causing climate change. Climate change itself is a certainty.
A consensus of this order between 1,200 scientists from 113 countries - that is pretty fucking huge. Or is that still not enough proof? if not, what would it take to convince you?
Consensus is NOT science, nor is it proof.

was later changed to:Iz Man wrote:edited for accuracyStopper wrote: The depletion of the ozone layer is a separate issue from global warming (although they are linked), so I don't know what relevance your paragraph here has. So I haven't bothered to check if it's correct.
http://www.badastronomy.com/bablog/2007 ... r-induced/
after it had already been responded to! Cheat!Iz Man wrote:CFC's (chlorofluorocarbons) contribute to ozone depletion, which contributes to the greenhouse effect. There were more CFC's produced in those 2 eruptions than what has been produced by man since man has been producing CFC's.Stopper wrote: The depletion of the ozone layer is a separate issue from global warming (although they are linked), so I don't know what relevance your paragraph here has. So I haven't bothered to check if it's correct.
http://www.badastronomy.com/bablog/2007 ... r-induced/
Source: National Climatic Data Center