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On Mon, 20 Dec 2010 22:09:10 -0500, W1TEF
wrote: On Mon, 20 Dec 2010 21:31:09 -0500, Gene wrote: Now.... as I see it, we have the same problem.... if the contribution of heat by man is sufficient, if there *IS* a tipping point, it could mean the end of life as we know it..... I agree with that completely. However, scientists are supposed to be skeptical. A good scientist will never, EVER, say definetly, positively, absoutely, "pinky swear" and something is incontrovertible fact. Only mathematicians can make those kinds of statements and usually those are covered by caveats. There has been no, I repeat no, real science on climate change. Things like average global temperature just don't exist. Can't exist unless you can cover every square meter of land and sea with temperature reporting devices and that ain't gonna happen. You can't even use statistical techniques, including fractal math I might add, to obtain an average temperature - the biosphere is too large. The science has been all one sided with no room for other ideas and concepts. Well known effects of solar science are dismissed as "secondary" or "irrelevant". It's all about carbon. Answer me this - Mt. Pinatubo blew up in 1991, it released some ungodly amount of CO2 into the atmosphere along with some other noxious gases like hydrogen sulfide and a couple of other "ides". Net result - a decrease in reported temperatures of about 1 degree Celisus. The amount of CO2 released into the atmosphere was equal to the entire CO2 output of the world for ten years - TEN years. Hello? Bueller? You're right - we don't know. Erroring on the side of change though is economically treacherous. What is needed is good science - real science that accounts for everything, solar, atmophere, pollution - the whole panoply of sciences that directly affect our living space. The solution isn't "clean energy". Under the guise of "carbon reduction" movement of wealth from the developed world and giving it away to the un-developed world - it's as simple as that. It is an international social solution to third world poverty - it's not about climate science. That does not mean that we shouldn't work towards a fossil fuel free future - I agree that is important and necessary if only because of the pollution problems. But we need more and better science - not some faked, fudged "temperture" charts, hocus pocus emotionally charged statements about settled science. Wow... you really don't know much about science. |
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