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  • Dec 7, 2009, 05:07 PM
    tomder55
    Yes they did in Massachusetts v. EPA. The unelected ,appointed for life ,black robed oligarchs made a 5-4 decision that compels the EPA to take action to curb Co2 emissions in new cars ;SUVs and trucks... and opened the door for more intrusive regulatory action by the EPA.

    Now get this ; in their decision they instructed the EPA to make a decision relying solely on global warming science . At the time they were unaware of how fraudulent the science was.

    This decision today gives the President something in his pocket to crow about when he goes to Copenhagen . And as Steve said ;It also is a not so veiled threat by the administration to Congress, to move the Cap and Trade bill through the Senate, or they will take unilateral action.
  • Dec 8, 2009, 03:40 AM
    Catsmine

    Does "three strikes" count for flatulence? Methane's a greenhouse gas, too.
  • Dec 8, 2009, 04:19 AM
    tomder55
    Cats ;who knows ?The one thing permanent in government is the bureaucracy .The idiocy at Federal Agencies transfers from administration to administration.

    People keep talking about the 2,000 page health care legislation being proposed... It is nothing compared to the volumes of pages generated when these administrators transfer signed legislation into enforcement code.

    This is the same EPA that claimed there were no toxic fumes endangering rescue workers at "ground zero" after 9-11.

    I have no doubt buried in the Federal Code is agricultural methane emission regulations.
  • Dec 8, 2009, 04:46 AM
    frangipanis

    Didn't read all the skeptic ramble as it's a no brainer. Scientific proof of climate change occurring at an alarming rate is irrefutable. To argue against the need for urgent action is utterly irresponsible.

    Lateline - 24/11/2009: New report to confirm climate change trends

    Climate Change: An Issue for National Security (Australia 2010) | Security News - SourceSecurity.com
  • Dec 8, 2009, 05:12 AM
    tomder55
    Quote:

    Scientific proof of climate change occurring at an alarming rate is irrefutable. To argue against the need for urgent action is utterly irresponsible.
    "call me irresponsible - call me unreliable
    Throw in undependable too"

    My Bumper sticker
    CLIMATE CHANGE HAPPENS is selling like hotcakes.

    Perhaps you should read the skeptic ramble as it doesn't dispute climate change . It disputes AGW and the manipulation of the data the scientists used to support their conclusion.

    We have had a 10 year cooling trend .
    Global Cooling is Here

    So the scientists most responsible for the IPCC findings first tried to suppress that inconvenient truth .Then they just changed the meme from Global Warming to climate change and continued to push for economy wrecking decisions by policy makers who are bound to a course of action based on fraudulent scientific consensus.

    Look; the fools in Copenhagen will pontificate for 2 weeks and get nothing done. China and India will not sign on to any agreement and the Europeans are notorious cheaters when it came to Kyoto goals. Their own hyopcritical carbon footprint in the 2 week session will be larger than many 3rd world nations.( 1,200 limousines and 140 private jets producing 880 pounds of CO2 per attendee .)
  • Dec 8, 2009, 01:00 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by frangipanis View Post
    didn't read all the skeptic ramble as it's a no brainer. Scientific proof of climate change occuring at an alarming rate is irrefutable. To argue against the need for urgent action is utterly irresponsible.

    Lateline - 24/11/2009: New report to confirm climate change trends

    Climate Change: An Issue for National Security (Australia 2010) | Security News - SourceSecurity.com

    Cannot dispute that climate change is happening, ie; glacial melt, withdrawing of polar ice but like so many, and unlike that dizzy dame looking after the Copenhagen conference, I am unconviced there is a close correlation between CO2 emissions and what we observe and even less convinced we have the will and the ability to reverse the emissions or that we should be attempting to.
  • Dec 8, 2009, 01:05 PM
    Catsmine
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    Cannot dispute that climate change is happening, ie; glacial melt, withdrawing of polar ice but like so many, and unlike that dizzy dame looking after the Copenhagen conference, I am unconviced there is a close correlation between CO2 emissions and what we observe and even less convinced we have the will and the ability to reverse the emissions or that we should be attempting to.

    The funny thing, Clete, is using their math to calculate the remedies they advocate. By their math, everything the whole planet does to reduce emissions will decrease the global teperature one degree Celsius every 129 years.
  • Dec 8, 2009, 01:24 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Catsmine View Post
    The funny thing, Clete, is using their math to calculate the remedies they advocate. By their math, everything the whole planet does to reduce emissions will decrease the global temperature one degree Celcius every 129 years.

    The US has reached a stage of paranoia on this declaring CO2 a health hazard, Australia is becoming paranoid seeing CO2 as a security threat, but no one has stopped to ask how did we get into this mess? And the answer; population, unbridaled population growth. The problem will not go away as more and more people in developing countries try to catch up with a west obscessed with CO2 abatement. Someone has to tell China and India that for the good of the planet 2 billion people cannot be allowed to develop into CO2 emitters. China has forty mile traffic jams now, imagine what it will be like when another 1 billion people attempt to go home for New Year, a billion cars sitting on expressways pumping out CO2 . Someone has to tell Africa it must forever remain in the dark. We have the ridiculous proposition being put by South Africa that it is a developing nation. Someone has to tell Brazil and Indonesia not to cut down rain forest
  • Dec 8, 2009, 01:59 PM
    speechlesstx
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    Their own hyopcritical carbon footprint in the 2 week session will be larger than many 3rd world nations.( 1,200 limousines and 140 private jets producing 880 pounds of CO2 per attendee .)

    Meanwhile, for the rest of us - don't exhale.

    Apparently the theme for Copenhagen is "Scare the Children." The opening film, Please Help the World:

  • Dec 8, 2009, 03:39 PM
    frangipanis

    At work, so cheating with time here a little:

    "Now, it could just be me, but I would have thought that the world's most comprehensive assessment and review of climate science by thousands of international experts should probably be the first port of call when searching for facts."

    ABC News - Special Events Blog: Copenhagen Climate Change Conference
  • Dec 8, 2009, 05:44 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by frangipanis View Post
    at work, so cheating with time here a little:

    "Now, it could just be me, but I would have thought that the world's most comprehensive assessment and review of climate science by thousands of international experts should probably be the first port of call when searching for facts."

    ABC News - Special Events Blog: Copenhagen Climate Change Conference

    Don't know what you mean about cheating with time what we have here is cheating with facts
    It might be a fact that there are health risks associated with temperature rise, it might be a fact that we will get more severe weather events, and that we are likely to get severe impacts on food production but it is not a "fact" that we have the ability to bring things back to what we consider "normal" or to make any significant impact on what is happening. It is wishful thinking led by the Europeans who already have a decided economic disadvantage when compared with the rest of the world.
    What we see here is an attempt to limit changes for which we don't actually know the reason to 2 degrees of warming, and we "know" that if the planet warms to that extent we are in unknown territory.

    Lets look at the magnitude of what we need to do.
    Restore rain forest, this means curtailing soya bean production, and beef production, and consumption, in Brazil and other places which rely on this production. i.e. the US needs to change its diet. It also means phasing out the use of rain forest timbers in furniture production, paper production
    Cut vehicle emissions, this means smaller, more efficient vehicles. Just by coincidence the greatest impact will be in the US
    Cut emissions from electricity production. Coal fired power stations need to be converted to gas and ultimately phased out. The impact will be felt in the US, Australia and China.
    Cut fugitive emissions from the oil industry, so back to the big producing countries and the big users Saudi Arabia, US, Russia
    Cut emissions associated with agriculture. This means changing the way we deal with all aspects of agriculture
    Cut emissions associated with refrigeration

    Has anyone grasped the fact that our modern society cannot be allowed to continue because our approach to everything we do is wrong if we are effectively to deal with the problem as it is presented to us. You wonder why the politicians are dancing around the problem? What ever they do is eventually political suicide and there are very few statesmen out there. All this and we are not even sure if we actually know the cause
  • Dec 8, 2009, 05:46 PM
    excon

    Hello clete:

    We are the new Eastern Islanders.

    excon
  • Dec 8, 2009, 05:52 PM
    frangipanis

    Dr James Hansen, a NASA Climate Scientist seems to have grasped some pertinent facts:

    Lateline - 07/12/2009: Climate scientist discusses Copenhagen summit
  • Dec 8, 2009, 06:05 PM
    tomder55

    Hansen is also one of the biggest frauds on the planet
    American Thinker Blog: Global Warm-mongering: More Silk from a Pig's Ear

    Besides Al Gore (the Goracle) ,Hansen may be the biggest huckster in this scam.
    NASA warming scientist James Hansen, one of former Vice President Al Gore's closest allies in the promotion of man-made global warming fears, is being publicly rebuked by his former supervisor at NASA.
    Quote:

    Retired senior NASA atmospheric scientist Dr. John S. Theon, the former supervisor of James Hansen, NASA's vocal man-made global warming fears soothsayer, has now publicly declared himself a skeptic and declared that Hansen “embarrassed NASA” with his alarming climate claims
    .: U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works :: Minority Page :.

    Theon declared "climate models are useless." "My own belief concerning anthropogenic climate change is that the models do not realistically simulate the climate system because there are many very important sub-grid scale processes that the models either replicate poorly or completely omit," Theon explained. "Furthermore, some scientists have manipulated the observed data to justify their model results. In doing so, they neither explain what they have modified in the observations, nor explain how they did it. They have resisted making their work transparent so that it can be replicated independently by other scientists. This is clearly contrary to how science should be done. Thus there is no rational justification for using climate model forecasts to determine public policy," he added.
  • Dec 8, 2009, 06:06 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    Hello clete:

    We are the new Eastern Islanders.

    excon

    Don't you mean Easter Islanders?

    I agree we have cut down the trees and our statues face the sea but our demise is near
  • Dec 8, 2009, 06:12 PM
    frangipanis

    Some things just need to be spelt out:

    12, 2009Conspiracies and the IPCC
    A letter writer to a newspaper recently pleaded for guidance on how to get the facts about whether there is human-induced global warming. But the writer added emphatically that he did not want to read reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) because he wanted independent and reliable information.

    Now, it could just be me, but I would have thought that the world's most comprehensive assessment and review of climate science by thousands of international experts should probably be the first port of call when searching for facts.

    And make no mistake about how central the IPCC is to the global warming debate. The IPCC's reports are why ours and other governments around the world are calling for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions; and why everyone will meet in Copenhagen next month.

    But some of Australia's leading politicians such as Tony Abbott and Senator Nick Minchin have variously dismissed the IPCC as "alarmist" or fuelling a left-wing conspiracy to "de-industrialise" modern society.

    During a visit to NSW's Henty Field Day this year (ABC News - Special Events Blog: Farmers still sceptical about climate change science) I met numerous farmers' representatives who also harboured a dark suspicion of the IPCC and of climate scientists.

    So is the IPCC really that kooky? Have thousands of participating scientists from around the world who've contributed to four IPCC reports since 1990 duped the world with hidden agendas and manipulated science? Have they all got it wrong?

    I should point out that the IPCC's conclusions are supported in most countries by most major scientific bodies. In Australia that includes the CSIRO, the Australian Academy of Science, and the Federation of Australian Scientific and Technological Societies, to name a few.

    The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was established in 1988 by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) and the UN Environment Program (UNEP). It has issued four reports (1990, 1995, 2001 and 2007) each asserting with increasing certainty that the globe is warming (now 100 per cent certain) and that human driven greenhouse gas emissions are largely to blame (now 90 per cent certain). The next report is due 2014.

    While it is called a 'panel,' the IPCC is actually one of the most ambitious scientific undertakings in history bringing together hundreds of scientists and other experts who are generally nominated by their governments or by non-government organisations (such as the Australian Academy of Science or the CSIRO). But the IPCC is also policy-neutral. Its job is to present the best science. There is not a single policy recommendation in its reports.

    A different group of scientists is picked for each report and it is not just climate scientists - but biologists, physicists, geologists, economists, engineers, health experts and so on. Each report deals with three categories: the physical science, or how climate change works; impacts, adaptation and vulnerability, or how to deal with it; and mitigation, or how to minimise it.

    Each of these working groups is headed by two scientists, one each from a developed and developing nation, supported by up to 500 other scientists known as lead authors who in turn are supported by up to 2000 further expert reviewers. Together they evaluate thousands of pieces of peer-reviewed research from around the globe.

    Here is how Queensland University's Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, a world expert on coral reefs and climate change, describes what happened when he contributed a small slice of the 2007 IPCC report:

    "The IPCC has one of the most rigorous review processes I have ever experienced. There are various stages of review. The first round involves the working groups picking over the text (hundreds of eyes and qualified expert opinions). If you have been involved in this process, it is a quite an experience which takes months and years - involving a lot of pedantic haggling over detail - but always using the peer-reviewed literature as the base. When this is complete, then the documents are sent to signatory governments for review. Leading scientists from each of the countries pick over the details. And after this, the documents are placed for open comment (on the web). At this point, any government, industry, science group, special interest group, or individual is invited for comment, recommendations, amendments etc. In response, the lead and contributing authors are required to respond to each comment or suggestion in a precise fashion, however correct or off-the-wall they may be. The responses from the specialists are them independently reviewed to ensure that the documents have been amended to include the comment/suggestion/objection or the comment/suggestion/objection refuted scientifically (ie with peer-reviewed literature). Personally, I had to respond to 87 comments on a relatively small contribution to the Australian and NZ chapters within Working Group 2 of the IPCC report in 2007. At the end of the day, I don't think you could have a more rigorous process. The only problem is that it ends up being conservative (e.g. failure of AR4 IPCCC in 2007 to predict the current dramatic decline of Arctic sea ice). That may be its only flaw."

    There were more than 30,000 comments from the open public review process for just one of the 2007 working groups - all of them given a written response that is publicly available.

    One of the lead authors on the 2001 and 2007 reports, UNSW's Professor Andy Pitman, also worries it is unduly cautious especially because in the final stages all governments, including those with vested interests in fossil fuels like Saudi Arabia, have to approve what has been written "line by line."

    Prof Pitman says he and others acknowledge there is much they don't know about how the earth and the climate work; that they have been wrong on some things and that they are eager to test and re-test emerging data. They are by nature a conservative bunch, he says. "All good scientists are sceptics to the core."

    But so far nothing has seriously challenged their analysis of an underlying warming trend and its connection to human generated CO2 emissions. If anything, the latest data points to faster and stronger global warming.

    "Don't you think ambitious scientists would love to make their name proving global warming wrong? To prove the IPCC is wrong? ," he says. "It would guarantee a Nobel prize!"

    "Are we just biased and have we turned the profession into being distorted onto our side?" asks New Zealand's Professor Martin Manning of Victoria University who headed technical support for the 2007 IPCC report. "God, I wish that were the case, because I have grandchildren and practically every day I really, really wish we were wrong."

    Which brings us to one of the enduring sources of frustration among IPCC and many other scientists. Just about all the scientists attacking the IPCC, Prof. Pitman says, have never researched nor published any climate science in peer-reviewed journals - and peer review is how science works.

    "Climate Science is not about opinions. It is about what is provable and disprovable. There are no scientific publications that provide serious challenge to the IPCC conclusions. Not one. But there are literally thousands that support the conclusions of the IPCC."


    When is science valid?
    A valuable reference here is a short, sharp guide published by the Federation of Australian Scientific and Technological Societies. It's worth a look.

    In part, it provides a checklist to see whether a scientific idea has been validated:

    •Has it been published in the peer-reviewed literature in that field of science?
    •Have other scientists cited that publication as being valid (as opposed to citing it to show that it is wrong?)
    •Have other scientists conducted additional tests that show the idea to be valid?
    •Has the idea been built upon to create new understanding, i.e. has the idea become useful?
    Posted by Margot O'Neill on November 12, 2009 in Copenhagen Climate Change Conference | Permalink
  • Dec 8, 2009, 06:17 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by frangipanis View Post
    Dr James Hansen, a NASA Climate Scientist seems to have grasped some pertinent facts:

    Lateline - 07/12/2009: Climate scientist discusses Copenhagen summit

    Yes Hansen has a message there and in part I agree with him but I do think you should research Bob Carter also. You see there are many aspects to this debate and no one commentator is entirely right. We must not take action on short term observations
  • Dec 8, 2009, 07:18 PM
    frangipanis
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    Yes Hansen has a message there and in part I agree with him but I do think you should research Bob Carter also. You see there are many aspects to this debate and no one commentator is entirely right. We must not take action on short term observations

    We must take action based on what we already know to be fact. My money rests on the reputation and expertise of people like Will Steffan, Executive Director of the Institute of Climate Change at the Australian National University and the vast store of scientific evidence.
  • Dec 9, 2009, 03:45 AM
    Catsmine
    Frangipanis, the quote from Ms. O'neill (is she a PhD?) is fascinating, but she is not describing the Scientific method. She is describing the Scholastic method. Both are useful methods of study, but by using the Scientific method you can debunk invalid conclusions easily with just one criterion: can you predict a second occurrence?

    Has any of the "Climate Science" made an accurate prediction? I do not know of one. I have heard of several incorrect predictions, have I missed the correct ones?
  • Dec 9, 2009, 04:20 AM
    tomder55
    Quote:

    Has any of the "Climate Science" made an accurate prediction? I do not know of one.
    Not only that ;with the destruction of the raw data they could never even duplicate results... a prime criteria for scientific integrity . In the case in New Zealand where all the data was obtained;an honest graphing of the data showed completely different results than were published.
  • Dec 9, 2009, 06:38 AM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Catsmine View Post
    Has any of the "Climate Science" made an accurate prediction? I do not know of one. I have heard of several incorrect predictions, have I missed the correct ones?

    Hello Cats:

    Uhhh, the polar ice caps melting... You missed it, huh? I don't know how. They used to be BIG, and now they aren't.

    excon
  • Dec 9, 2009, 07:24 AM
    speechlesstx
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    Uhhh, the polar ice caps melting... You missed it, huh? I dunno how. They used to be BIG, and now they aren't.

    I think it's called Summer. Last year the arctic ice increased by a half million square miles and the ice between Canada and SW Greenland was at its highest level in 15 years.

    All I know is it's 8 degrees this morning in Texas, a little global warming would be nice right now. Meanwhile, don't exhale or the EPA will be on your a$$.
  • Dec 9, 2009, 07:27 AM
    excon

    Hello again, Steve:

    Sooooo, if I were to mention the UN report released yesterday saying that the last decade was the warmest on record, you'd call that a lie too, huh?

    Ok, then I won't mention it.

    excon
  • Dec 9, 2009, 07:42 AM
    speechlesstx
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    Sooooo, if I were to mention the UN report released yesterday saying that the last decade was the warmest on record, you'd call that a lie too, huh?

    You mean the report by the same IPCC that relies on the same discredited scientists pushing their religion on us? No, I don't believe much of anything they say.
  • Dec 9, 2009, 09:41 AM
    speechlesstx
    Willis Eschenbach has been looking over the data (what he can get) and found that, "before getting homogenized, temperatures in Darwin (weather station at Darwin Airpot in Australia) were falling at 0.7 Celcius per century … but after the homogenization, they were warming at 1.2 Celcius per century."

    Here are the graphs showing the difference between raw and "homogenized" data. Notice the difference between the red (adjusted) and the blue (raw):
    http://hotair.cachefly.net/images/20...ru-darwin7.jpg

    http://hotair.cachefly.net/images/20...ru-darwin8.jpg

    Quote:

    Those, dear friends, are the clumsy fingerprints of someone messing with the data Egyptian style … they are indisputable evidence that the “homogenized” data has been changed to fit someone’s preconceptions about whether the earth is warming.

    One thing is clear from this. People who say that “Climategate was only about scientists behaving badly, but the data is OK” are wrong. At least one part of the data is bad, too. The Smoking Gun for that statement is at Darwin Zero.
    That's how you "hide the decline."
  • Dec 9, 2009, 10:02 AM
    excon

    Hello again, Steve:

    I don't know if you noticed, but I don't publish scientific data. I just publish scientific conclusions. I don't do the data, because first and foremost, I don't UNDERSTAND the data. And, I'm a fellow who has a good understanding of science..

    I don't do the data, because I know it can be misleading if taken OUT of the context of the totality of the data. IS there, within the science community, data that conflicts with the consensus? Yes, there is? Is it surprising that you, or Willis Eschenbach could find it? No. Does it change the overwhelming totality of the scientific conclusions? No.

    You don't like it when I talk rudimentary science, like it hurts to throw trash into the air... But, you NEVER do contradict me, or show me data that says its just fine to do that... You even argue that it's not, but you have NO solutions to industries that do that. Or at least you've offered none that I can find. Drill, baby drill is NOT a solution.

    So, in terms of convincing ME that global warming is a hoax, which is what you believe, you're going to have to do better than finding obscure people who aren't scientists, to debunk it.

    excon
  • Dec 9, 2009, 10:11 AM
    tomder55

    230 members of the American Physical Society ,(some of its most distinguished members),have petitioned the society to suspend release of it's 2007 report until it can be determined to what extent it is tainted with fudged and faulty data from the CRU .

    Quote:

    Pressure on this venerable society of physicists, which was founded in 1899 at Columbia University, is coming from members who are squarely in the scientific mainstream and are alarmed at the state of climate science revealed in the leaked e-mail messages and program files from the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit.
    Physicists Stick to Warming Claim Post-ClimateGate - Taking Liberties - CBS News
    Quote:

    Those files show that prominent scientists were so wedded to theories of man-made global warming that they ridiculed dissenters who asked for copies of their data, plotted how to keep researchers who reached different conclusions from publishing, and discussed how to conceal apparently buggy computer code from being disclosed under the Freedom of Information law. Internal investigations are now underway at East Anglia, Penn State, and the British government's weather forecasting unit.

    One APS dissenting member is William Happer, a physicist who runs the Happer Lab at Princeton University. Another is Hal Lewis, a professor emeritus of physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. A third is Robert Austin, another Princeton physics professor and head of a biophysics research group. They've been circulating a letter saying: "By now everyone has heard of what has come to be known as ClimateGate, which was and is an international scientific fraud, the worst any of us have seen... We have asked the APS management to put the 2007 statement on ice until the extent to which it is tainted can be determined, but that has not been done. We have also asked that the membership be consulted on this point, but that too has not been done."
    Quote:

    Of the signatories so far, Happer says, 77 are fellows of major scientific societies, 14 members of the National Academies, one is a Nobel laureate, and there is a large number of authors of major scientific books and recipients of prizes and awards for scientific research. He adds: "Some have accepted a career risk by signing the petition. The 230 odd signatories can hardly be dismissed as lightweights compared to those who spread the message of impending climate disaster."
    REAL scientists should be alarmed because this reflects badly on their profession. Thankfully responsible ones are taking notice and beginning to speak up.
  • Dec 9, 2009, 10:30 AM
    excon

    Hello again,

    Ok, I got it. Somebody cheated, and you think it changes things.. To what degree, may I ask?

    a. Global warming is a hoax

    b. Global warming is NOT a hoax, but man has nothing to do with it.

    c. Global warming IS happening and IS man made, but if we just drilled for more oil, it'll go away.

    d. Global warming IS happening, and I don't know what to do about it, but CAP and TRADE ain't it.

    e. Global warming IS happening and I don't care, as long as my pick up starts every morning, and my stock in Exxon don't go down.

    f. I just like to piss excon off.

    g. I'm bored.

    h. None of the above, and here's why.

    excon
  • Dec 9, 2009, 10:53 AM
    speechlesstx
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    I don't know if you noticed, but I don't publish scientific data. I just publish scientific conclusions.

    Easy point to understand, if the data is faulty then the conclusion is likely faulty also.

    Quote:

    You don't like it when I talk rudimentary science, like it hurts to throw trash into the air... But, you NEVER do contradict me, or show me data that says its just fine to do that...
    Maybe that's because we've agreed with what seems like a thousand times that throwing trash into the air isn't good. Why would I contradict you on something I agree with?

    Quote:

    You even argue that it's not, but you have NO solutions to industries that do that.
    See above. Also for what seems like the thousandth time, all I've ever called for is an honest debate. Telling everyone repeatedly that I don't think throwing trash into the air is bad is patently dishonest.

    Quote:

    So, in terms of convincing ME that global warming is a hoax, which is what you believe, you're going to have to do better than finding obscure people who aren't scientists, to debunk it.
    You can't form an "educated" opinion if you don't read the post. You're for education aren't you?
  • Dec 9, 2009, 11:00 AM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by speechlesstx View Post
    You can't form an "educated" opinion if you don't read the post. You're for education aren't you?

    Hello again, Steve:

    I read it, already. It didn't do it for me.

    excon
  • Dec 9, 2009, 11:22 AM
    tomder55
    The magnitude of damage this scam is doing to science is probably beyond the grasp of most of us. What can be trusted now ?
    From my perspective it would be irresponsible for a public official to base policy on what is proving to be a falsification.
  • Dec 9, 2009, 02:50 PM
    frangipanis
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Catsmine View Post
    Frangipanis, the quote from Ms. O'neill (is she a PhD?) is fascinating, but she is not describing the Scientific method. She is describing the Scholastic method. Both are useful methods of study, but by using the Scientific method you can debunk invalid conclusions easily with just one criterion: can you predict a second occurance?

    Has any of the "Climate Science" made an accurate prediction? I do not know of one. I have heard of several incorrect predictions, have I missed the correct ones?

    There is no debate as scientific proof is already accessible. All nit-picking does is add to the inertia. You could debate this issue to oblivion, Catsmine.
  • Dec 9, 2009, 07:13 PM
    inthebox

    "there is no debate" Ha ha ha

    I wonder if the horse riders said that when the first automobiles were made. Or when the wright brothers tried to fly, or iwhen the sun revolved around the earth?


    G&P
  • Dec 9, 2009, 09:57 PM
    frangipanis

    Climate Change: Evidence

    Department of Climate Change - Science - facts and fiction - Think Change
  • Dec 10, 2009, 07:53 AM
    tomder55

    frangipanis

    I'll accept the premise of human caused climate change if you can show me evidence that it is warmer now than in the Medieval Warm Period ;a time when the Vikings colonized Greenland and Vineland... or that the Viking spewed C02 out of their SUVs.
  • Dec 10, 2009, 10:34 AM
    excon

    Hello again, tom:

    Way back when we revered education, we lead the world in science & technology. That was because we thought science was science - like English was English, or algebra was algebra..

    It's true that all NEW science looks like magic to the uninformed. That scares people... Maybe that's why they turned science into interest group. If we thought that way when Henry Ford invented the car, or the Wright brothers took to the air, we'da burned those people at the stake, and we'd still be cooking our dinner in the fireplace of our log cabins...

    I don't know what happened so that people can deny what's right in front of them.. You're not the only denier, tom... In the face of overwhelming evidence that vaccination saves lives, there's a growing movement of people who refuse to protect their children. The growth in the alternative health industry is a direct result of our disbelief in science... I could go on.

    No, I don't know where this denialism came from, but I know it doesn't bode well for us. Not at all.

    excon
  • Dec 10, 2009, 11:02 AM
    speechlesstx
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    Way back when we revered education, we lead the world in science & technology. That was because we thought science was science - like English was English, or algebra was algebra..

    We revered education when it was an education, before it became an indoctrination and dumbing down of our children.

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    It's true that all NEW science looks like magic to the uninformed. That scares people...
    And by "new science" you mean? Homogenized, value added data? Hiding the decline? Considering it a "travesty" that scientists can't account for a cooling trend? Redefining peer review? What? Those things SHOULD scare people. I don't know why you can't (or is it won't) see that?

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    we'da burned those people at the stake, and we'd still be cooking our dinner in the fireplace of our log cabins...
    Still running with the meme that we're anti-science. You know that's not so.

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    I don't know what happened so that people can deny what's right in front of them..
    I've been wondering the same thing myself.

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    You're not the only denier, tom... In the face of overwhelming evidence that vaccination saves lives, there's a growing movement of people who refuse to protect their children.
    Um, tell them to stop listening to that fool Bill Maher.

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    No, I don't know where this denialism came from, but I know it doesn't bode well for us. Not at all.
    Works both ways, ex. Consensus based on a predetermined conclusion isn't science. The agenda behind it should bother you, unless you're a one worlder.

    Quote:

    Copenhagen offers the prospect of a robust political deal, endorsed by the world's leaders and witnessed by the world's people, that sets out clear targets and a timeline for translating it into law. To be a truly historic achievement, such a deal must do two things.

    First, it must lay the basis for a global regime... -Khofi Annan
    I'm not into that.
  • Dec 10, 2009, 11:21 AM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by speechlesstx View Post
    The agenda behind it should bother you, unless you're a one worlder.

    Hello again, Steve:

    Let me say it another way. Science, like algebra, has NO agenda... On the other hand, people who DENY science are the ones with the agenda. Yes, it DOES bother me.

    You speak about dumbing down students, but you don't want 'em to learn anything about sex. You don't want 'em to learn about evolution. You don't want 'em to learn biology... You don't want 'em to learn history... Frankly, looks to ME, like YOU folks are the ones dumbing the kids down.

    excon
  • Dec 10, 2009, 11:30 AM
    tomder55
    It sure helps forward the debate when people who express healthy skepticism are tarred as deniers ;as if to equate us with holocaust-deniers . But OK I can play that game . Attacking the critic is a well worn and tried method for people who have no other defenses to offer . My church used that method well in the dark ages.

    I am talking temperature patters that go back centuries(It was warm in the 11th century ;as warm if not warmer than it is now ) and am countered with "truths "and what you call "overwhelming evidence " in a very short snapshot in time.

    It's ironic really .Science goes back to times before humans exist to make a case for evolution... and a compelling case it is . But when it comes to climate ;they only see changes that have occurred since the industrial revolution began. It doesn't make sense.

    They do a huge disservice to legitimate scientific inquiry .

    It is a historical undeniable FACT that the medieval warming period existed . All the selective examination of tree rings can't hide that fact. It is also a FACT that there was a Little Ice age that followed. It shut off the Greenland colonies as pack ice began advancing southwards in the North Atlantic, as did glaciers in Greenland. There were winter fairs on the iced over Tames River . As late as 1780 people walked across NY harbor from Manhattan to Staten Island in the winter . Glaciers in the Swiss Alps advanced, destroying farms and crushing villages. In 1658, a Swedish army marched across the Great Belt to Denmark to invade Copenhagen. The Baltic Sea froze over, enabling sled rides from Poland to Sweden.

    All the evidence shows that we began to leave that period in the mid-19th century .

    I'm not making this up . IT IS FACT !
    So I ask again . Was the Medieval Warm period and the Little Iceage that followed it the result of man made C02 emissions ?
  • Dec 10, 2009, 11:35 AM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    So I ask again . Was the Medieval Warm period and the Little Iceage that followed it the result of man made C02 emissions ?

    Hello again, tom:

    No. Does that mean that the current global warming ISN'T caused by man? No.

    That's the best you got?

    excon

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