VolsNSkinsFan
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2007
- Messages
- 15,813
- Likes
- 3,974
If you would, could you state what it is you would have to see to be convinced climate change is occurring?
As far as I can tell, the only way you and others can discuss this issue is by constructing straw men. Obviously weather has always existed and will continue to exist. This includes cold and warm events, droughts and floods, etc. You don't seem to get that what the weather is like this week actually doesn't have much bearing on the 30 year climate picture. They're two different scales.
If you would, could you state what it is you would have to see to be convinced climate change is occurring?
Remember, you are talking to a type of mentality that successfully argued for decades that tobacco does not cause health problems or that the universe is 3000 years old.
Science/scientists are bad evil people, unless they discover something that can be sold at a massive profit.
Cyclonic Activity is below average, Tornadic Activity is below average, Wildfires are below average. The only thing extreme is the cold.
Remember, you are talking to a type of mentality that successfully argued for decades that tobacco does not cause health problems or that the universe is 3000 years old.
Science/scientists are bad evil people, unless they discover something that can be sold at a massive profit.
I love random statements with nothing to back them up...
Here's a link telling how we are experiencing more extreme weather now:
Extreme weather becoming more common, study says | Environment | The Guardian
I love random statements with nothing to back them up...
Here's a link telling how we are experiencing more extreme weather now:
Extreme weather becoming more common, study says | Environment | The Guardian
Remember, you are talking to a type of mentality that successfully argued for decades that tobacco does not cause health problems or that the universe is 3000 years old.
Science/scientists are bad evil people, unless they discover something that can be sold at a massive profit.
Let's not forget that there are peddlers of falsehood on both sides of this issue.
When the head of the EPA claims Aspen will be the same climate as Amarillo and science writers claim climate change is causing acidification of the ocean (2 recent examples in this thread) why wouldn't people be skeptical of "science".
Not even close. But nice attempt at lumping us with past issues. Pretty sure Drs & Scientists recommend smoking, cocaine, heroine, lumbotomies, and electro-shock therapy too. Where they right or wrong?
And at one point, doctors thought bleeding a patient would remove the bad humours that was causing a person to be sick. Were they right or wrong?
Science advances, leading to new understanding of how the world works. Back in the 1920s-1940s, doctors did recommended smoking, then (amazingly enough), studies showed the many adverse health affects of it. I doubt you can find a doctor today that would tell you to start smoking.
The problem I have with this topic is that the only reason people are arguing against it is because any attempt at correction would cost money, rather than discussing the data itself. If the carbon buildup in the atmosphere could be lowered and this correction would have zero cost to industry, would anyone still be arguing against it?
i believe i am one of those two examples, and if so you are miss labeling me. I don't think climate change is causing the acidity level to rise. I was just pointing out there has been a rise in the acidity and it has had a documented effect on animal life. in the coral reefs to be exact.
my problem are the alarmists. Right or wrong they need to come up with real ways to deal with the issue. imo they are too busy saying "the sky is falling the sky is falling" and not enough time getting out of the way/fixing the problem/figuring out how to. and no, the carbon tax/cap'n'trade would not be fixing the problem. if what they say is true, the carbon tax isn't fixing the problem it is just passing on responsibility to someone else.
This is where I'm at basically. I'm in the "luke-warmest" camp.
Often times too, the alarmists have an economic benefit <cough> Al Gore <cough>
my problem are the alarmists. Right or wrong they need to come up with real ways to deal with the issue. imo they are too busy saying "the sky is falling the sky is falling" and not enough time getting out of the way/fixing the problem/figuring out how to. and no, the carbon tax/cap'n'trade would not be fixing the problem. if what they say is true, the carbon tax isn't fixing the problem it is just passing on responsibility to someone else.
There is some merit to this. Unfortunately, people have a tendency to point out problems rather than solve them. And a lot of scientists tend to want fixes NOW, no matter what.
I think everyone agrees that climate change is a natural phenomena. Many climate scientists believe that man made pollution is increasing this change and have data to back it up. While the carbon tax/cap would slow down the growth a little, I think the many tons of carbon and pollutants other countries put out (I.e., China) far exceeds ours. It's hard to talk climate change with a country willing to dump toxic pollutants in their own poor neighborhoods.
There is some merit to this. Unfortunately, people have a tendency to point out problems rather than solve them. And a lot of scientists tend to want fixes NOW, no matter what.
I think everyone agrees that climate change is a natural phenomena. Many climate scientists believe that man made pollution is increasing this change and have data to back it up. While the carbon tax/cap would slow down the growth a little, I think the many tons of carbon and pollutants other countries put out (I.e., China) far exceeds ours. It's hard to talk climate change with a country willing to dump toxic pollutants in their own poor neighborhoods.
In the billions of years this planet has existed the climate has been gradually changing. It gets hotter...it gets colder.... You'll get no argument from most on climate change.
Till you add the politics of "man made climate change". When anyone disagrees bart and his groupies the labels get broken out. I find it hard to take anyone seriously that calls everyone who disagrees a denyer.
yes, if these scientists are or people funding them actually want to save the world they should be looking long term and working in groups that can do something. the scientists study the problem and present solutions. the engineers get the solution and make it real. anything less it set up for failure, simply because it is not set up to succeed. i guess that is part of my definition of alarmism vs realism and thus my part of my problem with them.I'll add that climate scientists are not the source of solutions. They can and have documented the impact of CO2 on the climate. If the solution is reduce CO2 then that is probably another set of scientists to figure that one out.
My problem comes in when we expect a climate scientist (or look to them) to understand how policy changes will impact us. This problem is fraught with externalities. Changing this changes that yet we frequently don't see the full and thorough cost/benefit analysis or at least an honest discussion of the short term real costs that some people will face.
For example, in a recent (past 5 years or so) EPA mandate related to coal they presented data about how many children (in the 20,000 range IIRC) would ultimately benefit. Awww, do it for the children. However, the did NO ANALYSIS of economic impact on coal producing areas including how loss or reduction of income and employment impact would impact children in those areas.
Policy is difficult, policy is messy and unfortunately policy is often crafted by those who stand to gain from the new regulatory regime (look to the EPA practice of "friendly lawsuits" whereby there's a nod and wink between regulators and environmental groups resulting in settlements with the environmental groups).
I don't know the answer but there is plenty of misinformation floating on both sides of this issue.
Let me rephrase for you: What would you need to see to be convinced humans are a driving force behind climate change?
I find it funny how the rhetoric shifts in these kind of conversations. One moment there is no climate change, the next it is just not caused by people, the next it is just not that big of a deal, then back to there is no climate change. No factually based position is ever taken, and thus there is no way to properly evaluate the position. So I ask: what would you need to see to accept anthropogenic climate change?
If the weather now was so extreme since we have been pumping so much CO2 since 1970 then wouldn't hurricane strength be increasing drastically?
