the issue is someone needs to prove we are doing it. at BEST science currently has correlation, not causation. thats been my argument the whole time.
I have a couple friends who work in this very field, know a bunch more, studied it in college, and worked with folks at ORNL. do you know the current best method to test for temperature changes? kinda a trick question because it depends on what you have. Ice core or sediment cores are the best. do you know how accurately those tell scientists what year it is? Ice cores they can check the layers, but the farther back you go the more compressed those layers get, and they stop being accurate predictors. The older Ice Core sample only goes back 800k years. even at only 800k its impossible for them to KNOW where one year stops or stops. Sediment cores don't have the compression issue, but that is because the layers aren't as ordered, so there is no accurate way to say this was year .......81bc and this was year ......82bc. carbon dating only works to a point. when you read the reports/papers the temperature data is all noted as being extrapolated from PROXY data. do we use proxy data now? no. why? because its not a good predictor, and that same proxy data today tells us a different story about our current environment than our preferred methods do.
so when you say the warming that has happened over a decade would normally take thousands of years is a guess. and its a guess that only assumes one factor (temperature change) was at play. doesn't look at any chemical changes, composition changes, changes in precipitation, atmospheric changes, other natural disruptions whether living or not. it assumes ALL of those factors are temperature related. its lazy and its done to manipulate.