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Last Thursday, Ursula asked "What Motivates Climate Change Deniers" and invited people to explain their positions in the face so much evidence and so strong a consensus on the part of the scientists who spend their life's studying the subject. More than 700 comments were posted (a new record for this blog).
Reviewing these responses I found a few that were truly well informed and were asking thoughtful questions that represented skepticism, not denial. Skepticism is good. It's the most important quality of scientific activity. Some of the skeptic's questions lie at the frontiers of current climate research and remain unknowns.
Too many of the responses to Ursula's post, however, had nothing to do with an attempt to understand how climate science (or any science) reaches its conclusions. Flames about Al Gore, the "climate gate" e-mails and the hockey stick data were trotted out again and again. These are all talking points intended to avoid real engagement with the scientific process — the experiments, the data collection, and the journal articles where ideas are fought out in the face of evidence or mathematical consistency.
Climate science is corrupt, the deniers tell us. But they have no problem with medical science when it tells them to take pills for high blood pressure. ...Science is not a lunch buffet. Yes, the individual results on small, focused issues like the coffee-bad/coffee-good debate may flip back and forth. When research domains mature into overarching paradigms, however, its time to take notice.
...Some form of anthropogenic climate change? As best as the world's scientific community can tell: yes as well! Beyond that "yes" the questions are all about policy, not science. People need to make that distinction. Don't pick and choose between the science you like and the ones you deny.
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:thumbsup: The truth is so silly!!!!major bean wrote: Human activity is not the cause of climate fluctuations. The climate is cyclical.
The volcano last year and current puts more polutants in the air than all of civilization for the past 200 years.
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http://environment.about.com/od/greenho ... no-gas.htmThis argument that human-caused carbon emissions are merely a drop in the bucket compared to greenhouse gases generated by volcanoes has been making its way around the rumor mill for years. And while it may sound plausible, the science just doesn’t back it up.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the world’s volcanoes, both on land and undersea, generate about 200 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually, while our automotive and industrial activities cause some 24 billion tons of CO2 emissions every year worldwide.
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2010 was record year for greenhouse gas emissions. Worldwide carbon-dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels reached a record 30.6 billion metric tons in 2010, an international energy group reports. Despite hopes that the global recession could lead to more efficient and lower-emission energy use, he adds, "That seems to have been wishful thinking."
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Hey PS! Thanks for asking. Again, this falls into the science part, not the policy portion of the issue, but I'm happy to find some info for ya.PrintSmith wrote: So tell me SC, what was it that caused the Little Ice Age and the emergence from it? Was it the interruption of the ocean current highway leading from the tropics to the northern hemisphere? Was it a volcano sending lots of sulfur into the upper atmosphere where it turned into cyanide (or hydrogen cyanide or something like that) which reflected the sun's warmth? Did the output of radiation from the sun diminish a fraction of a percent? In order to know what the current cause of the warming is, wouldn't we also have to have an understanding of what caused the last cooling cycle and why the planet emerged from that?
If indeed our activity is the cause, which I don't happen to believe, then can we also artificially moderate it by putting reflective compounds into play and is this something that is being modeled to prevent us from falling off the abyss? If we have the power to warm the planet, we also have the power to cool it off. Personally, I don't believe we have either, but the opposite belief would have to include the power to cool along with the power to warm. If we are the cause of the climate change, then we would have to have the power to change it in either direction.
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