Moderator: Community Team
Lootifer wrote:Nobunaga wrote:More mud in the eye for the climate panic zealots.
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer ... orms-uk-me
Isnt inter year variations something that is typically used relentlessly against those in support of global warming by those who are believe it to be a myth?
Not taking a side, just sayin' you need to play with a stright bat.
Nobunaga wrote:More mud in the eye for the climate panic zealots.
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer ... orms-uk-me
PLAYER57832 wrote:Nobunaga wrote:More mud in the eye for the climate panic zealots.
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer ... orms-uk-me
Reminds me of the US congresspeople who built Igloos in Washington, claiming that the big snowstorms flew in the face of global warming.
In fact, if you actually study SCIENCE, instead of just cute 2 minute news blurps, all of this is quite consistent with the fact that the Earth's climate is changing, and almost certainly do to human impacts.
Nobunaga wrote:Lootifer wrote:Nobunaga wrote:More mud in the eye for the climate panic zealots.
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer ... orms-uk-me
Isnt inter year variations something that is typically used relentlessly against those in support of global warming by those who are believe it to be a myth?
Not taking a side, just sayin' you need to play with a stright bat.
Well, our planet is supposed to be a near living hell by now, and a few island nations are by now, according to the original schedules, submerged....
Did I miss those news stories?
Nobunaga wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Nobunaga wrote:More mud in the eye for the climate panic zealots.
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer ... orms-uk-me
Reminds me of the US congresspeople who built Igloos in Washington, claiming that the big snowstorms flew in the face of global warming.
In fact, if you actually study SCIENCE, instead of just cute 2 minute news blurps, all of this is quite consistent with the fact that the Earth's climate is changing, and almost certainly do to human impacts.
You kill me. If it's warm - climate change. If it's cold - climate change again. If nothing unusual happens.... Yeah, that's probably unusual, so let's blame climate change again
Nobunaga wrote: Your religion has achieved its goal of creating billions, if not trillions of dollars in new tax revenues from carbon where none existed before - huge sums of money from thin air. As far as religious miracles go, I'll give you credit, that's an impressive one.
But I don't go to your church.
Nobunaga wrote:Well, our planet is supposed to be a near living hell by now, and a few island nations are by now, according to the original schedules, submerged....
Did I miss those news stories?
Metsfanmax wrote:Nobunaga wrote:More mud in the eye for the climate panic zealots.
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer ... orms-uk-me
Climate scientists predicted that the Arctic sea ice minimum would likely be larger this year than last year. The reason why? The sea ice minimum in 2012 was so low that the 2013 minimum was likely to be larger due to pure statistical noise. Year-to-year variations are much less important than long-term trends, which is something you really need to keep in mind when reading any piece which suggests that a single comparison between two years is enough to disprove or prove the reality of global warming.
oVo wrote:Equating Carbon Credits to Sin Taxes is interesting and I'm always curious as to where any revenue collected in such a way goes.
There is certainly something going on with the environment we live in and Global Warming is just one part of the problem. Nobody alive today really needs to concern themselves with it, let's just leave it for our children's, children's, children to resolve.
I live in the most wasteful nation on the planet and the bad habits of the citizens around me will take generations to alter. These people can't walk five steps to place garbage in a trash can, how can they be expected to recycle anything? There's enough resources around (oil, wood, water, food) for our existence now, why worry about the condition of this place when we're gone?
It will all come to an end soon enough anyways.
Night Strike wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Nobunaga wrote:More mud in the eye for the climate panic zealots.
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer ... orms-uk-me
Climate scientists predicted that the Arctic sea ice minimum would likely be larger this year than last year. The reason why? The sea ice minimum in 2012 was so low that the 2013 minimum was likely to be larger due to pure statistical noise. Year-to-year variations are much less important than long-term trends, which is something you really need to keep in mind when reading any piece which suggests that a single comparison between two years is enough to disprove or prove the reality of global warming.
Kind of like how 40 years of miniscule global warming is statistical noise on an earth that is over 4 billion years old (according to your standards)?
Metsfanmax wrote:Nobunaga wrote:Well, our planet is supposed to be a near living hell by now, and a few island nations are by now, according to the original schedules, submerged....
Did I miss those news stories?
Science is a constantly self-improving process. Our models are much better than they were in the 1970s, and specific forecasts from earlier decades should be taken with a huge grain of salt; specific forecasts from this decade should be taken with a slightly smaller grain of salt. The point of modelling is not that we can guarantee what will happen in the year 2100. There are uncertainties attached to all of the predictions made in climate science, and if you have been led to believe that any climate science prediction is a certainty that disproves the science if it does not hold up, that is probably the fault of the media for misunderstanding the role of uncertainty in any forecasting science.
The case for global warming until now rests on basically unassailable temperature measurements. The general case for global warming modelling into the future rests on very simple physics that is well-understood, but trying to make predictions about exactly how much hotter it will be in 100 years, or how much the sea level will rise, is just really hard. We can't be certain about what will happen in 2100, and we admit it. We make the best guess we can, and inform policymakers with that.
But there is very little doubt about the fact that the Earth is warming very rapidly, and that humans are the primary cause of this. If 97% of doctors told you that you had cancer, would you decide not to do anything about it because at one time doctors thought bleeding people out was a way to treat illness?
thegreekdog wrote:oVo wrote:Equating Carbon Credits to Sin Taxes is interesting and I'm always curious as to where any revenue collected in such a way goes.
There is certainly something going on with the environment we live in and Global Warming is just one part of the problem. Nobody alive today really needs to concern themselves with it, let's just leave it for our children's, children's, children to resolve.
I live in the most wasteful nation on the planet and the bad habits of the citizens around me will take generations to alter. These people can't walk five steps to place garbage in a trash can, how can they be expected to recycle anything? There's enough resources around (oil, wood, water, food) for our existence now, why worry about the condition of this place when we're gone?
It will all come to an end soon enough anyways.
Wow. Antarctica is a dirty place.
You posted a lot of rhetoric here. It is interesting how many people are interested in the government doing "something" about global warming (probably upwards of 50% of people in this country) and yet there is a lot of criticism levied at the people of the same country for not doing anything about it. It's weird. It's like if I say "Government, you need to stop me from jumping down the stairs" and then I continue to jump down the stairs.
BigBallinStalin wrote:The other is plastic bag prohibitions being worse for the environment too.
thegreekdog wrote:oVo wrote:Equating Carbon Credits to Sin Taxes is interesting and I'm always curious as to where any revenue collected in such a way goes.
There is certainly something going on with the environment we live in and Global Warming is just one part of the problem. Nobody alive today really needs to concern themselves with it, let's just leave it for our children's, children's, children to resolve.
I live in the most wasteful nation on the planet and the bad habits of the citizens around me will take generations to alter. These people can't walk five steps to place garbage in a trash can, how can they be expected to recycle anything? There's enough resources around (oil, wood, water, food) for our existence now, why worry about the condition of this place when we're gone?
It will all come to an end soon enough anyways.
Wow. Antarctica is a dirty place.
You posted a lot of rhetoric here. It is interesting how many people are interested in the government doing "something" about global warming (probably upwards of 50% of people in this country) and yet there is a lot of criticism levied at the people of the same country for not doing anything about it. It's weird. It's like if I say "Government, you need to stop me from jumping down the stairs" and then I continue to jump down the stairs.
oVo wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:The other is plastic bag prohibitions being worse for the environment too.
Not sure how these prohibitions can be worse for the environment,
but I have seen where many of those bags end up.
Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:oVo wrote:Equating Carbon Credits to Sin Taxes is interesting and I'm always curious as to where any revenue collected in such a way goes.
There is certainly something going on with the environment we live in and Global Warming is just one part of the problem. Nobody alive today really needs to concern themselves with it, let's just leave it for our children's, children's, children to resolve.
I live in the most wasteful nation on the planet and the bad habits of the citizens around me will take generations to alter. These people can't walk five steps to place garbage in a trash can, how can they be expected to recycle anything? There's enough resources around (oil, wood, water, food) for our existence now, why worry about the condition of this place when we're gone?
It will all come to an end soon enough anyways.
Wow. Antarctica is a dirty place.
You posted a lot of rhetoric here. It is interesting how many people are interested in the government doing "something" about global warming (probably upwards of 50% of people in this country) and yet there is a lot of criticism levied at the people of the same country for not doing anything about it. It's weird. It's like if I say "Government, you need to stop me from jumping down the stairs" and then I continue to jump down the stairs.
Individual action cannot solve this problem. I could choose to stop driving my car, and it would not make any meaningful difference to whether global warming continues. It's best to think of our society as being addicted to carbon and we need to forcibly break ourselves off the addiction if we're going to improve. You don't get very far by asking an alcoholic to kindly stop. But if you make the alcohol twice as expensive, you'll likely get what you want.
Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:oVo wrote:Equating Carbon Credits to Sin Taxes is interesting and I'm always curious as to where any revenue collected in such a way goes.
There is certainly something going on with the environment we live in and Global Warming is just one part of the problem. Nobody alive today really needs to concern themselves with it, let's just leave it for our children's, children's, children to resolve.
I live in the most wasteful nation on the planet and the bad habits of the citizens around me will take generations to alter. These people can't walk five steps to place garbage in a trash can, how can they be expected to recycle anything? There's enough resources around (oil, wood, water, food) for our existence now, why worry about the condition of this place when we're gone?
It will all come to an end soon enough anyways.
Wow. Antarctica is a dirty place.
You posted a lot of rhetoric here. It is interesting how many people are interested in the government doing "something" about global warming (probably upwards of 50% of people in this country) and yet there is a lot of criticism levied at the people of the same country for not doing anything about it. It's weird. It's like if I say "Government, you need to stop me from jumping down the stairs" and then I continue to jump down the stairs.
Individual action cannot solve this problem. I could choose to stop driving my car, and it would not make any meaningful difference to whether global warming continues. It's best to think of our society as being addicted to carbon and we need to forcibly break ourselves off the addiction if we're going to improve. You don't get very far by asking an alcoholic to kindly stop. But if you make the alcohol twice as expensive, you'll likely get what you want.
It's not about blame or credit. We have a problem, and no substantial action has been taken by the market to address the problem, because the externalities associated with carbon dioxide emissions are not appropriately factored into the price we pay for products that cause such emissions.
oVo wrote:Rhetoric indeed, or does it become something else if it's true? Is there any doubt America is the most wasteful (per capita) nation in the world, with China actually having the biggest impact by the sheer numbers of it's population? It's time for this Nation to lead by example, stfu and just do it.
I do believe the government needs to regulate and try to keep a lid on toxic production and where it ends up, but feel people can't opt for a "protect me from myself" posture. People have to take some responsibility for the environment and resources where they live too, by taking steps to improve conditions and any factors that have the potential to effect their quality of life...
locally, nationally and globally.
Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:oVo wrote:Equating Carbon Credits to Sin Taxes is interesting and I'm always curious as to where any revenue collected in such a way goes.
There is certainly something going on with the environment we live in and Global Warming is just one part of the problem. Nobody alive today really needs to concern themselves with it, let's just leave it for our children's, children's, children to resolve.
I live in the most wasteful nation on the planet and the bad habits of the citizens around me will take generations to alter. These people can't walk five steps to place garbage in a trash can, how can they be expected to recycle anything? There's enough resources around (oil, wood, water, food) for our existence now, why worry about the condition of this place when we're gone?
It will all come to an end soon enough anyways.
Wow. Antarctica is a dirty place.
You posted a lot of rhetoric here. It is interesting how many people are interested in the government doing "something" about global warming (probably upwards of 50% of people in this country) and yet there is a lot of criticism levied at the people of the same country for not doing anything about it. It's weird. It's like if I say "Government, you need to stop me from jumping down the stairs" and then I continue to jump down the stairs.
Individual action cannot solve this problem. I could choose to stop driving my car, and it would not make any meaningful difference to whether global warming continues. It's best to think of our society as being addicted to carbon and we need to forcibly break ourselves off the addiction if we're going to improve. You don't get very far by asking an alcoholic to kindly stop. But if you make the alcohol twice as expensive, you'll likely get what you want.
It's not about blame or credit. We have a problem, and no substantial action has been taken by the market to address the problem, because the externalities associated with carbon dioxide emissions are not appropriately factored into the price we pay for products that cause such emissions.
Metsfanmax wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:oVo wrote:Equating Carbon Credits to Sin Taxes is interesting and I'm always curious as to where any revenue collected in such a way goes.
There is certainly something going on with the environment we live in and Global Warming is just one part of the problem. Nobody alive today really needs to concern themselves with it, let's just leave it for our children's, children's, children to resolve.
I live in the most wasteful nation on the planet and the bad habits of the citizens around me will take generations to alter. These people can't walk five steps to place garbage in a trash can, how can they be expected to recycle anything? There's enough resources around (oil, wood, water, food) for our existence now, why worry about the condition of this place when we're gone?
It will all come to an end soon enough anyways.
Wow. Antarctica is a dirty place.
You posted a lot of rhetoric here. It is interesting how many people are interested in the government doing "something" about global warming (probably upwards of 50% of people in this country) and yet there is a lot of criticism levied at the people of the same country for not doing anything about it. It's weird. It's like if I say "Government, you need to stop me from jumping down the stairs" and then I continue to jump down the stairs.
Individual action cannot solve this problem. I could choose to stop driving my car, and it would not make any meaningful difference to whether global warming continues. It's best to think of our society as being addicted to carbon and we need to forcibly break ourselves off the addiction if we're going to improve. You don't get very far by asking an alcoholic to kindly stop. But if you make the alcohol twice as expensive, you'll likely get what you want.
It's not about blame or credit. We have a problem, and no substantial action has been taken by the market to address the problem, because the externalities associated with carbon dioxide emissions are not appropriately factored into the price we pay for products that cause such emissions.
Also, I should add that this idea of having the government levy a tax to correct an externality (Pigovian taxation) has been supported by a number of economists, even conservative ones like Greg Mankiw and George Shultz. That's because the whole point of the tax is to make the market work as it should -- which it doesn't, when people pollute the environment and don't pay for it. I don't take the addiction metaphor lightly. Two of the most important causes for the historical decline in smoking have been 1) learning more about the dangerous health effects of smoking and 2) higher taxes associated with purchasing cigarettes. Of course, industry advocates threw as much doubt onto the science linking cigarettes to cancer as they do now onto the science linking carbon dioxide emissions and global average temperature rises. We can help combat this by clearly describing the scientific consensus to people (97% of peer-reviewed papers published by climate scientists agree that humans are a primary cause of global warming).
thegreekdog wrote:I think individual action is the only way this problem can be solved. Effectively, we need to incentivize people to modify their lifestyles, which may include, for example, finding new jobs or having less children. Our current system of government does not permit societal change through government action; rather, government action results in rent-seeking which results in virtually no change.
For example, car emmissions standards were raised again (last year?). This caused some hoopla in the conservative camp, but if you look at the actual standards, the deadlines to reach those standards are fairly ridiculous (e.g. "by the year 2040"). So the "most liberal" (in quotes because I don't agree) president in history is setting largely ineffective emmissions standards (probably because of lobbying by car manufacturers). What to do? Individual action is the only answer. I'm ignoring the hypocrisy of asking others to sacrifice when you will not sacrifice, but it is what it is.
And, frankly, it is about blame (maybe not credit). There are certain industries and certain jobs that account for more pollution than others. Those industries and employees will have to suffer and receive the brunt of any major overhaul.
Finally, to my knowledge there is no scientific consensus that X result will happen in Y years because of global warming. If and when that is established, perhaps people will be incentivized to change their lifestyles.
BigBallinStalin wrote:I've always wondered about the relative benefits and costs of global warming. If it's getting warmer in globally(?) or in specifically areas at different rates(?), then new possibilities open up. For example, if Siberia was warmer, then it could produce better wine. Same with the UK. The effects are very vague, it seems.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users