Posted on 01/30/2007 7:30:32 AM PST by Notwithstanding
Two New Books Confirm Global Warming is Natural; Not Caused By Human Activity Tue Jan 30 2007 10:02:32 ET
Two powerful new books say todays global warming is due not to human activity but primarily to a long, moderate solar-linked cycle. Unstoppable Global Warming Every 1500 Years, by physicist Fred Singer and economist Dennis Avery was released just before Christmas. The Chilling Stars: A New Theory of Climate Change, by Danish physicist Henrik Svensmark and former BBC science writer Nigel Calder (Icon Books), is due out in March. --- break --- Unstoppable Global Warming documents the reality of a moderate, natural, 1500-year climate cycle on the earth. The Chilling Stars explains the why and how.
(Excerpt) Read more at drudgereport.com ...
Ban those books,burn them. How dare there be another opinion, only Al Gore and the liberals know what is best for our planet. Al will take care of women while we beat our wash on rocks getting rid of the evil washing machine. Al will make sure every cow on our planet has a plug in his where his mother never kissed him. Shame on people who say that global warming is a natural effect of the earth and the earth will heal . Ban those books before people start to think.
I guess the money spent on space programs hasn't been a waste at all. Especially because the resulting data can be used to halt the maniacal trend to spend millions in an attempt to cool the Earth.
I have been patiently waiting for two political arguments from the left.
Why don't they dispute the "science" that concludes the earth is in a constant state of global climate change (at least for the past several million years)?
The other one is off topic.
[Does this mean that man-made pollution did not cause the Wisconsin Ice Sheet to recede thousands of years ago?]
If it weren't for Global Warming, Canada would not exist.
Thank MAN for Global Warming?
If it cant help in 2008 they will not release it.
If people would just see them for the reactionaries that they are, it would be better.
Ambition should be made of sterner stuff; that sort of thing.
ping to self
Exactly. Since Canada and the Northern US got to benefit from Global Warming, we shouldn't begrudge providing the same warmth for others.
Wellll, OK.
Clearly, these are moonbats who have not been paying attention to either the IPCC or Al Gore and, in accordance with the scientific brain trust at the Weather Channel. need to be decertified.
/sarc
.
I guess that Al Gore has learned his lesson..."Tis far, far better never to debate at all, than to resort to physically menacing opponents during a debate"
We learned a lot about Gore's "style" when he intruded on Bush's space during that debate in 2000.
The guy most responsible for the current politicization of modern American science, in my opinion. His conflation of his personal political views (liberal) with his scientific interests (global change and comparative planetology) set back rational discourse for years on important national issues.
Ever since the Global Warming crackposts took over, I've wondered how having to use less fuel for heat and having a longer growing season could have a negative impact.
Ah yes...I have a couple of screen captures of that debate.
Even Al Gore's home state of Tennessee wasn't much of a haven for Native Americans until the area began to warm up.
About 12,000 years ago, the region's climate began to warm and the predominant vegetation changed from conifer to our modern deciduous forest. ... During what is known as the Archaic period, descendants of the Paleo-Indians began to settle on river terraces, where they gathered wild plant food and shellfish in addition to hunting game.Sometime between 3,000 and 900 B.C., natives took the crucial step of cultivating edible plants such as squash and gourdsthe first glimmerings of agriculture. Archaic Indians thereby ensured a dependable food supply and freed themselves from seasonal shortages of wild plant foods and game. With a more secure food supply, populations expanded rapidly and scattered bands combined to form larger villages.
The next major stage of Tennessee pre-history, lasting almost 2,000 years, is known as the Woodland period. This era saw the introduction of pottery, the beginnings of settled farming communities, the construction of burial mounds and the growing stratification of Indian society....
The peak of prehistoric cultural development in Tennessee occurred during the Mississippian period (900-1,600 A.D.). Cultivation of new and improved strains of corn and beans fueled another large jump in population.
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