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Palin: Global Warming Not Man-Made
ABC news ^ | Aug. 29, 2008 | Rick Klein

Posted on 08/29/2008 9:51:54 PM PDT by FocusNexus

In an interview for the September issue of the conservative magazine Newsmax, Gov. Sarah Palin, R-Alaska, said she does not believe climate change is caused by human behavior.

"A changing environment will affect Alaska more than any other state, because of our location. I'm not one though who would attribute it to being man-made," Palin said in the interview, which was posted online Friday.

(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.abcnews.com ...


TOPICS: Extended News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008veep; climatechange; elections; globalwarming; issues; mccain; palin
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Palin: Global Warming Not Man-Made

Global warming on Free Republic

Latest from Global Warming News Site

Latest from Greenie Watch

61 posted on 08/30/2008 6:25:51 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Drill Here! Drill Now! Pay Less! Sign the petition at http://www.americansolutions.com/)
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To: Left2Right

Good point, especially #2


62 posted on 08/30/2008 6:33:32 PM PDT by pankot
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To: Dilbert San Diego
After 8 years of being VP, she could be a front runner for president.

If she lives up to our hopes, the news is even better. McCain has said if he is elected, he will not run for reelection in 2012, so she possibly could be running in 2012.

Long way to go between now and then, of course.

63 posted on 08/30/2008 6:37:07 PM PDT by TN4Liberty (The first amendment doesn't end with "...as long as nobody is offended.")
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To: kabar
The reality is that the earth has not warmed since 1998 and even the global warming nuts acknowledge that we are going to have a cooling trend thru 2015.

Both aspects of your characterization of reality are wildly inaccurate.

64 posted on 08/30/2008 6:57:28 PM PDT by cogitator
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To: Left2Right
2) If it really does cause sea levels to rise, where do most liberals live? On the east and west coast! Thus, global warming could possibly solve two problems at once!

Yep.

Increased food production and liberals get a bath.

A perfect storm!

65 posted on 08/30/2008 9:19:11 PM PDT by dirtbiker (My Walmart still has 7 copies of "An Inconvenient Truth" on the shelf)
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To: cogitator
There IS a problem with global warming... it stopped in 1998

Climate facts to warm to

No rise in world temperatures for the past decade, UN’s top weather man admits in BBC news revelation that also concedes some scientists doubt climate change theory

Has Global Warming Stopped?

66 posted on 08/31/2008 6:19:16 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: kabar
Example of a rebuttal (ask for more if you don't think this is sufficient):

Climate myths: Global warming stopped in 1998

67 posted on 08/31/2008 7:32:27 AM PDT by cogitator
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To: cogitator
The issue is not climate change, but rather, is it manmade and can man control it. If CO2 is such a significant factor, why have global temperatures dropped precipitously? Are you suggesting that the current data are incorrect? If the effects of CO2 are cummulative, you wouldn't have such swings. Is CO2 the culprit for the warming or is it solar activity? If these climate models are so accurate, why haven't they been predictive of climate change, i.e., warming?

The article you linked uses such pejorative phrases as "climate-change deniers" to invoke images such as Holocaust deniers. The fact is that there is no consensus among scientists on the data and that is not the way science and the scientific method works. At one time, the consensus among scientists was that the earth was flat and the center of the solar system. You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts. Who the Hell is Michael Le Page and the "New Scientist Environment?

All four major global temperature tracking outlets (Hadley, NASA's GISS, UAH, RSS) have released updated data. All show that over the past year, global temperatures have dropped precipitously. Meteorologist Anthony Watts compiled the results of all the sources. The total amount of cooling ranges from 0.65C up to 0.75C -- a value large enough to erase nearly all the global warming recorded over the past 100 years. All in one year’s time.

Is Global Warming on the Wane? The Case for a Cool Climate:For example, deep-ocean heat content has not increased during the past five years. Looking at just one year, from January 2007 to January 2008, we find that satellite-derived atmospheric temperatures indicate that Earth was about one degree Fahrenheit cooler at the beginning of 2008 than it was at the beginning of 2007. The United Kingdom's Hadley Centre ocean and land temperature records show cooling in the last seven to ten years.

68 posted on 08/31/2008 8:00:32 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: kabar

“The reality is that the earth has not warmed since 1998 and even the global warming nuts acknowledge that we are going to have a cooling trend thru 2015.”

The reality is that you have no idea what you’re talking about. Yes, there are natural variations in temperature, and El Nino likely contributed to 1998’s record heat, just as other natural oscillations have reversed that trend. But overall, natural variation is being overidden by something else, and that something is man-made. The trend toward increasing warming HAS NOT STOPPED. See:

http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/graphs/Fig.A2.lrg.gif

for example.

I realize that this is not a politically correct opinion within this group, which allows nonsense such as “how could ‘Ice Road Truckers’ be filmed if there was really global warming?” to go unchallenged, but conservatives need to wake up and start doing something about this problem instead of ceding it to the liberals and their big government solutions.


69 posted on 08/31/2008 10:21:29 AM PDT by EnviroConservative
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To: EnviroConservative
The reality is that you have no idea what you’re talking about. Yes, there are natural variations in temperature, and El Nino likely contributed to 1998’s record heat, just as other natural oscillations have reversed that trend. But overall, natural variation is being overidden by something else, and that something is man-made. The trend toward increasing warming HAS NOT STOPPED

Newbie, you are barking up the wrong tree. There are plenty of charts and data that refute your contention. And the question is: What is causing the "warming" and can man control climate change? And what constitutes a trend in terms of global climate change?

Try this chart: All four major global temperature tracking outlets (Hadley, NASA's GISS, UAH, RSS) have released updated data. All show that over the past year, global temperatures have dropped precipitously.

In the 1970's, the consensus of scientists was that we were headed into a new ice age. You have no idea what you are talking about.

70 posted on 08/31/2008 11:03:11 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: purpleraine

One of the talking heads on today’s talk shows said something similar: “Sarah Palin is like opening the door to DC to let some fresh Alaska air in.”


71 posted on 08/31/2008 11:04:56 AM PDT by Textide
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To: Textide

nice


72 posted on 08/31/2008 11:30:39 AM PDT by purpleraine
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To: kabar
I realized that you're on my Geology Picture of the Week mailing list, which I appreciate and I don't want to offend you. So I'll offer just some brief responses.

Even though increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations are a factor that will contribute to increasing global temperatures, the Earth's climate is complex and there are ways it can cool -- changing cloud cover and ocean circulation being two ways. The perception of a "precipitous" decline is based on starting at a high point -- an El Nino year in 1998 -- and the current end point, a year influenced by a strong La Nina. The oceans are a significant enough factor that you can have such swings even with increasing atmospheric CO2.

I thought of a general analogy (people always nitpick analogies, but I stupidly keep trying). Imagine a baseball player with a career .250 average. In spring training, the hitting coach helps him make an adjustment. In the first month of the season, the player hits .315. The next month, .330. The next month, .299. Then he has a bad month and hits .225. He gets it back a bit and in the next two months hits .275. and .290.

So his year (by month) was .315, .330, .299, .225, .275, .290.

Questions: 1. Is he a better hitter this year than for his career? 2. During his bad month and his decline from .330 to .225, would you say he was a better or worse hitter than for his career? 3. Do you think one season is sufficient to really evaluate if he's a better hitter than before the adjustment was made? (The motivation behind this analogy is that in a complex system -- and hitting a baseball in competition has a lot of associated variables -- it is very possible to have a longer-term increasing trend with periods of decrease. To really evaluate the direction of the trend, it's necessary to have long-term data, and when analyzing the data, it's necessary to be aware of potential biasing factors.)

Here's another article, perhaps less pejorative, and from scientists. These scientists do have a clear POV, but this particular subject has generated a lot of discussion, so there's a lot out there.

Waiting for Global Cooling (PDF)

I'm currently very curious about the quietude of the Sun. This might influence temperatures globally if it continues, i.e. if the new solar cycle doesn't get going and the Sun actually enters into a new sunspot minimum period. However, I've predicted before here on FR that the next year with an average or bigger El Nino will set a new global temperature record, and I stand by that prediction no matter what the Sun does over the next few years. I even predict that there will be a new global temperature record by 2013 even if there isn't an El Nino year between now and then, but I think the odds are that there will be an El Nino year by then.

I have a bit about models in my profile, if you care to take a look.

There is more that we could discuss but I'd rather leave it at this for now.

73 posted on 09/02/2008 9:36:58 AM PDT by cogitator
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To: cogitator
thought of a general analogy (people always nitpick analogies, but I stupidly keep trying). Imagine a baseball player with a career .250 average. In spring training, the hitting coach helps him make an adjustment. In the first month of the season, the player hits .315. The next month, .330. The next month, .299. Then he has a bad month and hits .225. He gets it back a bit and in the next two months hits .275. and .290. So his year (by month) was .315, .330, .299, .225, .275, .290.

1. Is he a better hitter this year than for his career?

In the real world, his batting average would be determined by his at bats and hits. You can't add up the months to get his annual average without assuming that he had the same number of official at bats each month. It is a running average, which is why we have the batter's up to date average on a daily basis. That aside, just to stay with the analogy, he had an above average career year, i.e, .289. Depending on the length of his career, this year could have a major impact on his career batting average, e.g., this is his second year in the league.

During his bad month and his decline from .330 to .225, would you say he was a better or worse hitter than for his career?

I wouldn't make such an assumption. You don't make such assumptions without more data. He could have been injured, had fewer at bats, or was in slump. I notice from your example that during the first three months, his average was .315, .330, and .299. What happens if he produces similar numbers for the rest of the season and does it again next season? Is the second season also an anomoly? Is past performance an indicator of future performance?

Do you think one season is sufficient to really evaluate if he's a better hitter than before the adjustment was made? (The motivation behind this analogy is that in a complex system -- and hitting a baseball in competition has a lot of associated variables -- it is very possible to have a longer-term increasing trend with periods of decrease. To really evaluate the direction of the trend, it's necessary to have long-term data, and when analyzing the data, it's necessary to be aware of potential biasing factors.)

All analogies breakdown after awhile. Using your analogy, what if the player's career spanned several billion years? And he had a history of flucuating batting averages so that every 11,000 years or so he would go into prolonged slumps or go on a hitting tear. However, we didn't have good records for most of his career and had to depend on some very old, poorly kept records, i.e, the only really accurate records just spanned 11,000 years to the present. We also know that there are hundreds of variables that affect his hitting and that his current batting average marks niether his highest or lowest average.

Can we predict what his average will be next year or for the next 11,000 years? And how useful is the career average in predicting it.

In the 1970s, the "scientific consensus" {an oxymoron] was that we were heading into a prolonged period of cooling. Now it is global warming and climate change, which is disputed by many reputable scientists who disagree with the models and the assumptions. The earth's climate has always been cooling or warming. It is a natural cycle.

Questions: How long must the earth continue to cool before it is accepted as a trend? Do you disagree with the data that show the earth is cooling and has been since 2001?

However, I've predicted before here on FR that the next year with an average or bigger El Nino will set a new global temperature record, and I stand by that prediction no matter what the Sun does over the next few years. I even predict that there will be a new global temperature record by 2013 even if there isn't an El Nino year between now and then, but I think the odds are that there will be an El Nino year by then.

LOL. You have enough El Nino qualifiers to cover all the bases. I predict that we will have a very cold winter this year and the earth will continue to cool for the next 10 years.

74 posted on 09/02/2008 10:37:36 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: kabar
Once again I tried an analogical approach only to find it doesn't accomplish my goals. Very basically, global temperature is like batting average; you don't know all the variables affecting the number, you just have the number itself. In order to get at what causes variability in the number, you have to do more detailed analysis than just looking at possible trends in the value of that number.

The comment I responded to, however, was based on this general number. You said, "The reality is that the Earth has not warmed since 1998". Your comment is based on just looking at the annual global temperature values! (Except for the endpoint, which is only a partial year at this point). The links I provided attempt to demonstrate the potential errors of that overly simple approach. However, I thought of a better (and simpler) baseball player analogy.

Our guy has a career average of .250 his first five years in the league. (Never over .270, never under .230). He makes the spring training adjustment, and because pitchers haven't compensated, he has a career year: .330. Over the next four years, his season averages are .310, .300, .329, and .300. Then, starting the current season, he has some sort of problem. We don't know what is. All we know is that his average in the first two months of the season is .225.

In the manner that the "global cooling" trend argument is being made, someone might say that the player has experienced a "precipitous decline" in batting average from the career year to the first two months of the current season, because he hit .330 and now he's hitting .225.

Given what he's accomplished over the previous five years, it would be IMO premature to say that he's really in precipitous decline. I hope you can see why it would be inaccurate to judge his batting average trend starting with the career year and ending with the current slump -- because that ignores his consistently higher average over the previous five years, and also ignores the fact that the year isn't over yet! (Granted, this is going to be a cool year and we know why; similarly we might know that the player is hurt and might not get better over the whole season. So we'd at least have to wait until next year when he's hopefully "normal" to get a better sense of where he is, batting-wise.)

So:

How long must the earth continue to cool before it is accepted as a trend? Do you disagree with the data that show the earth is cooling and has been since 2001?

Offhand, I'd say at least five years and I'd be happier with 10. Certainly more than one! Note that in one of the three global temperature indices, 2005 was warmer than 1998 and in the other two, 2005 was just barely under 1998 (in both cases by statistically insignificant amounts). So the clock starts ticking in 2005, not 1998. So the answer to the second question is that I don't agree that the data show the earth is cooling. That's the point of my simplified analogy.

LOL. You have enough El Nino qualifiers to cover all the bases. I predict that we will have a very cold winter this year and the earth will continue to cool for the next 10 years.

OK, we'll see (I hope so, at least). Regarding the qualifiers, the most significant factors that might cause increased variability in the warming trend are the oceans, the Sun, and a big volcanic eruption. Regarding that last factor, though there have been some noticeable eruptions recently, they haven't been big enough to be significant factors.

75 posted on 09/02/2008 12:23:11 PM PDT by cogitator
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To: EnviroConservative
giss

Please elucidate how GISS is constructed (see climateaudit.org for example).

76 posted on 09/02/2008 12:29:18 PM PDT by palmer (The third party malcontents don't like Palin because she is a true conservative)
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To: BigSkyFreeper
Voting for Obama and Biden is merely embracing Communism.

"They're not communists, they're DEMOCRATS!" is the argument I've heard from a generally unthinking dhimmirat apologist.

Time for FReepers to start knocking down this denial and do some educating of your favorite dhimmirat acquaintance.

OK, so the name of the party is "democrat". The ideology is collectivist/fascist/communist.

Put the Communist Manifesto in front of them and ask them what points the democrat party disagrees with.

Put the Communist Goals for America in front of them and ask them which of those goals the Democrats haven't supported by their policies.

I'm sick and tired of these commies claiming they aren't, or feigning ignorance.

77 posted on 09/02/2008 12:34:30 PM PDT by MrB (You can't reason people out of a position that they didn't use reason to get into in the first place)
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To: Yossarian

Let Saracuda get her feet wet as VP, get her chess pieces in place,

then run for pres in ‘16 and EXECUTE.

The leftist establishment in our national cesspool needs a dose of “reform”, Alaska style.


78 posted on 09/02/2008 12:36:06 PM PDT by MrB (You can't reason people out of a position that they didn't use reason to get into in the first place)
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To: pankot

That’s the whole problem - they don’t have a belief in a sovereign God/Creator that is in control of everything.

They have elevated Man to godhood while at the same time devaluing him by asserting that he is simply an evolved animal.


79 posted on 09/02/2008 12:39:04 PM PDT by MrB (You can't reason people out of a position that they didn't use reason to get into in the first place)
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To: palmer; EnviroConservative
Please elucidate how GISS is constructed (see climateaudit.org for example).

And while we're doing that, let's also see if we can figure out why spring is earlier and fall is later over the past 130 years or so -- just in case we're concerned GISS might be wildly in error or something like that.

Global Warming Rushes Timing of Spring

(I'm a little curious where that 8 hours earlier spring green-up since 1982 is from)

80 posted on 09/02/2008 1:18:18 PM PDT by cogitator
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