Posted on 12/23/2003 12:33:31 PM PST by cogitator
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:45:19 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Leaders of one of the nation's top scientific organizations issued a new warning this week that human activities -- most notably the greenhouse gas emissions from power plants and other industries -- are warming Earth's climate at a faster rate than ever.
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
I think in this, as in many other things, it's shallow and mistaken to "follow the money." How many things have you done in your life that you did not do for the money? All of us have.
There are many other motivators stronger than money. Belief is one (think of religious martyrs, or Muslim suicide-bombers...), as is a desire for the respect of those we respect. Why, Lenin and Stalin weren't all that big on money, but they thought they were building a better world. Look what those two creeps did with that distinctly non-pecuniary motivation.
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this list.
I don't get offended if you want to be removed.
but not for atrocities such as the Kyoto Accord.
What has that to do with a politician's agenda? If a computer said it, it obviously must be an absolute fact. Computers can't lie you know. </sarcasm>
If a model has shortcomings, scientists and their grad students are working diligently right now to unearth and expose the fallacies.
Hmmm, yep just like Soon & Baliunas. No probs, afterall politicians would never use bad information would they? Nor would they ever attack those who would disagree with the agenda.
http://www.eco.freedom.org/el/20031102/gunter.shtml
Proof exists (that greenhouse does not), but believers would rather denounce than debate
By Lorne Gunter
Too many scientists have based their research, their reputations, and their incomes on the greenhouse theory to let it go now.
So, rather than debate the growing evidence that the greenhouse theory is fundamentally flawed, many greenhouse-believing scientists have begun viciously attacking those who question its conclusions and denouncing any agnostic as a heretic - especially ones presenting uncomfortably challenging proof.
Witness Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. Both are noted solar physicists. Earlier this year, they published an exhaustive study of the climate of the past 1,000 years or so in the journal Climate Research. They examined more studies on historic climate trends - 240 in all - than any previous researchers, and concluded the 20th century was not unusually warm. In the past millennium there had been at least one other period when, worldwide, temperatures were as much as 2 - 3 degrees Celsius warmer than the 1990s.
This was not a particularly startling conclusion. There have been literally thousands of papers written by geologists identifying a Medieval Warm Period running from about 800 to 1300 AD, and a Little Ice Age spanning 1300 to about 1850. Soon and Baliunas merely confirmed that these thousands of earlier studies were right.
But Soon and Baliunas were both vehemently attacked. Myths were spread that they had cooked their findings (as good scientists do, they acknowledged in their article the very limitations in their results that have been used to try to discredit them). Three junior editors at the journal that published their study resigned, claiming embarrassment that their employer published shoddy research. Then, the controversy sucked down the editor-in-chief.
However, when an independent review was conducted of the Soon/Baliunas article, no misrepresentation was found, nor any shortcomings with Climate Research's peer-review process. (These latter facts are often left out of news stories on the controversy, though.)
The reason for the hissy fit over Soon/Baliunas is simple though. The pair do not shy from drawing obvious conclusions from their research: if the warming of the 20th century is not unusual, then it is likely natural, meaning the Kyoto accord is an exercise in futility. And, even if the warming is not natural, it is not extreme, and thus nothing to worry about.
This is a threat to the greenhouse religion. Therefore, the pair must be burned at the stake.
Example:
Cox Newspapers, in an article published in May, disclosed that the study by Soon,
Baliunas and three other authors was underwritten by the American Petroleum
Look up some Soon-Baliunas papers in The Astrophysical Journal, and it turns out that the Mount Wilson Observatory of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics is supported by Texaco, Exxon Foundation, the Electric Power Research Institute, and the American Petroleum Institute. Soon & Baliunas are associated with and do projects for both. Obviously bad guys working for big energy.
All the more in touch with reality. If we can't trust the self-correcting facility of science, we are in big trouble, probably headed for third-world status. Maybe we should worry, although science is still cranking along as usual. Also, I long ago separated project managers from those doing the work. The workers, grad students usually, do get into their subject matter and question things deeply. No rubber stamps there. Also no power to change things. We should be hearing complaints if there is a problem.
Let's review: this only works when there is LIGHT. Hence the photo in photosynthesis. What gases do trees/plants release at night? (Hint: it isn't O2)
I froze my hinderlands off last year. It snowed on the first day of Spring. After hearing for twenty years about how every winter is warmer than the last, I'd like to know how come it still is so cold outside. I figure global warming statistics are like the Soviet Union economists announcing their GDP grew by leaps and bounds every year -- but strangely, their living standards kept falling behind the US.
The whole vacuous idea, including this article ought to be truncated, along with all these turds touting it!!!
It's the last 25 years that is really starting to look unusual -- and that's not model-based.
Based on which temperature record? The surface record, the satellite record or the balloon record. I've heard the increase according to the balloon soundings and the satellite record wasn't really a big deal.
And was it Mr. Christy who said the said the upward adjustments to the satellite record were very peculiar since the adjustments were made primarily because they agreed with the models?
In a phone interview, Christy said that while he supports the AGU declaration, and is convinced that human activities are the major cause of the global warming that has been measured,
I notice that Christy's comment is not in quotes. I wonder what he really said and in what context.
People at NOAA with research to the contrary of global warming are GAGGED.
Overheard in a NOAA/ERL elevator:
"...so I asked him if he knows what this lab is doing. And he said, 'I don't know what this lab is doing but what I think this lab is doing is going out to get money to keep people employed'"
Current CO2 levels are about 350 ppm (parts per million) and these BRAIN DEAD IDIOTS apparently want us to believe that prior to 1900 the CO2 level was a miniscule 70 ppm.
Yet the plain truth is that earth was covered with millions of square miles (literally) of forests, jungles and plains teeming with plant life. And for that plant life to flourish as it did, atmospheric CO2 was an absolutely indispensable ingredient. And they want us to believe that this abundance of plant life came about with a tiny 70 ppm of CO2 in the atmosphere?
Do they really think we're that stupid???
--Boot Hill
The U.S. East Coast has exhibited a slight cooling trend over the past couple of decades while the rest of the world has been warming up. The suggested cause is increased cloud cover due to higher sea surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, which provide more moisture for more clouds over the U.S. East Coast.
What's this? CO2 causes warming which raises sea temperature which increases evaporation causing clouds that cool. Sounds like a negative feedback effect. Any estimate of the magnitude of this negative feedback? Has it been factored into the models?
And a lot of denying.
The American Geophysical Union declares: "...that since 1900 more than 80 percent of the atmosphere's heat-trapping carbon dioxide...has been caused by fossil fuel burning and changes in land use."
There is a simple way to make a logical estimate of the impact of man's contribution to global temperatures via CO2 emmissions.
There are two basic routes by which C02 can be released to the atmosphere. The first is plant/animal processes, which are ultimately sun driven, and the second is by the combustion of carbon based materials (mostly fossil fuels).
Working from that premise, all that is necessary to perform this analysis is to compare the sun's energy input to the earth, versus man's energy input from the production of power.
Man's input | 1.1 × 1014 kWh |
Sun's input | 1.5 × 1018 kWh |
Human impact | 0.007% |
You read that right, folks, human activity impacts the forces that create CO2 at a level less than 0.007% of what the sun's impact is! That's only 75 parts per million or one part in 13,400. And from this miniscule input, those BRAIN DEAD IDIOTS extrapolate that man is causing global warming.
--Boot Hill
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