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Keyword: fakescience

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  • Glaciers Falling on Tourists: Yet Another Danger of Climate Change

    09/13/2018 10:46:10 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 64 replies
    The Atlantic ^ | September 11, 2018 | by ELIZABETH EARL
    In the summer of 1987, a woman visiting Alaska was crushed by a 1,000-pound chunk of ice. According to news reports at the time, Thais Grabenauer, 59, had been taking pictures with her husband at the foot of Exit Glacier, a towering wall of ice that’s one of the most popular attractions in Kenai Fjords National Park. A half-ton piece of the glacier calved off as the couple was snapping, killing Grabenauer and injuring her husband. It was one of those wrong place, wrong time tragedies that seem unlikely to happen again. But in the three decades since Grabenauer’s death,...
  • Category 6? Climate change may cause more hurricanes to rapidly intensify.

    09/11/2018 5:41:08 PM PDT · by mdittmar · 49 replies
    washington post ^ | September 11, 2018 | Chris Mooney
    A new study shows that we have a lot to worry about when it comes to changing hurricanes as the planet warms.
  • At Jerry Brown's climate summit, one deadline will overshadow all the others

    09/11/2018 11:28:41 AM PDT · by Innovative · 48 replies
    LA Times ^ | Sept. 11, 2018 | Evan Halper
    The political leaders coming from around the world for Gov. Jerry Brown’s climate action summit this week will grapple with a lot of urgent deadlines to drive down emissions, but one date is especially exasperating. It is 2035 — the year advocates aim to kill off production of gasoline and diesel powered vehicles.
  • 'Climate change moving faster than we are,' says UN Secretary General (barf alert)

    09/10/2018 2:33:37 PM PDT · by Ennis85 · 52 replies
    BBC News ^ | 10th September 2018 | Matt McGrath
    UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has said that if the world doesn't change course by 2020, we run the risk of runaway climate change. Mr Guterres said he was alarmed by the paralysis of world leaders on what he called the "defining issue" of our time. He wants heads of government to come to New York for a special climate conference next September. The call comes amid growing concerns over the slow pace of UN negotiations. Mr Guterres painted a grim picture of the impacts of climate change that he says have been felt all over the world this year,...
  • Global marches seek urgent action on climate change

    09/08/2018 6:49:46 PM PDT · by Olog-hai · 37 replies
    Associated Press ^ | Sep. 08, 2018 9:18 PM EDT
    More than 18,000 people marched Saturday in Paris as part of an international mobilization to show popular support for urgent measures to combat climate change in advance of a San Francisco summit. Crowds overflowed a plaza in front of City Hall before marching east to the Place de la Republique, carrying an urgent message that it’s up to the public to put global warming at the top of the political agenda. “Planet in Danger,” read some banners. Activists around the world encouraged “Rise for Climate” protests before the summit taking place Sept.12-Sept. 14. California’s governor proposed the event after President...
  • Hillary Clinton’s Reason For Opposing Brett Kavanaugh? Global Warming

    09/07/2018 2:15:47 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 35 replies
    The Daily Caller ^ | September 7, 2018 | Michael Bastasch, Energy Editor
    Former Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton wants supporters to tell their senators to vote against Judge Brett Kavanaugh becoming the newest justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. Clinton’s main reason for opposing President Donald Trump’s second Supreme Court nominee? Man-made global warming. “Replacing Kennedy with Kavanaugh would swing the Court to a new, hard-right majority that would rule against curbing greenhouse gases for years—maybe decades—that we can’t afford to waste on inaction,” Clinton wrote in a series of tweets published Friday....
  • Federer Is Tough to Beat. Global Warming Might Have Pulled an Upset.(Barfa-rama)

    09/05/2018 7:46:38 PM PDT · by vespa300 · 17 replies
    New York Times ^ | 09/05/2018 | Kendra Pierre-Louis
    Roger Federer, one of the world’s greatest tennis players, may have become an unwitting spokesman for the effects of climate change on Monday at the U.S. Open.
  • Global warming could spur more and hungrier crop-eating bugs

    09/04/2018 12:30:40 PM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 37 replies
    Santa Fe New Mexican ^ | September 4, 2018 | By Seth Borenstein AP
    A warmer world likely means more and hungrier insects chomping on crops and less food on dinner plates, a new study suggests. Insects now consume about 10 percent of the globe’s food, but that will increase to 15 to 20 percent by the end of the century if climate change isn’t stopped, said study lead author Curtis Deutsch, a University of Washington climate scientist. The study looked at the damage bugs like the European corn borer and the Asiatic rice borer could do as temperatures rise. It found that many of them will increase in number at key times for...
  • Opinion: Disempower far-right climate change deniers. Don’t debate with them

    09/04/2018 12:42:47 PM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 49 replies
    The Guardian ^ | September 3, 2018 | by Molly Scott Cato
    After a long, hot summer beset by record temperatures, drought and deadly fires, imagine my shock, on returning to the European parliament, to be confronted with a report that denies the reality of climate change. Some of the claims made by the report’s author, the Ukip MEP Stuart Agnew, are pretty hair-raising. For instance, he claims that the effect of CO2 levels on our climate is “negligible”, and that it is “one of agriculture’s greatest friends”. Agnew claims there is a lack of concentration of CO2 and as a result there is no problem for the EU to solve. So...
  • Climate change killed off Neanderthals, study says

    08/31/2018 11:13:35 AM PDT · by BenLurkin · 49 replies
    Fox ^ | Chris Ciaccia |
    The evidence is there that Europe experienced stark cold and dry spells, putting a strain on Neanderthals' food supply and ability to survive. Thanks to a group of researchers looking at stalagmites in Romania, we may have proof this was indeed the case. Dr. Ersek and his team looked at the stalagmites—rocks that gather in caves for long stretches of time —to look at the climate. Stalagmites contain rings, similar to trees, which can give an indication of how extreme weather patterns, occurring over thousands of years, impacted Neanderthals. The study was published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the...
  • Study: Climate Change Contributed to Neanderthal Demise

    08/31/2018 12:18:13 PM PDT · by ETL · 47 replies
    Sci-News.com ^ | Aug 30, 2018 | News Staff / Source
    Neanderthals were skilled hunters and had learned how to control fire, but they had a less diverse diet than modern humans, living largely on meat from the animals they had successfully pursued. These food sources would naturally become scarce during colder periods, making Neanderthals more vulnerable to rapid environmental change. In comparison, modern humans had incorporated fish and plants into their diet alongside meat, which supplemented their food intake and potentially enabled their survival. ..." Dr. Ersek and colleagues examined stalagmites in two caves in the Carpathian Mountains, which revealed more detailed records of climate change in continental Europe than...
  • EPA watchdog to probe scientific integrity

    08/31/2018 12:57:27 PM PDT · by yesthatjallen · 9 replies
    The Hill ^ | 08/31/18 | Timothy Cama
    The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) internal watchdog is auditing how the agency deals with issues of scientific integrity. In a notice released Friday, the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) said it would launch research into how the EPA implements and adheres to its scientific integrity policy. The audit was launched voluntarily by the office, so it is not connected to a specific request from a lawmaker or complaint. But critics of the Trump administration have nonetheless criticized the agency for what they see as attempts to undermine science at the EPA, including downplaying the harms from climate change and...
  • Shock study: U.S. had far fewer mass shootings than previously reported

    08/30/2018 10:13:03 AM PDT · by CPRC · 32 replies
    The Washington Times ^ | August 29, 2018 | Stephen Dinan
    A shock 2016 study argued that the U.S. accounted for nearly one-third of all mass shootings, sparking global headlines about the dangers of an American gun culture. Now another researcher says the original study “botched” the data. John R. Lott Jr., president of the Crime Prevention Research Center, crunched the numbers and said his count shows that the U.S. had less than 3 percent of the world’s mass public shootings over a 15-year period. That is smaller than the 4.6 percent of the world’s population that the U.S. accounts for — and way less than the 31 percent of global...
  • Scientists calculated a 'point of no return' for dealing with climate change - time is running out

    08/30/2018 10:38:45 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 67 replies
    Business Insider ^ | August 30, 2018 | by Kevin Loria
    There's nothing mysterious about what it will take to limit climate change: The world needs to transition away from fossil fuels towards renewable energy. But the timing of that transition is extremely important. According to a new study published in the journal Earth System Dynamics, we could soon cross a point of no return. The new study calculates that if the world's governments don't initiate a transition to clean energy sources by 2035 we'll almost certainly pass that point of no return. The exact year could change, according to the researchers' model. But no matter what, the deadline is coming...
  • Should We Dim the Skies to Save the World?

    08/30/2018 10:43:07 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 54 replies
    The Atlantic ^ | August 30, 2018 | by Derek Thompson
    A fleet of jets takes off from airports around the world. They ascend beyond the cruising altitude of commercial airlines until they reach the stratosphere. Then, they spray. A thick stream of sulfuric acid pours forth from the aircraft, bathing the skies in toxic aerosols. Winds spread the noxious cloud around the world, where it lingers for months, even years. The effects down on Earth are unmistakable. On every continent, blue skies are replaced with a pallid veil of white. The Milky Way disappears. There is less sunlight for solar power, more damage to the ozone, and a surge of...
  • Feds threaten to withhold climate change cash [Canada]

    08/30/2018 11:24:03 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 6 replies
    Well and Tribune ^ | August 30, 2018 | by The Canadian Press
    OTTAWA - Provinces that don't get on board with the federal Liberals' plan to deal with climate change, including putting a price on pollution, will forfeit their share of a $2-billion federal fund, Environment Minister Catherine McKenna says. The Liberals find themselves with multiple provinces opposing aspects of the plan, from new clean fuel standards to carbon pricing through a tax or cap and trade. McKenna said no one should question the government's commitment to combating climate change and the pan-Canadian plan it unveiled shortly after taking office in late 2015. "There's no backing away from climate change," McKenna said...
  • ‘Eco-grief’ over climate change felt by generations of British Columbians

    08/30/2018 11:34:37 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 30 replies
    The Toronto Star ^ | August 28, 2018 | By CHERISE SEUCHARAN
    VANCOUVER - Claire Dooley was 13 when climate change first hit home. It was 2015, and the first year she saw the wildfire smoke blanketing her Vancouver neighbourhood. “It was scary to look outside and see the smoke invading my childhood memories,” she said. “It’s everywhere in my hometown and the place I grew up, where all my childhood memories are - it’s almost claustrophobic.” Now 16, Dooley has been increasingly worried about the changing climate, fearing the world may be completely different only a few years from now when she embarks upon adulthood. “I think in today’s world of...
  • Chicago Cardinal: Global Warming, Migrants Are ‘Bigger Agenda’ than Sex Abuse

    08/28/2018 2:51:41 PM PDT · by detective · 49 replies
    Breitbart ^ | 28 Aug 2018 | Thomas D. Williams, Ph.D.
    Cardinal Blase Cupich, the Archbishop of Chicago, has downplayed bombshell allegations that Pope Francis knowingly rehabilitated an abusive American cardinal, saying the pope has a “bigger agenda” to worry about, such as protecting the environment and migrants. In a television interview with NBC News, Cardinal Cupich commented on a recent 11-page statement by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, former papal nuncio to the United States, that alleges a series of misdeeds by high-ranking Catholic prelates, including Pope Francis himself. “The pope has a bigger agenda. He’s gotta get on with other things, of talking about the environment and protecting migrants and...
  • Pope Francis Concerned With Climate Change Over Sexual Predator Clergy

    08/28/2018 11:29:39 AM PDT · by Sean_Anthony · 13 replies
    Canada Free Press ^ | 08/28/18 | Katy Grimes
    The Evil Lavender Mafia: Pope Francis must resign. He was all too aware of the molestation of young boys and young men by predatory, pedophile and homosexual priests, bishops and cardinals, yet continued to protect and even promote them Is the Rot Unraveling in the Catholic Church? It appears this may be the case. But Pope Francis refuses to address this rot signifying that he is no leader. Evil thrives in an environment of permissiveness and appeasement, as we have witnessed in Catholic parishes and dioceses throughout America. However, good priests and bishops who tried to expose the rot were...
  • Five recent events stoking climate change fears

    08/25/2018 3:52:58 PM PDT · by yesthatjallen · 19 replies
    The Hill ^ | 08/25/18 | Miranda Green
    Here's the list. Click on the link if you want the details: Arctic’s thickest ice layer breaks for first time on record Longer fire seasons contribute to historic forest fires Hurricanes hit with more frequency and intensity Heat waves paralyze cities worldwide with record-setting temps Toxic algae blooms close down beaches