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Jonathan Cook wrote:
We went to see this movie over the weekend. Although not much in it was new to me, overall it was a pretty good presentation of the data and issues surrounding global warming. If anyone out there actually believes the "global warming isn't happening" or "it is but we don't have a part in causing it" lines, you should really see this movie, without any blinders on or partisan preconceptions. Yes, Al Gore throws in a couple of snide partisan remarks, and I wish they hadn't included those because it detracts from the message of the movie, but overlook them and listen to the data. Whether you like or despise Al Gore, he's obviously taken a lot of time and effort to polish his understanding and presentation of this issue. The movie is worth seeing. I'll go out on a limb with an opinion and an OBROFF (though not needed as this is a valid environmental sbject). There has been extreme debate over this at the office involving massive research on the part of many people to try and convince one side or the other. This is good but I remain unconvinced that the movie is nothing more than alarmist though I, admitedly, base this largely on a basic, and very fundamental, premise of not ever, ever getting my facts from career politicians. In my opinion the scientific community at large has to share established data and so you hear the same basic 'facts' touted over and over with, what I see, as very little in the way of original, exhaustive studies. The politics of science is huge and really misunderstood, in my opinion and there is corruption after corruption, changed paradigms after changed paradigms. Research Frederic Sietz. This coupled with the fact that accuracy of recent data gathering would show potentially more variance as well as other serious anomolies and contradictions in terms of times of coincedent global warming with decreased CO2 'inflation' just, well, bugs me. I also do not trust complex simultation as I do not believe they can get all of the variables right and that some singular events (Krakatoa, Mt. Saint Helens) can change the outcome dramatically. Something that bugs me too is the fact (I'm open to hearing someone who knows this) that our ability to accurately measure CO2 dimishes in times in times of high solar impact. The other thing is the most recent comment that, if the statistics are right, coupled with 'population growth models' the current recommendations proposed will not do enough and the movie could make us complacent about real, additional, research and problem solving. My opinion only. OBROFF: I was suprised that a map of the San Juan National Forest I bought recently did not have terrain elevation contours. I saw a road following a river for 12 miles before crossing it so I went, assuming good access. I'm a dilligent hiker who believes one must generally walk a minimum of 1-2 miles to avoid people on public water but I was not prepared for the fact that this road was 1000-1500' above the river which was 1/4 mile away with no way to reasonably descend. Get a map with terrain elevation data!!!! Your pal, Halfordian Golfer It is impossible to catch and release a wild trout. |
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Computer simulations are notoriously unreliable.
They are written by computer programmers (a semi-anti-social bunch the includes the likes of Tim Walker and me, for example). A steep and observable rise in atmospheric CO2 is not in dispute however, nor are thinning ice caps and receding glaciers. CO2 levels are, by some reports, approaching unprecedented levels. Is all or any of this a natural phenomenon with no correlation to fossil fuels? Some correlation? Total correlation? Only a fool would say there is no correlation. Global warming has become a political issue because the ideological right sees it as a threat to (their) ideal of unregulated and unrestrained business growth (free market capitalism). Regardless the causes, I wouldn't make any long term real estate investments in the Bahamas. |
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![]() wrote in message ... ...I don't doubt that there's something going on, but I don't believe the scientific studies.... Ah, the beauty of gyromancy! Wolfgang |
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Jonathan Cook wrote:
wrote: Global warming has become a political issue because the ideological right sees it as a threat to (their) ideal of unregulated and unrestrained business growth (free market capitalism). I agree. But we consumers play along, too, not wanting any impacts on our energy-intensive, affluenza-driven lifestyles... Most excellent. "Affluenza" I will definitely steal that one. -- Ken Fortenberry |
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![]() "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message . net... Jonathan Cook wrote: wrote: Global warming has become a political issue because the ideological right sees it as a threat to (their) ideal of unregulated and unrestrained business growth (free market capitalism). I agree. But we consumers play along, too, not wanting any impacts on our energy-intensive, affluenza-driven lifestyles... Most excellent. "Affluenza" I will definitely steal that one. You won't be the first: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...=Google+Search Wolfgang |
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... A steep and observable rise in atmospheric CO2 is not in dispute however, nor are thinning ice caps and receding glaciers. CO2 levels are, by some reports, approaching unprecedented levels. Is all or any of this a natural phenomenon with no correlation to fossil fuels? Some correlation? Total correlation? Only a fool would say there is no correlation. All true and correct. Unfortunately, there are many millions of fools. Note, for example, that global warming has been a very real phenomenon for well over a century, a matter of great concern to some few thoughtful individuals for nearly as long, documented fact for decades, and the scientific literature is voluminous and incontestable.......which is to say that it's simply been a myth......till now. NOW, we have a movie! It is just a matter of time till the DVD comes out, at which time it gets on T.V.......at which time it becomes (at long last) REALLY real! Global warming has become a political issue because the ideological right sees it as a threat to (their) ideal of unregulated and unrestrained business growth (free market capitalism). That's only a small part of a large complex of reasons. The short version: global warming is a political issue because it IS real and it is merely the biggest and most far reaching thing that has confronted our species since the last recession of the continental ice-sheets. Wolfgang Regardless the causes, I wouldn't make any long term real estate investments in the Bahamas. |
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#10
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![]() -- Some of my angling snaps: http://gallery.fishbc.com/gallery/vi...bumName=RalphH I don't doubt that there's something going on, but I don't believe the scientific studies. It has been a while now, but I knew some of the scientists who were doing the computer simulation models. Even those doing the modelling admitted that their models were drastically inaccurate. Tweaking knobs slightly caused wildly different results. Their models didn't correlate with the observed measurements. from memory. I was taking geography course when the initial buzz about global warming started about 25 years ago. Subsequently I read that comparisons of actual climatic results to the computer simulations of the time indicated the results were far more moderate than the predictions. There is little doubt global warming is taking place. Reliable information on mean air temperature, rainfall, ocean temperature, glacial movements, polar ice cap depth and extent have been taken for many decades and these all indicate "warming". The bigger question is do we know the cause and can we do anything about it? Is this a relatively short term trend like the "little ice age" of hundreds of years ago? The earth and been both signficantly cooler and warmer in prehistory (based on pollen samples). Temperatures in moderate latitudes were much higher in the millenium after the official end of the last ice age. So is this just a natural trend or a man made trend. I'd bet the later is a factor and we'd be fool not to try to reduce our CO2 output. Conversely I wish I had a buck for every expert who told me the world was going to end in the next 2 or 3 decades. Still none the less the sunset of our petro based economy is expected, switching from fossil fuels to alternate sources makes sense long term in this regard alone. |
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