Kepler
Si certus es dubita
Re: climate change times are a changin'
It is, after all, only a theory.
We don't even know if gravity is real.
It is, after all, only a theory.
We don't even know if gravity is real.
Well, is there any doubt that unilateral US action will be ineffective?
and how does one define "effective"? Do we use a cost-benefit analysis? How will it help the situation if we force substantial additional poverty on millions of people in exchange for a minor, perhaps trivial, incremental change in global emissions?
Shutting down all coal-fired electrical generation plants immediately seems to be the EPA's goal. I just don't see how that is cost-effective. My surmise is that if we were to promote substantial additional economic growth and then use the incremental additional wealth created to relocate people away from problem areas, we'd have a more cost-effective solution.
We don't even know whether global warming will occur or not. The models say that it will happen -- in 25 or 30 or 50 years -- unless there is a major volcanic event in the interim. The odds of such an event seem to be ~ 15% - 25% depending upon who you read.
You can always keep adding new features to models until you get the output you need. Do they have any evidence that this convection cycle happens in the real world? Or is it just filed under "crap we added to the model to make it work?"
Whatever it takes to keep the money pouring in. I hope the shills are getting a slice.
Yes, the evidence of the convection cycle was from an article in a scientific journal. I don't have the details handy but the whole conversation was a group of scientists from weather / climate fields. I've also read in several places about discoveries in the past several years about how the ocean stores and releases heat.
For example, there supposedly is a glut of lobsters coming onto the market from Maine because of warmer-than-usual water off the coast there.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/29/us/in-maine-fishermen-struggle-with-glut-of-lobsters.html?_r=0 for example.
A new report (in summary) says we can cancel out the cost of developing all-renewable energy simply by ending oil company subsidies. If the numbers are vetted and real, who could be against it, besides oil companies? My biggest question is, how does this affect consumer costs in the short term? Is it knowable? Is it flexible besides by new subsidies and/or carbon taxes?
Oh hello opinion piece filled with misinformation already debunked earlier in the thread. Welcome back for another go around!
Bobby Kennedy, jr. on a roll, blaming the Koch brothers for everything wrong with the world. And acting like the pompous bully he is. Doesn't this reporter realize his father and Uncle Jack screwed Marilyn Monroe? And that Uncle Ted (long before he asked that young lady in Florida if she wanted to "suck it") had killed a girl then ran away and hid and lied about it for the rest of his worthless life? What's really enlightening is to hear this wealthy p.o.s. talk about "rich" folks, by which he presumably means the microscopic percentage of Americans who have more money than he does. What an arse hole.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...bs-mic-reporter-pushing-carbon-footprint.html
TDS has a great segment last night on the sheer dim-wittedness of the Denialists.
Boy the way Glenn Miller Played
Songs that made the Hit Parade
Guys like us we had it made
Those were the days.
Didn't need no Welfare state
Everybody pulled his weight
Gee our old LaSalle ran great
Those were the days
And you knew who you were then
Girls were girls and men were men
Mister, we could use a man like Herbert Hoover again
People seemd to be content
$50 payed the rent
Freaks were in a circus tent
Those were the days
Take a little Sunday spin
Tonight I'll watch the Dodgers win
Have yourself a dandy day that cost you under a fin
Hair was short and skirts were long
Kate Smith really sung the song
I don't know just what went wrong
THOSE WERE THE DAYS!