Paratus
Lifer
You know that really bright thing up in the sky? You know the one that when it's out it's light and warmer and when it's not out it's darker and colder? It's called the sun and it's the ultimate driver of all things climate in one way or another.
I know it's an overly simplistic answer, but you anthropogenic CO2 climate alarmists seem to want simple answers to complex questions.
Yes the sun who's output we measure on a day today basis. If the sun was driving the change we'd know.
In its most recent report in 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) highlighted 54 key uncertainties that complicate climate science.
Such a declaration of unresolved problems could hardly be called hidden. And some of these such as uncertainties in measurements of past temperatures have received consid- erable discussion in the media. But other gaps in the science are less well known beyond the fields circle of specialists. Such holes do not undermine the fundamental conclusion that humans are warming the climate, which is based on the extreme rate of the twentieth-century temperature changes and the inability of climate models to simulate such warming without including the role of greenhouse-gas pollution. The uncertainties do, however, hamper efforts to plan for the future. And unlike the myths regularly trotted out by climate-change denialists, some of the outstanding problems may mean that future changes could be worse than currently projected.
I read some of your links. I'm not sure it says what you think it says.