Beautifully said. Strongly seconded.
Look, if we could take the whole Earth's athmosphere and compress it in a way that would allow it to maintain the same density everywhere, its thickness would be a mere 5 kilometres. Now think about all the crap we've been spewing in the air for the last 150 years or so... suddenly, climate change becomes frighteningly possible - and believable.
cyber - do yourself a favor and read up on the glacial/interglacial periods, and how your little graph doesn't do a lot of things you think it does
The only way the graph could be wrong is...
Just look at the level of intellectual dishonesty in this thread: Unable to refute the science - and NeoV has provided an excellent summary of the 6 separate analyses of ClimateGate 1.0, all of which found no manipulation of data and no distortion of the science - the climate-change denial crowd is reduced to attacking individual climatologists for alleged FOIA violations.
Note that these attacks have nothing substantive to do with ACC. Mann is attacked for allegedly withholding climate data during a FOIA request. And then the attackers perform their truly slimy move: They pretend that the alleged withholding of data by Mann "proves" that ACC is false. I'll say that again: They completely ignore all the actual science - and all of the conclusions of six separate analyses of Climategate - and insist that Mann withheld data from a FOIA request, and - therefore - ACC must be false.
Climategate 2.0 - just like Climategate 1.0 before it - is a classic ad hominem attack. It has nothing to do with science.
Just look at the level of intellectual dishonesty in this thread: Unable to refute the science - and NeoV has provided an excellent summary of the 6 separate analyses of ClimateGate 1.0, all of which found no manipulation of data and no distortion of the science - the climate-change denial crowd is reduced to attacking individual climatologists for alleged FOIA violations.
Note that these attacks have nothing substantive to do with ACC. Mann is attacked for allegedly withholding climate data during a FOIA request. And then the attackers perform their truly slimy move: They pretend that the alleged withholding of data by Mann "proves" that ACC is false. I'll say that again: They completely ignore all the actual science - and all of the conclusions of six separate analyses of Climategate - and insist that Mann withheld data from a FOIA request, and - therefore - ACC must be false.
Climategate 2.0 - just like Climategate 1.0 before it - is a classic ad hominem attack. It has nothing to do with science.
I never said Mann withheld data from a FOIA request, I said that Phil Jones (head of CRU) and Eugene Wahl (NCDC) illegally deleted e-mails that were subject to a FOIA request, both have admitted it, it's not even in doubt. You were the one that brought Mann into this as anything other then a link between Jones and Wahl.
cyber - you get an F for comprehension - which isn't surprising
What I'm saying about your graph is that climate scientists are fully aware of it - you are acting like it's the nail in the coffin, putting any discussion about this topic to rest.
What I'm telling you - is that you are wrong that your graph explains everything that is going on with our climate - in fact, it does the opposite. I'm not going to explain it all here - you can just ask Doc I'm sure. Basically the pattern in your graph appears to be due to changes in the earth's orbit and tilt - which to be completely honest no one fully understands - but, and here's the kicker - based on that data alone -we should be experiencing slight cooling right now - this is the oft-quoted by skeptics argument that goes something like " in the 70's you said we were heading for another ice age!!!" However - two factors are in play - the orbital change and the tilt changes are not in sync - the last time this happened, to this degree, was 430,000 years ago - the other is the very thing you are trying to disprove - the warming effect from non-natural CO2 (and other greenhouse gases).
Are you strongly seconding him because of his inaccuracies, or his decision to ignore another poster who always strives for accuracy? I bet you're strongly seconding him because you agree with his message, even if it's wrong. Reminds me of the righties in the 60's that had the "My country right or wrong" bumper stickers, you can get one that says "my science right or wrong" and put it on your bicycle.
I am seconding him because I have the academic and professional background required to understand these things in detail, not just as soundbites from political commentators. Because over the last six years I've been participating in international conferences filled with scientists, regulators, journalists, activists, as well as "normal folk" whose lives are affected by climate change. Because I've attended numerious scientific sessions, discussed with climatologists, economists, public policy experts and *gasp!* politicians. Because, no matter whether you want to believe that man plays a role in changing the climate, the current way of life and our economy are unsustainable in the long-run. Because I work for an energy regulator, and I know what national and global energy needs are, and how bad we need to get zero-emissions power.
When I put all these things in the balance against the insults coming from an random dude on the Internet, all I can do is shrug. You're free to play with your conspiracies. Just as you got me pegged as a "tree-hugging-bad-science activist", I'm free to think that you're a "laissez-faire" traditionalist with insufficient intellectual baggage. But, by all means, go on being as pig-headed as you like. I'm not trying to convince you. Stay derpy!
For us laypeople then, what's the deal with these e-mails (and the ones before it)? A case of well-intentioned people going a little too far in trying to make sure their warnings are heard and acted upon? It seems undeniable that there was less that pure honesty afoot here.
I am seconding him because I have the academic and professional background required to understand these things in detail, not just as soundbites from political commentators. Because over the last six years I've been participating in international conferences filled with scientists, regulators, journalists, activists, as well as "normal folk" whose lives are affected by climate change. Because I've attended numerious scientific sessions, discussed with climatologists, economists, public policy experts and *gasp!* politicians. Because, no matter whether you want to believe that man plays a role in changing the climate, the current way of life and our economy are unsustainable in the long-run. Because I work for an energy regulator, and I know what national and global energy needs are, and how bad we need to get zero-emissions power.
When I put all these things in the balance against the insults coming from an random dude on the Internet, all I can do is shrug. You're free to play with your conspiracies. Just as you got me pegged as a "tree-hugging-bad-science activist", I'm free to think that you're a "laissez-faire" traditionalist with insufficient intellectual baggage. But, by all means, go on being as pig-headed as you like. I'm not trying to convince you. Stay derpy!
Theres nothing like context, and theres nothing like context in these accusations. People might want to look a little deeper. There is no Climategate, sorry.
That's weak.
Not meaningful at all for the folks who disagree with your stance. More about the ideas and issues, less about yourself. Many well qualified men/women have been wrong or right on important issues. You'd have to start by acknowledging the emails and not discounting them on basis of your "qualifications" and superiority complex, which is bullshit.
Global Warming is real, and natural; however, there is zero evidence linking mankind to the current warming cycle, or that the cycle itself is any more or less severe/accelerated than similar cycles throughout Earth's entire history.
At the end of the day, that doesn't mean we should ignore our environment or encourage destructive behavior. It simply means that our fiscal investments and environmental regulations need to remain limited/reasonable.
-reasonable rules that prevent negligent destruction of our environment (littering, avoidable pollution, limits on deforestation, etc) = good.
-Carbon credits, Cap&Trade, and other extremist nonsense = bad.
-unregulated drilling/mining = bad
-modern less intrusive drilling/mining = good
-encouraged recycling = good
-alternative fuel research = good (for multiple reasons)
-"green" product development (ie. more efficient) = good
-encouraging lower emission engines = good
-tax breaks for any of the above = bad
Etc etc...
Her reply was this classic:
"Appeal To Anonymous Authority:
an Appeal To Authority is made, but the authority is not named. For example, "Experts agree that ..", "scientists say .." or even "they say ..". This makes the information impossible to verify, and brings up the very real possibility that the arguer himself doesn't know who the experts are. In that case, he may just be spreading a rumor.
The situation is even worse if the arguer admits it's a rumor. "
education/job/her participation as a parasite. I hope she has fun at Durban.
Sorry to be off topic, but you just described most of the stories started at Fox news. They are famous for "some people say".
Sorry to be off topic, but you just described most of the stories started at Fox news. They are famous for "some people say".