Like dihydrogen monoxide. That stuff can be toxic!
Indeed it can be!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_intoxication
Like dihydrogen monoxide. That stuff can be toxic!
Almost everything can be toxic in the right concentrations. Even oxygen, in high enough concentrations for long enough (or at elevated pressures), is toxic - sometimes extremely so at elevated pressures. Other things can be helpful or hurtful - ozone at very high elevations is generally good, ozone at elevations with people is generally bad. Virtually nothing is completely good or completely bad.CO2 isn't a pollutant. It's a naturally occurring gas that humans / animals exhale and plants take in.
The balance may be out of whack, but in my opinion it's bad to think of it as a pollutant.
Almost everything can be toxic in the right concentrations. Even oxygen, in high enough concentrations for long enough (or at elevated pressures), is toxic - sometimes extremely so at elevated pressures. Other things can be helpful or hurtful - ozone at very high elevations is generally good, ozone at elevations with people is generally bad. Virtually nothing is completely good or completely bad.
The Earth has amazing feedback loops far beyond our current understanding, and it could be that current levels are good for the Earth. But right now they appear bad for the Earth, on balance. I don't think we should play G-d and I don't think we should destroy our economy, but I do think we should be taking all economically feasible steps to lower CO2 output and/or sequester or mitigate it, as well as working to make more radical approaches economically feasible. If we are wrong and our current and projected CO2 concentrations are good for the Earth, then those same amazing feedback loops will adjust for that lowering as well. It's almost always less likely to destabilize a system by imposing slower change than with faster change, so we're unlikely to damage the Earth by lowering levels.
I don't think we're likely to damage the Earth by not lowering levels either, for that matter. But by not acting we may well eliminate some species which would otherwise survive, and that would be a shame.
I guess we could argue symantics but clearly excess CO2 from non naturally occuring sources is having a negative impact on our climate. Now this impact may be over dramaticized at times, but long term it could be catastrophic. Venus is a good example of a run away green house effect.
I will compare your polutant argument to that of toxic chemicals. Any naturally occurring substance becomes toxic if consumed in an amount that exceeds a certain threshold.
Punishing with taxes? How so? When you create CO2 in large quantities you are creating a pollutant. A carbon tax is designed so that you compensate society for the damage you do to the environment. Why would you want to encourage freeloading?
Theres almost zero risk to the scientist for pushing bad 'science' for decades. They'll ride the gravy train as long as they can. Once/If proven wrong, they'll just jump ship, and support whatever the new theory is. And just tell the public that there's new data that supports the new conclusion.
That's nice. Irrelevant to what I asked, but not surprising in the least.
I'll play. Why do you want lower wages and higher unemployment? Ahh, you want to encourage freeloading and increasing dependency.
Love that phase, too. "Punishing with taxes." Always cracks me up.
It might, but you are smarter than most here and not someone as I see as a hack.
You might reflect on my post just prior to this. Companies will still function. The CEOs will get paid. They will control costs. Controlling costs will mean labor gets punished. Somehow that doesn't crack me up.
Now come up with and alternative.
It might, but you are smarter than most here and not someone as I see as a hack.
You might reflect on my post just prior to this. Companies will still function. The CEOs will get paid. They will control costs. Controlling costs will mean labor gets punished. Somehow that doesn't crack me up.
Now come up with and alternative.
Since you obviously have a superior understanding of our economy and its complexities, please enlighten us as to what you think will happen if we significantly increase corporate taxes? I'm all ears.Offset the tax with a drop in corporate tax rates? Clearly you have a simplistic view of the economy and the only thing your able shit from your mouth is "tax.. bad! ".
I'm just waiting for the people to stand behind their words of reducing CO2 emissions by shutting off their computers unless their computer is powered by a personally owned alternative electrical (wind, solar, or hydro) source.
Since you obviously have a superior understanding of our economy and its complexities, please enlighten us as to what you think will happen if we significantly increase corporate taxes? I'm all ears.
I'm just waiting for the people to stand behind their words of reducing CO2 emissions by shutting off their computers unless their computer is powered by a personally owned alternative electrical (wind, solar, or hydro) source.
You realize that's a really bad argument, right?
So now we are hypocrites if we don't break off from the powergrid and create our own power source?
The subject was carbon taxes....not offsetting the carbon tax with a drop in corporate tax rates is a tax increase. Based on your little rant I must assume that you're actually against a corporate carbon tax. Please clarify.What part of drop in corporate tax rates did you not understand in my post? Never once have i argued for an increase in the corporate tax rate. I understand your despiration in trying to refocus everyones attention in order to avoid your inability to contribute an intellectual conjecture.
Why? Because there's no such thing as a real green power source that doesn't add CO2 into the atmosphere or require CO2 to be released during it's manufacture?
This really is terrible logic on your part. One can certainly mail in more than what they legally owe if they feel that Gov needs higher tax receipts. One cannot go invade another country. The two are not even remotely comparable.
You mean a scientist will change his hypothesis if new information is found and supported that makes the old one untenable?
Here's a pro tip, just for you Michal:
That's how science works.
Science as a whole isn't a dogmatic ideological troll such as yourself. The scientific method filters bullshit and it does it well.
No, the logic is perfectly sound. Why can't you go invade another country?
And big business science will go where the money is. Currently thats pumping up global warming.
How much money is their in debunking global warming? vs. How much money is there in continuing fear mongering?
Some how you global warming believers think that scientists are somehow these pure incorruptible individuals, with no personal motives, with no finical motives, they just do it for science.
-They're not.
Lordy you are actually sticking with it instead of re-thinking it. Ouch.
I'd think it fairly obvious on why going to invade a country you feel should be invaded will, with 100% (not evn 99.99999%) certainty, not contribute in any way to that country being invaded - unless you could consider supplying them with a one off training opportunity as a contribution. On the other hand, if one is so incredibly delusional as to think the Fed gov needs more money (to be sure, to simply blow it, burp, and ask for mo), and thus is advocating for higher taxes, one could actually write a check for more than what they legally owe and actually see their cause advanced.
Lets simplify for you: The person trying to unilaterally invade a country, zero % of their cause realized, and in reality, a negative %. The person wanting the Fed gov to have more money, and thus writing a check for more than they legally owe, cause 100% realized.
I'm not sure how you can't grasp this...
