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Cont: Global warming discussion V

Actually, I did do a search but since I've been away for over 4 years perhaps I screwed it up. I will check out your link although at first glance it sounds almost ominous. Is controversy or correcting ignorance not welcome anymore?

The policy of having a single thread was a direct response to the tactics of those whose ignorance was wilful. It has since been relaxed.
 
Perhaps I've missed it somewhere. I have been away for a while so I apologize if so, but shouldn't there be a sub topic on AGW here of all places?

I invite those with at least a high school science education to try to educate the professional science deniers at CFACT.ORG and other Trumpist websites.
Thanks for the invite, but I suspect I have much better uses of my time than to fight Trumpists, whatever that is.

First rule in any sort of education, you can only teach those who want to learn. Willfully ignorant will remain so up until they change their willingness to learn.
 
Corona Virus Conspiracy Theories Part III

There are rich and powerful people who have knowingly taken actions that may well end in depopulation, for example. The Climate Crisis isn't something that was even remotely unpredictable, after all, and Big Fossil Fuel has known the science and predicted it with high certainty for a long, long time.

You have this backwards. There is no “climate crisis”. Carbon dioxide is not a pollutant. There is likely more CO2 produced by the worlds volcanoes, and released from solution by the worlds oceans, than can ever be emitted by man. The “crisis” is in the diverting of trillions of dollars that would otherwise go towards solving real human problems. It is in the absolute destruction that will result by abandoning coal and gas in the developing and the developed world which will result not only in economic devastation, but in the deaths of hundreds of millions of people. This is a particularly brazen strategy of the elites. David de Rothschild of the eternal Rothschild banking dynasty, is front and center on this issue.

There are also powerful people who are exerting excessive power in deeply problematic ways - the radical right, in particular. Tippit's already stated that he doesn't vote - and that happens to actually be a win for them in the end. They've pointedly worked to reduce trust in the forces that are in the best position to restrict them, reducing participation and involvement. That then means that efforts of theirs to subvert those forces are vastly more (easily) doable.

Ahh, the personification of evil itself, the radical right winger, combated by the forces of good, the radical left wing, in a timeless battle. Who will prevail? Tune in to Fox News and MSNBC for answers.


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You have this backwards. There is no “climate crisis”. Carbon dioxide is not a pollutant. There is likely more CO2 produced by the worlds volcanoes, and released from solution by the worlds oceans, than can ever be emitted by man. The “crisis” is in the diverting of trillions of dollars that would otherwise go towards solving real human problems. It is in the absolute destruction that will result by abandoning coal and gas in the developing and the developed world which will result not only in economic devastation, but in the deaths of hundreds of millions of people. This is a particularly brazen strategy of the elites. David de Rothschild of the eternal Rothschild banking dynasty, is front and center on this issue.

Evidence? At last check, the evidence seems to very, very firmly back up my position and I've seen none that would actually support nearly any of this with one notable exception. To address that, though... Climate myths: Human CO2 emissions are too tiny to matter

Ahh, the personification of evil itself, the radical right winger, combated by the forces of good, the radical left wing, in a timeless battle. Who will prevail? Tune in to Fox News and MSNBC for answers.

No point in taking this absurdity seriously.
 
You have this backwards. There is no “climate crisis”. Carbon dioxide is not a pollutant.

It's a natural part of the global ecosystem. But...

There is likely more CO2 produced by the worlds volcanoes, and released from solution by the worlds oceans, than can ever be emitted by man.

Even if that was true (and citation required by the way), the problem is that CO2 is a tiny percentage constituent of the atmosphere but an important component in how it functions. How that balance is affected by humanity's contribution of a shedload of additional carbon that used to be nicely locked up in the ground is the problem.

The “crisis” is in the diverting of trillions of dollars that would otherwise go towards solving real human problems. It is in the absolute destruction that will result by abandoning coal and gas in the developing and the developed world which will result not only in economic devastation, but in the deaths of hundreds of millions of people.

The actual crisis is the fundamental inability of people to grasp the significance of how our activity alters the global atmospheric balance. In geological timescales there is no crisis - planet Earth will chug along perfectly nicely with or without us. In human timescales we're stuffed.

The issue is not how do we avert climate change but how we deal with it. Unfortunately there are still many economic interests that want to keep using fossil fuels, and many ill-informed people who think that high tech solutions that involve the consumption of a lot of energy to produce will save us. It won't. Even Greta doesn't entirely get it - sailing across the ocean in a boat made of carbon is not carbon neutral.

There are even more ill-informed people who somehow think that it isn't a real issue and will wait until their feet are wet, or their economy is having to deal with mass migration from areas that can't survive anymore, before they wake up and smell the coffee. Those people, and it seems to include you, are too busy tilting at windmills. Carry on ranting at your imaginary enemies instead of dealing with actual problems. You'll change nothing.
 
Evidence? At last check, the evidence seems to very, very firmly back up my position and I've seen none that would actually support nearly any of this with one notable exception. To address that, though... Climate myths: Human CO2 emissions are too tiny to matter

A decent article, but the volcano emissions are contended. In addition, I think the "fossil fuel" theory of oil is largely nonsense. Not that "fossil fuel" doesn't exist, but that it doesn't account for the vast quantities of oil extracted from very deep oil deposits found in Russia, Venezuela, and miles under the ocean floor where no fossils could conceivably be deposited. Abiotic oil theory explains this.

As for the oceans, they are both CO2 source and sink, depending on atmospheric temperature. They are the "positive feedback loop" that results from carbonic acid being released from solution as the temperature rises, and the reverse when it falls.

I am not a climate scientist, so unlike yourself I am not absolutely certain as to whether or not anthropogenic climate change is materially important. However, there is absolutely no question as to the consequences that will result from the response to the purported "climate crisis". Hundreds of millions will die, and economies will be wrecked.

I also tend to believe the opposite of whatever David de Rothschild and the Rothschild banking dynasty claims, and their UN funded IPCC.
 
Even if that was true (and citation required by the way), the problem is that CO2 is a tiny percentage constituent of the atmosphere but an important component in how it functions. How that balance is affected by humanity's contribution of a shedload of additional carbon that used to be nicely locked up in the ground is the problem.
There are CO2 sinks, the ocean (at the right temperature) is a huge one. We also know that they're dynamic, for instance, the reproductive capacity of forest and other plant biomes is increased as the result of more food. Whether or not the sinks can accommodate anthropogenic sources is probably unknown at this point. That won't stop the fearmongers from assuming that what they think is certain.

The actual crisis is the fundamental inability of people to grasp the significance of how our activity alters the global atmospheric balance. In geological timescales there is no crisis - planet Earth will chug along perfectly nicely with or without us. In human timescales we're stuffed.

I don't think you can be certain of that, despite how certain you think you are. It isn't even clear that a warmer planet will be a catastrophic thing for humans.

There are even more ill-informed people who somehow think that it isn't a real issue and will wait until their feet are wet, or their economy is having to deal with mass migration from areas that can't survive anymore, before they wake up and smell the coffee. Those people, and it seems to include you, are too busy tilting at windmills. Carry on ranting at your imaginary enemies instead of dealing with actual problems. You'll change nothing.

I may be wrong, and a looming catastrophe is imminent. On the other hand, your response will guarantee massive economic losses, lower standards of living, and the deaths of hundreds of millions.

Much like the responses to Covid-19, we're left with widely differing views on what the expected values of our choices will be.
 
And then there is this:

COP26 Is A Global Energy Embarrassment

China is using their "dirty" coal-powered grid to manufacture wind turbines, solar panels, electric engines, and batteries. This would be funny if it weren't a tragic waste of energy, money, and time. All due to the faux "climate crisis".

When net-zero is really net-positive.

This is OT. Can a mod splice this into the relevant climate crisis thread? I'm not super interested in this discussion.
 
This is OT. Can a mod splice this into the relevant climate crisis thread?

I've already requested that in the approved manner (reporting the first off topic post) so your BS can be countered without earning the mods ire.

I'm not super interested in this discussion.
Does that mean you're not going to defend it?
 
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A decent article, but the volcano emissions are contended. In addition, I think the "fossil fuel" theory of oil is largely nonsense. Not that "fossil fuel" doesn't exist, but that it doesn't account for the vast quantities of oil extracted from very deep oil deposits found in Russia, Venezuela, and miles under the ocean floor where no fossils could conceivably be deposited. Abiotic oil theory explains this.

A potentially interesting tangent, but I think that I should clarify as a matter of course. When I said Big Fossil Fuel, it was a short way of referring to the larger oil, gas, and coal industries. By the evidence, the oil and coal industries, in particular, were fairly certain of the effects of their actions and chose to follow a course of action that they believed would cause disaster in the long term.

I am not a climate scientist, so unlike yourself I am not absolutely certain as to whether or not anthropogenic climate change is materially important. However, there is absolutely no question as to the consequences that will result from the response to the purported "climate crisis". Hundreds of millions will die, and economies will be wrecked.

You have interesting standards for "absolute certainty," then, and what assumptions you hold about "the" response to the climate crisis. Still, delving further into that is a tangent too far for this thread, I think, given that the point here involves powerful forces knowingly making decisions with the expectation that potentially, they could lead to depopulation, even if that was only an unpleasant side effect of the values that they were actually working to uphold. Do you acknowledge that this happened when it comes to major oil and coal companies?
 
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I've already requested that in the approved manner (reporting the first off topic post) so your BS can be countered without earning the mods ire.


Does that mean you're not going to defend it?

Someone else brought up the fake climate change crisis, not me, just like all of the other OT CT accusations.
 
Evidence? At last check, the evidence seems to very, very firmly back up my position and I've seen none that would actually support nearly any of this with one notable exception. To address that, though... Climate myths: Human CO2 emissions are too tiny to matter



No point in taking this absurdity seriously.

Several years ago, I used publicly available data for fossil fuel production and consumption along with basic chemistry and simple sums to estimate the impact of emissions.

Obviously I wasn't accounting for carbon sinks, but the number came out to about twice the annual ppm increase, so significant and plausible.

Of course we can also use isotope ratios to see the impact of fossil carbon (it's depleted in C14)

Almost as though estimates using valid science agree within their levels of uncertainty even with completely independent approaches.
 
Since I know that "net-zero" will result in economic catastrophe and millions dead, if and when implemented, and I know that the elites control coal and gas resources and are falling on those swords, then yes, the elites are knowingly making decisions that will lead to depopulation, but not as the result of environmental catastrophe, as you claim, but rather through polices that abolish coal and gas in response to a phony crisis that they have constructed. Once again, an example of the Hegelian dialectic.

I'd ask for what evidence you would require to change your mind here, but... that would fairly certainly stray into much more of a discussion about the climate crisis, if we dealt with the science and actual policy pushes surrounding AGW and "net-zero." If we dealt with the internal documents and media of the oil and gas companies, I expect that you would just claim that they were either fabricated or part of the plotting even then. Similarly, I could refer to other communications that support what I say in a larger sense - I'll refer you to this remarkably well backed up book that deals more with some more general history there, with the relevant decision-making of oil and gas execs as a bit of an aside. Delving all that much further than that in that direction would also be quite OT, though, and take a lot of time and effort that I simply don't believe would be rewarded. That pretty much leaves fundamentally weaker arguments that I generally prefer not to work with, especially when the thread isn't directly dealing with that subject in the first place. So, moving on, then, because I don't really see much point in pushing further here.

I'll restate my original position simply, though, as that you are fairly certainly right about some things, but that other things that you claim just don't work as well.
 
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Several years ago, I used publicly available data for fossil fuel production and consumption along with basic chemistry and simple sums to estimate the impact of emissions.

Obviously I wasn't accounting for carbon sinks, but the number came out to about twice the annual ppm increase, so significant and plausible.

Of course we can also use isotope ratios to see the impact of fossil carbon (it's depleted in C14)

Almost as though estimates using valid science agree within their levels of uncertainty even with completely independent approaches.
I did the same thing a few years ago and it did convert me from from the 'we're too puny to affect this' camp.

The major sink that would affect what you calculated is how much of the addition CO2 stays in the atmosphere and how much is absorbed the oceans. The 'Atmospheric Fraction'.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airbo...uld imply a faster increase in atmospheric CO
 

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