The point I am trying to make is that humans have, over geological time, going to have a very small effect upon the planet climate wise. The planet will eventually correct itself after humans are gone, and exhibit climates controlled by physical processes. The planet has had average temperatures which were 20-30 degrees warmer than they are today.
We are still in an ice age, technically speaking. Ice ages end, temps go up. There is not enough data in yet to describe how long the end of an ice age might last (we are about 12,000 years into the start of the last ice age's decline and do not know when it might end) or how fast temperatures rise.
Making the statement that man is the cause of global warming is not scientific, even when there is evidence for some things being true when they always exclude any data on ice ages.
It's the same for the extinction of dinosaurs, there are no DINOSAUR fossils in the last 9-12 feet of rock BEFORE that KT boundary line (this represents as much as 12 million years), the paleontologists argue this point, the astrophysicists say without any evidence, that an impactor killed the dinosaurs because of when it happened and some micro-fossils in the Caribbean show a mass die off of SOME microscopic lifeforms in that area at that time.
Until people (scientists) can put all the data together and without a doubt, rule out all but one item, pointing a finger at any one cause is bad science.