It would be interesting to take a closer look at it from the 70's until now.
I took a close look at it at the time, and have followed it since.
The alarmists have been alarmed for a while.
Who
are these alarmists of whom you speak so often?
Scientists (including climate scientists) in the 70's were extremely sceptical of any appreciable human influence on climate, short of a general nuclear exchange. It went against the scientific culture which has prevailed since the early 19thCE. However, numbers don't lie, and the laws of physics are well-known in scientific circles.
Scientists went to colleagues and friends asking them "where have I gone wrong here?", and they in turn went on to ask others. As we have now seen they weren't wrong.
If you only look at CO2 I'm sure it does.
CO
2 was the matter in hand. The matter which has indeed led to continuing AGW.
Climate scientists were, of course, studying all the influences on climate they could come up with. Solar, geographic, orbital, volcanic, asteroidal, and atmospheric. (I may have missed some.) Climate science was itself a sub-set of Earth Sciences, aka geology, and principally inspired by the discovery of periodic ice-ages (which practically demanded an explanation). Glaciologists were (in my experience) rugged types who sought their excitement outside their scienctific field. Oceanography's attractions are obvious, the downside being that there was no funding.
(A silver-lining of the "more research is needed" policy is that oceanography has come on leaps and bounds in the last few decades. Before that the only funding available was defence-related, meaning North Atlantic and under the Arctic ice.)
And I'm sure most politicians are limited to understanding CO2 and its role in the climate. Ask them about albedo, emissivity, reflectivity, irradiance, CO2 uptake, forcing, feedback,clouds, latent heat and how many really know what's going on?
Did Roosevelt understand anything about nuclear physics? Did Churchill understand the mechanics of the bouncing bomb? Did Mehmet the Conqueror have a sound grasp of ballistics? Could President Bush the Second have found Afghanistan on a globe?
Margaret Thatcher would have known what to ask and have understood the answers, but that's beside the point. Politicians depend on experts for advice.
Nope, it's energy. There's more than enough land to produce the required sustenance in this world economy. The limiting factor is the cost of energy to transport it from where it's produced to where it is needed.
Most people live where the food's produced and has been produced for thousands of years. The valleys of the Indus, the Ganges, Brahmaputra, Irrawady, Mekong, Yangtze, Yellow. Nile, Euphrates, Tigris. Danube, Rhine, Rhone, Loire, Thames, Humber. Taff. Amazon.
Most people live there because most people lived there before them. They lived there because population and agriculture go hand-in-hand. Agriculture prospers where conditions are favourable, and that includes climate. Change the climate and suddenly most people are living in the wrong place.
There's always been more than enough land to feed everybody, and there have always been hungry and starving people.
Now if you took the money from carbon trading and put it towards a high speed rail that circumnavigates the globe, that I'd be behind 100%.
Why am I not surprised?
I might take a look into this group, for now it's just my own observation.
By your own observation you are in said group. It's quite informal, you don't have to carry a card or anything.
Again it's my own observation, but I was the one saying "How can he afford a $350K mortgage on a house that's worth $100K tops when he makes $60K a year and has $10K in credit card debt?".
The point of that is lost on me, I'm afraid. Obviously an unregulated financial market has done the global economy far more harm than any efforts to promote renewable energy and energy efficiency has (you wouldn't believe the alarmism that was raised over Kyoto, "Europe will bankrupt itself!", "One World Gummint is on our doorstep!", crazy stuff like that) but I don't see the relevance. It's nothing new and we all saw it coming.
I was working in the City back in the 80's, and we all saw that coming as well (for "mortgage" read "junk-bond", but it's always the derivatives where the real steal is to be found). Then the dot-con bubble, and we all saw
that coming.
I'll take your word for it, it's a little before my...awareness.
I've seen a lot in my time, and I do pay attention. If you read
Merchants of Doubt you'll get the picture. I was born before the Surgeon-General's report on smoking, and even before Sputnik. It's been an interesting show, with the blessing (for myself) of never being conscripted. The closest I've come to war is hearing two IRA bombs go off in London.
The anti-science campaign against AGW is different only in scale and sophistication from those against tobacco, acid rain, environmental lead, the ozone-hole, mercury in drinking-water and many others. The sophistication results from practice; the scale results from how close to the bone AGW gets in the mature phase of the Oil Age.
China is out-of-phase with the Oil Age, which makes things even more interesting. But I digress ...
Back in the 70's it never occurred to me that I would watch climate change and its ramifications in real-time. Peak Oil yes, but not climate change. By the mid-80's I thought
maybe, and said the next ten years would tell. The next ten years did tell. And the years after that.
The great benefit of maturity is that one (hopefully) learns patience.