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The Great Global Warming Swindle

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  • The Great Global Warming Swindle

    anybody see this?
    P.S. You've been Spanked!

  • #2
    Interesting
    Q9450 + TRUE, G.Skill 2x2GB DDR2, GTX 560, ASUS X48, 1TB WD Black, Windows 7 64-bit, LG M2762D-PM 27" + 17" LG 1752TX, Corsair HX620, Antec P182, Logitech G5 (Blue)
    Laptop: MSI Wind - Black

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    • #3
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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      • #4
        The Great Martin Durkin Swindle:

        In 1997 the director, Martin Durkin, produced a similar series for Channel 4 called Against Nature, which also maintained that global warming was a scam dreamed up by environmentalists. It was riddled with hilarious scientific howlers. More damagingly, the only way in which Durkin could sustain his thesis was to deceive the people he interviewed and edit their answers to change their meaning. After complaints by his interviewees, the Independent Television Commission found that "the views of the four complainants, as made clear to the interviewer, had been distorted by selective editing" and that they had been "misled as to the content and purpose of the programmes when they agreed to take part". Channel 4 was obliged to broadcast one of the most humiliating primetime apologies it has made.
        George Monbiot: The president's avowed conversion on climate change is illusory. He is just drumming up new business for his chums.

        Main: Dual Xeon LV2.4Ghz@3.1Ghz | 3X21" | NVidia 6800 | 2Gb DDR | SCSI
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        • #5
          I'm not a climatologist and I haven't attempted to study any of the data so I'm no authority on climate change at the global level but I can say that I've personally seen, just in my lifetime, significant climate change at the local level. And I assert that at least some of that change is due to poor eco mangement (pollution, over fishing/hunting, etc.) on our part.

          While I believe that the "scientists" should be keeping an open mind and investigating as many of the potential causes as possible (eg., I saw an article on slashdot that I figured Doc would post that says Mars is heating up too--and I know that can't be our fault) as they make recommendations on public policy, I also believe that there are many things we can do to improve our environment at the local level and we should be pursuing those ends regardless of the global implications.
          P.S. You've been Spanked!

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          • #6
            I'm curious about a little something, if anyone has the answer..
            How much heat does solar energy produces on earth every day?
            If we were to 'shut down' the sun for 24hours (or turn it 50% down for 48 hours, 25% for 96 hours etc to avoid immediate effects), what will be the effect (if any) in the long run?
            "For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism."

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            • #7
              Like a huge green filter (about the diameter of the moon) in orbit at the right distance?
              That would be interesting...
              Last edited by NetSnake; 5 March 2007, 07:36.

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              • #8
                If they don't know this how can they calculate/predict anything?
                Dr. Mordrid
                ----------------------------
                An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Dr Mordrid View Post
                  If they don't know this how can they calculate/predict anything?
                  This is why the whole world has a dense population of weather stations. On our tiny little speck, lost in the Mediterranean, we have a couple of hundred or so and this density is replicated nearly everywhere. OK, there are gaps of a km or two between them and we don't know exactly what falls there, but interpolation is pretty accurate. It is therefore untrue that we don't know precipitation levels on land; we know it very accurately.

                  It is true that weatherships and other seaborne meteorological data-gathering stations are spaced much wider apart and we have less first-hand knowledge, but we can obtain very good estimations from the data that is measured combined with satellite observations.

                  As for snow depth, this is not really material; it is the water contained in the snow that is important and this is simply measured using heated rain gauges. Whether the snow is 1 cm thick or 10 m thick, the albedo is the same and, sooner or later, it will change phase to liquid. The quantity of air entrapped in the snow is also immaterial.

                  In any case, this is a specious argument, as you started this thread as a comical climate effort and now you are switching the argument to weather, almost equally comical.
                  Brian (the devil incarnate)

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                  • #10
                    Oops....

                    Allegre's second thoughts

                    (might take a long time - it's busy)

                    Published: Friday, March 02, 2007

                    Claude Allegre, one of France's leading socialists and among her most celebrated scientists, was among the first to sound the alarm about the dangers of global warming.

                    "By burning fossil fuels, man increased the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere which, for example, has raised the global mean temperature by half a degree in the last century," Dr. Allegre, a renowned geochemist, wrote 20 years ago in Cles pour la geologie.." Fifteen years ago, Dr. Allegre was among the 1500 prominent scientists who signed "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity," a highly publicized letter stressing that global warming's "potential risks are very great" and demanding a new caring ethic that recognizes the globe's fragility in order to stave off "spirals of environmental decline, poverty, and unrest, leading to social, economic and environmental collapse."

                    In the 1980s and early 1990s, when concern about global warming was in its infancy, little was known about the mechanics of how it could occur, or the consequences that could befall us. Since then, governments throughout the western world and bodies such as the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have commissioned billions of dollars worth of research by thousands of scientists. With a wealth of data now in, Dr. Allegre has recanted his views. To his surprise, the many climate models and studies failed dismally in establishing a man-made cause of catastrophic global warming. Meanwhile, increasing evidence indicates that most of the warming comes of natural phenomena. Dr. Allegre now sees global warming as over-hyped and an environmental concern of second rank.

                    His break with what he now sees as environmental cant on climate change came in September, in an article entitled "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" in l' Express, the French weekly. His article cited evidence that Antarctica is gaining ice and that Kilimanjaro's retreating snow caps, among other global-warming concerns, come from natural causes. "The cause of this climate change is unknown," he states matter of factly. There is no basis for saying, as most do, that the "science is settled."

                    Dr. Allegre's skepticism is noteworthy in several respects. For one, he is an exalted member of France's political establishment, a friend of former Socialist president Lionel Jospin, and, from 1997 to 2000, his minister of education, research and technology, charged with improving the quality of government research through closer co-operation with France's educational institutions. For another, Dr. Allegre has the highest environmental credentials. The author of early environmental books, he fought successful battles to protect the ozone layer from CFCs and public health from lead pollution. His break with scientific dogma over global warming came at a personal cost: Colleagues in both the governmental and environmental spheres were aghast that he could publicly question the science behind climate change.

                    But Dr. Allegre had allegiances to more than his socialist and environmental colleagues. He is, above all, a scientist of the first order, the architect of isotope geodynamics, which showed that the atmosphere was primarily formed early in the history of the Earth, and the geochemical modeller of the early solar system. Because of his path-breaking cosmochemical research, NASA asked Dr. Allegre to participate in the Apollo lunar program, where he helped determine the age of the Moon. Matching his scientific accomplishments in the cosmos are his accomplishments at home: Dr. Allegre is perhaps best known for his research on the structural and geochemical evolution of the Earth's crust and the creation of its mountains, explaining both the title of his article in l' Express and his revulsion at the nihilistic nature of the climate research debate.

                    Calling the arguments of those who see catastrophe in climate change "simplistic and obscuring the true dangers," Dr. Allegre especially despairs at "the greenhouse-gas fanatics whose proclamations consist in denouncing man's role on the climate without doing anything about it except organizing conferences and preparing protocols that become dead letters." The world would be better off, Dr. Allegre believes, if these "denouncers" became less political and more practical, by proposing practical solutions to head off the dangers they see, such as developing technologies to sequester C02. His dream, he says, is to see "ecology become the engine of economic development and not an artificial obstacle that creates fear."
                    CV OF A DENIER:

                    Claude Allegre received a Ph D in physics in 1962 from the University of Paris. He became the director of the geochemistry and cosmochemistry program at the French National Scientific Research Centre in 1967 and in 1971, he was appointed director of the University of Paris's Department of Earth Sciences. In 1976, he became director of the Paris Institut de Physique du Globe. He is an author of more than 100 scientific articles, many of them seminal studies on the evolution of the Earth using isotopic evidence, and 11 books. He is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and the French Academy of Science.
                    Dr. Mordrid
                    ----------------------------
                    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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                    • #11
                      I think this brings us to a simpler bottom line. Global warming is about as explainable dark energy and black holes. We know it's there, we can measuse it's effects and impacts and we can guess a hell lot of things about it. What really matters is pollution. If the world heats up another drgree celsius or not s quite frankly out of our hands. The quality of the air we breathe, the water we drink and the food we consume is a whole different opera.
                      "For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism."

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by TransformX View Post
                        I think this brings us to a simpler bottom line. Global warming is about as explainable dark energy and black holes. We know it's there, we can measuse it's effects and impacts and we can guess a hell lot of things about it. What really matters is pollution. If the world heats up another drgree celsius or not s quite frankly out of our hands. The quality of the air we breathe, the water we drink and the food we consume is a whole different opera.
                        that's the point i was trying to make.
                        P.S. You've been Spanked!

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Brian Ellis View Post
                          In any case, this is a specious argument, as you started this thread as a comical climate effort and now you are switching the argument to weather, almost equally comical.
                          Doc didn't start this thread. I did. And your assumption as to why I started it is wrong. I await your apology.
                          P.S. You've been Spanked!

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                          • #14
                            Not to mention that the aggregate precipitation is a key component of climate models. If there is doubt about it the model itself connot logically stand unless you're so tied to it your ego sustains it.

                            With a wealth of data now in, Dr. Allegre has recanted his views. To his surprise, the many climate models and studies failed dismally in establishing a man-made cause of catastrophic global warming. Meanwhile, increasing evidence indicates that most of the warming comes of natural phenomena. Dr. Allegre now sees global warming as over-hyped and an environmental concern of second rank.
                            Sounds about right.
                            Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 5 March 2007, 17:12.
                            Dr. Mordrid
                            ----------------------------
                            An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                            I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Dr Mordrid View Post
                              Sounds about right.
                              There it is folks, QED: those climatologists are full of it.
                              Chuck
                              秋音的爸爸

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