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New Scientist Special Report: 7 Reasons Climate Change Is ‘Even Worse Than We Thought’
1. The thick sea ice in the Arctic Ocean was not expected to melt until the end of the century. If current trends continue, summer ice could be gone in a decade or two. Read more (or see “Death Spiral Watch: Experts Warn ‘Near Ice-Free Arctic In Summer’ In A Decade If Volume Trends Continue“).
2. We knew global warming was going to make the weather more extreme. But it’s becoming even more extreme than anyone predicted. Read more (or see “NOAA Bombshell: Warming-Driven Arctic Ice Loss Is Boosting Chance of Extreme U.S. Weather“).
3. Global warming was expected to boost food production. Instead, food prices are soaring as the effects of extreme weather kick in. Read more (or see “Oxfam Warns Climate Change And Extreme Weather Will Cause Food Prices To Soar” and links therein).
4. Greenland’s rapid loss of ice mean we’re in for a rise of at least 1 metre by 2100, and possibly much more. Read more (or see “Greenland Ice Sheet Melt Nearing Critical ‘Tipping Point’” and links therein).
5. The planet currently absorbs half our CO2emissions. All the signs are it won’t for much longer. Read more (or see “Carbon Feedback From Thawing Permafrost Will Likely Add 0.4°F – 1.5°F To Total Global Warming By 2100” and “Drying Peatlands and Intensifying Wildfires Boost Carbon Release Ninefold“).
6. If we stopped emitting CO2 tomorrow, we might be able to avoid climate disaster. In fact we are still increasing emissions. Read more (or see “The IEA And Others Warn Of Some 11°F Warming by 2100 on current emissions path”)
7. If the worst climate predictions are realised, vast swathes of the globe could become too hot for humans to survive. Read more (or see “An Illustrated Guide to the Science of Global Warming Impacts“)
..Reporters need to learn that, if they wish to discuss ‘both sides’ of the climate issue, the scientifically legitimate ‘other side’ is that, if anything, global climate disruption is likely to be significantly worse than has been suggested in scientific consensus estimates to date. ..
The Consul wrote:So you are telling me that if there are 299,999,999 people who think man made climate change is real based on thousands and thousand of peer reviewed scientific studies many issued by prestigious institutes and I don't - even if I am the only one, and even if I am being paid to deny it in a real noisy way - are you saying the lamestream media should not, as a fair and balanced act, hear me out, maybe even give me my own show? Is that what you are saying?
Are you a real American or what?
undead wrote: The forum moderators should ban global warming denial like they did with the 9/11 "no planes" theories because they make just as much sense.
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=35996&p=490350#p490350
brainpanhandler wrote:A much better solution would be public schools that actually teach critical thinking skills, but there's no time for that. The only partial solutions will seem fascist to the portion of the population clinging to the denialists and they'll be right on that score.
operator kos » Sat Nov 28, 2009 1:04 pm wrote: I work for one of the leading environmental non-profits in the U.S. We get every single climate change report that comes out. We get briefed by experts in the field at least once a week. While you don't have to believe my anonymous appeal to authority, I will say that those who deny AGW are simply ignorant of the absolutely vast body of scientific research which concludes that the climate is changing and that industrial activity plays a major role. It has also been proven that companies like Shell and Chevron paid to have pseudoscientific attacks on AGW published and that the Bush administration deliberately suppressed the findings of its own EPA team which supported AGW.
Seriously, who the frig sides with Bush and oil companies over thousands of top scientists from around the world?[/b]
brainpanhandler wrote:operator kos » Sat Nov 28, 2009 1:04 pm wrote: I work for one of the leading environmental non-profits in the U.S. We get every single climate change report that comes out. We get briefed by experts in the field at least once a week. While you don't have to believe my anonymous appeal to authority, I will say that those who deny AGW are simply ignorant of the absolutely vast body of scientific research which concludes that the climate is changing and that industrial activity plays a major role. It has also been proven that companies like Shell and Chevron paid to have pseudoscientific attacks on AGW published and that the Bush administration deliberately suppressed the findings of its own EPA team which supported AGW.
Seriously, who the frig sides with Bush and oil companies over thousands of top scientists from around the world?[/b]
Good question. We have a few here apparently.
I understand the desire to resist caving to appeals to authority, but surely there are times when an appeal to authority is valid. Like when 97% of climate scientists agree that anthropogenic climate change is a reality. 97%! I mean what else can you get that kind of consensus from scientists on? The earth goes round the sun?
Our own poll here shows that 65% of us believe the science and that only 16% consider that anthropogenic climate change is wrong or probably wrong. Another 11% think the jury is still out. Most of that voting was done 3 to 4 years ago I would think when the thread was created.
It's really kind of remarkable that our poll does not more closely match the scientific consensus. The evidence is overwhelming. But we do have more than a few pigheaded mules that apparently believe admitting they were wrong or altering their views one iota is a sign of weakness. They are less concerned with ascertaining the truth and more concerned with maintaining their fragile egos and ironically are unable to think independently. If your knee jerk response is to resist overwhelming scientific consensus on anthropogenic climate change and dig your heels in you are possibly no longer thinking independently, but are merely reacting.
Folk must be feeling a bit like Charlie Brown kicking air at about this point.
it's not forward with more and grander social engineering at this point. it's rolling leviathan backwards. you want some earth changing social engineering? demobilize the military. defund the agriculture complex. defund the third and fourth parties involved between patient and doctor and their sycophant universities, end the violence and corruption inducing prohibition war on peaceful people (and the legal racism that goes with it). end the protection rackets around alcohol and tobacco. let the financial behemoths that thrive on these activities collapse. end their currency monopoly. pull the curtain back on the synergy between religions, entertainment monopolies, education and the warfare state.
have we sinned? heck yes we have in letting all this happen. it would mean admitting we've been wrong and dealing with the new old realities the foregoing would create. humans have way more technology and ability than we've ever had in the past to deal with it. gutsy, brave, bold. notice that this is a non-starter with the ruling quadfecta (a matrix of vertical integration and horizontal synergy, thank you sounder). they call it insane and seditious. jeepers, the dimunition of the car culture alone would reduce co2 way more than a carbon scam ever could. unless you like all that crap to the point where you don't want to give it up. i'll admit it has its appeal. which fork in the road are we gonna take? the future is easy easy easy to predict with the consensus choice. more failure. missed it by that much! doh!
Elihu » Fri Jan 03, 2014 12:54 pm wrote:brainpanhandler wrote:operator kos » Sat Nov 28, 2009 1:04 pm wrote: I work for one of the leading environmental non-profits in the U.S. We get every single climate change report that comes out. We get briefed by experts in the field at least once a week. While you don't have to believe my anonymous appeal to authority, I will say that those who deny AGW are simply ignorant of the absolutely vast body of scientific research which concludes that the climate is changing and that industrial activity plays a major role. It has also been proven that companies like Shell and Chevron paid to have pseudoscientific attacks on AGW published and that the Bush administration deliberately suppressed the findings of its own EPA team which supported AGW.
Seriously, who the frig sides with Bush and oil companies over thousands of top scientists from around the world?[/b]
Good question. We have a few here apparently.
I understand the desire to resist caving to appeals to authority, but surely there are times when an appeal to authority is valid. Like when 97% of climate scientists agree that anthropogenic climate change is a reality. 97%! I mean what else can you get that kind of consensus from scientists on? The earth goes round the sun?
Our own poll here shows that 65% of us believe the science and that only 16% consider that anthropogenic climate change is wrong or probably wrong. Another 11% think the jury is still out. Most of that voting was done 3 to 4 years ago I would think when the thread was created.
It's really kind of remarkable that our poll does not more closely match the scientific consensus. The evidence is overwhelming. But we do have more than a few pigheaded mules that apparently believe admitting they were wrong or altering their views one iota is a sign of weakness. They are less concerned with ascertaining the truth and more concerned with maintaining their fragile egos and ironically are unable to think independently. If your knee jerk response is to resist overwhelming scientific consensus on anthropogenic climate change and dig your heels in you are possibly no longer thinking independently, but are merely reacting.
cross post
Folk must be feeling a bit like Charlie Brown kicking air at about this point.
it's not forward with more and grander social engineering at this point. it's rolling leviathan backwards. you want some earth changing social engineering? demobilize the military. defund the agriculture complex. defund the third and fourth parties involved between patient and doctor and their sycophant universities, end the violence and corruption inducing prohibition war on peaceful people (and the legal racism that goes with it). end the protection rackets around alcohol and tobacco. let the financial behemoths that thrive on these activities collapse. end their currency monopoly. pull the curtain back on the synergy between religions, entertainment monopolies, education and the warfare state.
have we sinned? heck yes we have in letting all this happen. it would mean admitting we've been wrong and dealing with the new old realities the foregoing would create. humans have way more technology and ability than we've ever had in the past to deal with it. gutsy, brave, bold. notice that this is a non-starter with the ruling quadfecta (a matrix of vertical integration and horizontal synergy, thank you sounder). they call it insane and seditious. jeepers, the dimunition of the car culture alone would reduce co2 way more than a carbon scam ever could. unless you like all that crap to the point where you don't want to give it up. i'll admit it has its appeal. which fork in the road are we gonna take? the future is easy easy easy to predict with the consensus choice. more failure. missed it by that much! doh!
maybe you ain't been listenin.
these gangsters can't fix your climate for you. they're responsible for everything they're dumping the guilt on you / us for. how could they do one good thing along with all their bad? it's silly.
brainpanhandler » Mon Jan 28, 2013 3:16 pm wrote:Why RI is different, with a few loud, not very discerning exceptions. You are thankfully in a minority here if you cannot on the basis of the evidence reject the official narratives of the mlk/jfk/rfk assassinations or 9/11 commission (as examples) while at the same time on the basis of the evidence reject the moon landing hoax theory or the theory that global warming is not critically anthropogenic in origin but rather is actually a vast conspiracy involving the nwo nanny state and the great majority of credible, credentialed climate scientists to further cow and enslave the sheeple and take away their incandescent light bulbs.
There is no substitute for evidence gathering/assessment, critical thinking and measured, provisional judgement on a case by case basis. There just isn't.
Elihu » Thu Jan 02, 2014 2:36 pm wrote:how can melting ice cause sea levels to rise?
Melting of Floating Ice Will Raise Sea Level
When ice on land slides into the ocean, it displaces ocean water and causes sea level to rise. People believe that when this floating ice melts, water level doesn’t rise an additional amount because the freshwater ice displaces the same volume of water as it would contribute once it melts. Similarly, people also think that when ocean water freezes to form sea ice and then melts, the water is merely going through a change of state, so it won’t affect sea level. However, in a visit to NSIDC in May, Dr. Peter Noerdlinger, a professor at St. Mary’s University in Nova Scotia, Canada, suggested otherwise.
In a paper titled "The Melting of Floating Ice will Raise the Ocean Level" submitted to Geophysical Journal International, Noerdlinger demonstrates that melt water from sea ice and floating ice shelves could add 2.6% more water to the ocean than the water displaced by the ice, or the equivalent of approximately 4 centimeters (1.57 inches) of sea-level rise.
The common misconception that floating ice won’t increase sea level when it melts occurs because the difference in density between fresh water and salt water is not taken into consideration. Archimedes’ Principle states that an object immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces. However, Noerdlinger notes that because freshwater is not as dense as saltwater, freshwater actually has greater volume than an equivalent weight of saltwater. Thus, when freshwater ice melts in the ocean, it contributes a greater volume of melt water than it originally displaced.
http://nsidc.org/news/press/20050801_floatingice.html
Elihu » Thu Jan 02, 2014 2:36 pm wrote: try to decide if it's the environment you care about. or some repressed guilt or resentment begging for punishment, because the predators attempting to slip a carbon tax trading system around our necks could give a *&^% about the environment. its the money and deputies they want.
elihu wrote:demobilize the military.
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