Originally Posted by Yoda
This is where I get stuck. Conceptually, it seems to add up, but there are exceptions. For one, certain areas of the country have had some of the coldest winters on record over the last decade.
Sure, it's been really cold here too. But you're talking about top and bottom records - I'm talking about the average temperature over the whole year. It is a fact - which I also mentioned in my initial post - that the permafrost here in Sweden is melting.
More importantly, though, is that no one can seem to really give me a straight answer as to how much of this is because of us. You say you think there is "no question" that we're speeding it up...but what's that based on? Highlighting that things are, in fact, getting warmer, doesn't really tell us how much control we have over the process. Establishing that the climate is changing is only half the question; the other is establishing that we're the cause, or at least a significant part of it. I've asked people here and elsewhere for some sort of evidence that this is so, and no one's provided me with anything much yet, which leads me to believe that we really don't have all the answers yet. In my mind, that makes a lot of this talk premature.
I thought I did give you a straight answer. I could ask my best friend, a chemist a few months from a Ph.D. and specializing in developing new and more efficient methods to measure poison in watercourses (or something like that - it's all pretty complex), to lay it out for you in precise and chemical/biological terms. But he's not here right now.... and I don't know how to explain it better than I did in the previous post. But I can't understand how you can say that I haven't offered you an explanation to why the use of all these substances effect the environment in a bad way.
Anyway... The Industrial Age very young. How come the most rapid changes in the climate have occurred now? And knowing what substances that are being used in the Industrial countries, and knowing the efffects from using them, thoroughly calculated in chemistry labs ever since chemistry labs were invented and these substances were discovered - how can you not believe those scientists when they say that what goes for a small closed system goes for a larger closed system? The Earth is a closed system! The pollutions don't leave the atmosphere! And, as I told you previously but that you seem to have missed, those pollutions prevent the air from leaving the atmosphere as well! Is it here the problem lies, that you don't believe me when I say that? I can't understand how you can say that I am not at least trying to offer you "evidence" or a valid explanation to why and how global warming is happening.
Speaking on a purely gut level, the idea that we can so easily and dramatically (and irreversibly) change the environment of an entire planet strikes me as a bit grandiose. I'm open-minded, but initially skeptical of the idea that the planet is so incredibly fragile; I'm told the world is millions of years old...and now we're about to render it completely inhabitable for the first time in recorded history? Really?
Well, the recorded history is not very long now, is it?
Anyway....
Yeah... Really... If you're counting man years, we are killing the Earth slowly... If you're counting "Milky Way Years", we are killing it in milliseconds...
It's striking me now... This is an issue similar to when we discussed abortion. I come from a country where all political party acknowledge global warming, support the Kyoto protocol and to various extent believe we have to do something to stop the killing of this planet. You come from a country with a president - who you support - not long ago refused to admit that global warming even existed. Now he admits it exists, but doesn't believe it's because of us.
I realize now that instead of discussing global warming and what can be done to stop it we're actually down to debating whether air pollution is a good or a bad thing. I don't think I can handle that discussion.
Hype? You mean the numerous reports over decades from both the previous administration and several foreign intelligence agencies that said the same, as well as the USE of such weapons against neighboring countries? Yeah, I dunno how anyone bought into that.
Well, that's not the point... Isn't it possible that the administration "hyped" all those reports to gain support for an invasion? I would call that a hype if anything. There were other reports claiming the total opposite that were not very "hyped" by the administration though... Reports that turned out to be closer to the truth.
You're misunderstanding me. At no point did I even suggest that all environmentalists (or even most) believe what they do simply so they have a reason to exist. If you'll read my post again, you'll see that I was responding to Gol's question; namely, why WOULD someone -- anyone -- hype such a threat? I provided an answer as to what someone might stand to gain.
...and that would be political existence. No, I don't think I misunderstood you.
Unless you think I have some sort of history of saying completely unreasonable, nonsensical things, I don't think it'd be out of line to assume that if I ever appear to, there's probably a miscommunication taking place. I think I generally make myself pretty clear, but when I don't, it'd probably save us both a lot of typing if you did not choose to argue with the most negative interpretation of what I've said.
I choose what I want to argue with and you choose what you want to argue with. I took offense by your remarks on how civil right movement activists "hype" "racial tensions".... but I let that go since it has nothing to do with global warming. I would say that was to choose not to argue with the most negative interpretation of what you said.
I find it very difficult to believe that you actually think the situation is so cartoonish and simple.
Some people are genuinely skeptical, and plenty of those in the energy industry understand all too well that their obligation to the environment and their obligation to employees and shareholders overlap in many areas. Look at
BP. From the
top of their home page:
It's exactly as simple as that. Environmental activists and politicians work for a cause, corporations work for profit. They will not do anything in the longrun that will not earn them money. And that's why I added in my previous post that making them look bad, as Shell in particular did because of what they did in Africa among other things, is something they do not want to do - because that will lose them money. So when more and more people start to realize that polluting the nature perhaps isn't such a great idea, the big oil companies and car companies and so on will have to work on their image.
And Chris, if even BP are giving their customers advice on how to prevent global warming - how can you still claim that it's something that the human being can't affect?
Good businessmen think long-term, and long-term preventing climate change, if it really is the threat that some claim, is in their interest as much as ours.
That is true. You should see the excellent documentary
The Corporation. There you will see a former Shell executive for instance who realized that the future lies in products that are nice to Nature. Unfortunately his kind is in minority.
As for the claim that they don't get media coverage: I don't know what's given you that idea, but I hear about it all the time here. It's in the news on a regular basis.
Yeah, here too actually. But I don't have a clue who's the leader of the american Green party, and I'm pretty sure I'm sharing that non-knowledge with lots of americans. And why is that?
Environmentalists are not the "little" guy you're describing. The Democratic Party harps on about climate changes quite a bit, and they're backed by hundreds of millions of dollars a year. It is not the dominant issue in American politics, but it's got plenty of wealthy proponents.
Well, sure... American politics are a lot about what the Democrats think or what the Republicans think. And if the Democrats think this, then you can be pretty sure that the Repbublicans think more or less that. But the Democrats are not a Green party... They are not an environmentalist party... They are simply more environmentalists than the Republicans.
I suggest we dispense with the generalizations: people who tone down the threats against the environment do so for a variety of reasons; some of them are selfish
Such as?
Like how?
, and some are genuinely skeptical.
Examples?
And some environmentalists are genuine, and some are just looking for a cause,
Oh yeah, so typically environmentalists to be what they are simply because they're looking for A Cause.
I can't see how environmentalists differ from other politicians or activists in that matter in any way.... You become an environmentalists because your life is empty, but you become a conservative or a liberal because reason and life experience have taught you which path to follow?
and I imagine others simply have an inherent dislike of large companies.
Well, I can't really argue with you there, but there's a totally logical explanation to why environmentalists don't fancy many of the large companies very much. I think you can guess the reason.
No cause is so pure as to be above bandwagon-jumping and opportunists. They'll be found in the environmental movement just as they will in any other movement, and I don't think anyone here is in a position to generalize about the motives of them, or those who remain skeptical of the repeated claims that the sky is about to fall.
As long as we're talking about movements, I couldn't agree more. But I don't consider the corporate business world to be a movement, and thus the motives and goals are completely different, as I mentioned in my previous post. The motor of the environmental movement is their cause - to save Nature - the motor of the corporate businesses is largest possible profit.