Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 8,740
- Points
- 1,040
>My point through all of this Mr. Sallows is that this isn't based on a gnat's eyelash of evidence - this is decades of research, hundreds, if not thousands of papers. I don't know why you continue to think otherwise.
There are large portions of the planet's surface, under the seas, and in the atmosphere in which measurements have rarely if ever been taken, if taken at all, and certainly not across long intervals of time. Furthermore, some of it hasn't been taken particularly systematically. To me, that's a gnat's eyelash. We have access to lots of proxy data, but that's only as useful as our understanding and assumptions about all the factors that created it.
>I didn't claim C02 is not a greenhouse gas, although H20 is the dominant GHG.
>Really... now, I wouldn't have posted that... oh say like 7 posts ago:
My main point is that I didn't claim C02 is not a greenhouse gas, so perhaps you could give me a direct explanation why you wrote "Again, please post a few papers that show CO2 is not actually a greenhouse gas,". Why are you trying to situate the estimate?
Since you accept the presence of other factors, do you or do you not think it prudent to explore other hypotheses and gather more data? I'd like to know where you fit in between "We know almost nothing and must first learn more" and "We have the answers; spend as we dictate and divert no more funding in wasteful research that might prove us wrong"?
>In the end, please at least take the time to at least read the excerpts. It's been explored Mr. Sallows, by people a lot smarter than you and I.
Why do you assume they are smarter than you and I? You're confusing intelligence with subject matter experience.
>So, let us just then be sure where we stand though... you admit that C02 is a greenhouse gas, but you question it's role in global warming despite the research to the contrary?
I don't question that it has a role - and I wish the people excited about C02 would stop trying to pretend the majority of doubters are in denial of that - but I do question the role attributed to it by its enthusiasts. I would mistrust any assessment that attempted to persuade me that one factor of a complex system is responsible for what we observe or is the magic lever by which we can change the performance of the system.
>Not to mention, no one has yet to accept my challenge to provide research backing up the assertion that: "the projected rise in C02 would not in fact have a statistically significant impact on the temperature of the earth."
Why should anyone? C02 likely does have a statistically significant impact on temperatures. Two unanswered and more interesting questions are: what other factors have more statistically significant impacts on the temperature of the earth; and, what if anything can we do to mitigate the effects? I'd like some sort of response other than the usual blank stare and regurgitation of the litany: "Do you deny C02 makes a contribution; do you deny C02 is contributed to by people; why won't you do something about C02?"
There are large portions of the planet's surface, under the seas, and in the atmosphere in which measurements have rarely if ever been taken, if taken at all, and certainly not across long intervals of time. Furthermore, some of it hasn't been taken particularly systematically. To me, that's a gnat's eyelash. We have access to lots of proxy data, but that's only as useful as our understanding and assumptions about all the factors that created it.
>I didn't claim C02 is not a greenhouse gas, although H20 is the dominant GHG.
>Really... now, I wouldn't have posted that... oh say like 7 posts ago:
My main point is that I didn't claim C02 is not a greenhouse gas, so perhaps you could give me a direct explanation why you wrote "Again, please post a few papers that show CO2 is not actually a greenhouse gas,". Why are you trying to situate the estimate?
Since you accept the presence of other factors, do you or do you not think it prudent to explore other hypotheses and gather more data? I'd like to know where you fit in between "We know almost nothing and must first learn more" and "We have the answers; spend as we dictate and divert no more funding in wasteful research that might prove us wrong"?
>In the end, please at least take the time to at least read the excerpts. It's been explored Mr. Sallows, by people a lot smarter than you and I.
Why do you assume they are smarter than you and I? You're confusing intelligence with subject matter experience.
>So, let us just then be sure where we stand though... you admit that C02 is a greenhouse gas, but you question it's role in global warming despite the research to the contrary?
I don't question that it has a role - and I wish the people excited about C02 would stop trying to pretend the majority of doubters are in denial of that - but I do question the role attributed to it by its enthusiasts. I would mistrust any assessment that attempted to persuade me that one factor of a complex system is responsible for what we observe or is the magic lever by which we can change the performance of the system.
>Not to mention, no one has yet to accept my challenge to provide research backing up the assertion that: "the projected rise in C02 would not in fact have a statistically significant impact on the temperature of the earth."
Why should anyone? C02 likely does have a statistically significant impact on temperatures. Two unanswered and more interesting questions are: what other factors have more statistically significant impacts on the temperature of the earth; and, what if anything can we do to mitigate the effects? I'd like some sort of response other than the usual blank stare and regurgitation of the litany: "Do you deny C02 makes a contribution; do you deny C02 is contributed to by people; why won't you do something about C02?"