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Yes. Now read Druckles' article.
I thought you were much smarter than that.
Ok, I get it. All those scientific committees are totally wrong. Some personal web site hosted on mysite.verizon.com on the other hand is right. The government has brainwashed all these organizations so they can make money off the global warming scare just like they made money off parking tickets. ****ERS! We need to start the revolution, you convinced me repiV.
There's actually a theory that's it's to do with cosmic rays. Watched a film on it in a physics lesson (back when still at school). Not sure whether there any articles on it.
It basically says it happens once every so often and can be backed by the fact it does actually happen, or something. I'll have to find an article on it.
No I haven't heard of it before, I can admit that. You might have heard of it before but that doesn't mean you understand a damn thing about it.Does it not set alarm bells ringing in your head when you figure how significant the water vapour issue most probably is yet you've never even really heard about it before?
A personal website it may be, but it's a very good article and it should at the very least make you investigate the issue further.
No I haven't heard of it before, I can admit that. You might have heard of it before but that doesn't mean you understand a damn thing about it.
No thanks. I'm a network administrator by day and a web designer/programmer by night. I have no interest in studying for another degree. When someone needs network advice they come to me, when I need advice on climate change I go read a break down of the various respectable scientific studies on the subject. You can sit here and pretend you know what you are talking about because you read about water vapor on some blog. But excuse me for not buying in to your conspiracy bullshit, to be perfectly honest with you I don't take advice about science from someone that knows nothing about science, just like I don't take advice about my car from a hair stylist.
:cheers:
No, what I understand is that there are uninformed people out there like you that know absolutely nothing about a subject but think they understand enough about it to criticize people that spend all their life doing it. I run in to these people every day in my line of work. People that try to lecture me why we should be spending all that money running our own mail servers to handle around 2,000 accounts which produce around 100,000 messages a day when you can get a mail server at godaddy for $3.95 a month. Or because they saw a mac commercial on TV saying macs are better than PCs they want to know why we aren't upgrading any of our windows machines to macs. And when you try to explain these simple things to them they will walk away and then talk behind your back about how much more they know about these things than you do. Remember, nobody likes a know it all, they are total douchebags. I'm sure you run into them all the time when talking about bikes. There is nothing wrong with admitting you don't understand something, but when you pretend you do when you really dont you are as I said before nothing more than an uninformed douchebag.So basically, you're an uninformed, disinterested sheep and you want someone else to do your thinking for you. You don't even care if there are political motives behind what they have to say.
You can't expect me to take you even semi-seriously when your opinions are based on pure faith and you flat-out refuse to improve your knowledge of the subject beyond what the media spoonfeeds you, and nor can you expect me to take the "global warming movement" seriously when its momentum is based on millions of people who know nothing but have faith, just like you.
No, what I understand is that there are uninformed people out there like you that know absolutely nothing about a subject but think they understand enough about it to criticize people that spend all their life doing it. I run in to these people every day in my line of work. People that try to lecture me why we should be spending all that money running our own mail servers to handle around 2,000 accounts which produce around 100,000 messages a day when you can get a mail server at godaddy for $3.95 a month. Or because they saw a mac commercial on TV saying macs are better than PCs they want to know why we aren't upgrading any of our windows machines to macs. And when you try to explain these simple things to them they will walk away and then talk behind your back about how much more they know about these things than you do. Remember, nobody likes a know it all, they are total douchebags. I'm sure you run into them all the time when talking about bikes. There is nothing wrong with admitting you don't understand something, but when you pretend you do when you really dont you are as I said before nothing more than an uninformed douchebag.
Since water vapor is the most important heat-trapping greenhouse gas in our atmosphere, some climate forecasts may be overestimating future temperature increases.
Global warming is being accelerated by man, only a fool would state otherwise. We are damaging our natural environment beyond repair, not because of the emissions we produce but because of what we take and don't replace.
Only a fool would claim that there is a 100% certainty that global warming is being accelerated by man without actually knowing anything about the subject.
Your water vapour blog is quite flawed repiV.
Your water vapour blog is quite flawed repiV.
Several of his key references are themselves flawed and do not themselves have references and are not peer-reviewed.
One of his references only supports his claims by twisting the information (i.e. http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/alternate/page/environment/appd_d.html)
He also adjusts the Global Warming Potential for the other greenhouse gases, but not for water vapour. Water vapour is left out of the calculations traditionally because it's contribution varies so much with temperature, and it's absorption spectra overlap with other greenhouse gases.
In fact increased global warming is subject to positive feedback mainly because of water vapour so it's silly to say that people are trying to downplay it's importance.
Get better sources, and read their sources. /facepalm.
Edit: Also the NASA story says that water vapour being accounted for in models will probably show faster warming. Read the whole thing damnit.
I did, and I know what it says. I was simply using a reputable source to demonstrate that water vapour is the most significant of all greenhouse gases, I'm not trying to prove anything beyond that.
It's misleading to call it the most significant.
Water vapour is indeed the most abundant greenhouse gas, but since it has so much overlapping absorption frequencies as the other gases it's effect is reduced from what it would be in their absence. I think it also absorbs at lower wavelengths, afaik the further from the IR the absorption is the less greenhouse effect.
It's definitely most important in perpetuating and exacerbating the greenhouse effect (well except for the frozed seafloor methane possibly melting), but not in initiating it which I think is what people are mainly worried about currently. I imagine that's why it is often overlooked rather than some huge conspiracy.
Of course, the important thing is that though we are only responsible for a few percent of the atmospheric CO2, it is in a fine balance and upsetting that can have these runaway, positive feedback effects.
Proof?
The climate is forever changing due to natural effects, how is this any different or more catastrophic?
Also, what about the claim that, historically, CO2 levels actually follow changes in temperature rather than causing them?
It's not going to be any more different or catastrophic for the planet, the same thing has happened before.
However an ice age (can be caused by global warming by some theories involving buggered ocean currents) or melting ice caps will seriously mess with our civilisations.
Imagine how NYC flooding will affect the Dow Jones![]()
I think that data about CO2 levels following changes in temperature is an imcomplete picture without enough resolution of the times in question. For example, CO2 levels are regulated in several ways such as weathering which uses up CO2, and increase in dissolved C02 in the oceans. This prevents rapid changes in the atmospheric concentration by providing a 'buffer'.
However even a relatively small increase in CO2 can cause a change in temperature sufficient to start water vapour positive feedback looops, or freeing the millions of tons of frozen methane gas at the bottoms of the seas.
I'm afraid I don't have links to back these up atm, I remember most of this stuff from my lectures and textbooks from back when I studied Earth Science (I dropped it last year). But basically the Earths climate is self-regulating and goes through cycles.
The thing we don't want to happen is us prematurely triggering a change in cycle before we can all get into space and off this rock
Earth can survive ice ages and global floods, we know it has before. Even our species could. But civilisation would likely head for a dark age if there was any significant change in the worlds climate.
The little ice age was a cooling of <1 degree C afaik. It is thought to have been the cause of several famines...We had a miniature ice age a few hundred years ago, it didn't seem to bother anyone too much...
If it's no different from the natural things that have happened before, why are people willing to destroy the world's economy just to TRY and do something about it that probably won't even have any major effect?
That's the insanity.
Well I probably know a good bit more than the average joe, but it was a course I did for credits not for my main degree so I'm not a real expert.That's cool. I'd rather talk to someone who knows what they're on about who doesn't have sources than someone who has no idea and a load of links and doomsday prophecies to throw around.
It's self-regulating over geological time periods. Perhaps self-correcting is a better term.If the climate is self-regulating, does that not include any changes that may be caused by us?
Like I said, a small change has a large potential to quickly escalate.A *small* amount of global warming isn't necessarily a bad thing...mild winters save lives.
So you're saying that a reduced dependence on non-renewable resources....will DAMAGE the economy in the long run? /facepalmI'm guessing the dark age caused by a significant change in the climate would be no worse than the dark age caused by throwing the economy to the dogs in an attempt to stop climate change.
So you're saying that a reduced dependence on non-renewable resources....will DAMAGE the economy in the long run? /facepalm
Not to mention it ruins land for agriculture and contaminates water supplies, releases large amounts of methane, and takes up a lot of space.
And don't triple post. There's a perfectly legitimite Edit button, you're just taking up space in this thread.
I think you'd do well to watch Penn and Tellers excellent documentary on recycling. A satirical twist it may have, but it does a very good job of pointing out the flaws of recycling policy.
When admin you become, then policy you make. Until then, quiet be.
I think you'd do well to watch Penn and Tellers excellent documentary on recycling. A satirical twist it may have, but it does a very good job of pointing out the flaws of recycling policy.