my sentiments exactly. why exactly are we worried again? i'm pretty sure we'll all be dead. fuck the next generation.Kwayera said:Significant effects, however, will be seen in the next 100 years.
Can you even fucking read? "In the next hundred years" means our lifetimes.Wheelbarrows said:my sentiments exactly. why exactly are we worried again? i'm pretty sure we'll all be dead. fuck the next generation.
In bold are the adaptions I made.Trefoil said:Yeah, they'll have to move.
Some scientists believe, that the Maldives, for example, will be under water with a one meter sea rise sometime during the next century (after 2100). They're currently attempting to make long-term plans with Australia to migrate here (this is in like 2050 or 2100) by renting/buying a small portion of Australia.
Correct. So it's lucky for us deniers that they won't be rising 1 to 10 metres. You say you don't follow Al Gore, but that is a typical Al Gore statistic, supported by not even the most extreme scientists.Trefoil said:This isn't cyclical climate change. Sea levels don't rise 1 to 10 metres in 50 years under "cyclical climate change".
And last time I checked there was no definitive evidence, as to why the dinosaurs became extinct... congratulations on solving it. (All those believers in the asteroid theory, volcanic activity theory, ice age theory etc. will sure be upset.)Trefoil said:There's some coverage of that here: http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/sep2008/2008-09-22-02.asp
Basically: dry areas turn into mega-droughts and deserts, wet areas get flooded and battered by super-storms and hurricanes, lots of coastal places world-wide sink, lots of plantlife and animal life dies out (including crops), and there's a high chance of a triggering a run-away greenhouse effect similar to the conditions that made the dinosaurs extinct.
There are plenty of scientists who disagree with the THEORY of anthropogenic climate change.John Oliver said:Basically you're a retard if you don't accept the science. The science says it's a bad thing; it doesn't say what to do about it.
We in agreement? You can be anti doing anything about it and still accept that the science says it's happening.
For fuck's sake, the science is SOLID. It's not like science is an institution you idiots, it's a METHOD.
That made me laugh. It's YOU who obviously doesn't understand even the most basic science behind the theoretical anthropogenic 'global warming'. You're the person who claims a 1 - 10 metre sea rise in 50 years, a 2 degree temperature increase and you're the person who presented to us a source which claims 'carbon dioxide' is the 'main greenhouse gas'Trefoil said:I think that's the key point - they don't want to understand the science behind global warming, because it would threaten their denial stance.
QFT.alexdore993 said:There are plenty of scientists who disagree with the THEORY of anthropogenic climate change.
IN FACT, the climate has not warmed since 1998. Explain that.
IN FACT, the IPCC report is fraudulent for the simple fact that it was not properly peer-reviewed. Many contributers of the IPCC report, including Emeritus Proffessor Dr Lindzen, had their names added because they contributed to a small section on a very specialised area. However they did not agree to the findings of the report.
THE IPCC refused to take their names off and only after the threat of legal action have some scientists had their names taken off.
IN FACT, the IPCC predictions are also incorrect and have not correctly modelled the climate. Current measurements have highlighted this - the model has to be constantly readjusted because it is constantly shown to be WRONG. These people couldn't even predict the climate accurately 3 years down the track because of the many different factors which effect climate change, let alone 100 years!
So please, do us all a favour and stop claiming consensus on this issue amongst the scientific community. It is very frustrating. It is very wrong.
That made me laugh. It's YOU who obviously doesn't understand even the most basic science behind the theoretical anthropogenic 'global warming'. You're the person who claims a 1 - 10 metre sea rise in 50 years, a 2 degree temperature increase and you're the person who presented to us a source which claims 'carbon dioxide' is the 'main greenhouse gas'
There's a difference between skepticism and conspiracy theories. Alexdores is that difference.jb_nc said:lol its hilarious that even on here if you dare show one iota of scepticism you are lauded a heretic
Hmm... I don't think anyone here is that extreme. How does that relate to global warming again?John Oliver said:A bunch of batshit insane psuedo-libertarians, wacky commies, muslim extremists, some psychotic neoconservatives - altogether degenerates. Sounds like a standard internet community to me.
It might be. I am not persuaded by the existing evidence, but either way....Trefoil said:This isn't cyclical climate change. Sea levels don't rise 1 to 10 metres in 50 years under "cyclical climate change".
You need to do some research. It's bad alright. Imo we're destroying the planet. There are hundreds of bad impacts it will have (not just in the short term). As other people have already said, it will destroy the coral reefs. More extinct species and ecosystems. There will be an increase in tropical diseases. It will also affect the fresh water shortage, food shortage. There will be more natural disasters eg tornados. Less rainfall, more drought, more fire and many more. It is inevitable that our way of living is going to adversely impact the environment. The way we are living is unsustainable.jb_nc said:Yes, but why is that bad?
So we stop all that from happening now (because we are apparently the cause) but then sometime in the future it happens anyway because of the natural cycle of the earth... what do we do about it then? It seems to me it is going to happen either way. We are better of learning to deal with the consequences rather than trying to stop them.Rockyroad said:You need to do some research. It's bad alright. Imo we're destroying the planet. There are hundreds of bad impacts it will have (not just in the short term). As other people have already said, it will destroy the coral reefs. More extinct species and ecosystems. There will be an increase in tropical diseases. It will also affect the fresh water shortage, food shortage. There will be more natural disasters eg tornados. Less rainfall, more drought, more fire and many more. It is inevitable that our way of living is going to adversely impact the environment. The way we are living is unsustainable.