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Topic: Reddit’s science forum banned climate deniers. - page 157. (Read 636458 times)

legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



UN Climate Conference Sets Record For Largest Carbon Footprint…




 The current U.N. climate talks will be the first to neutralize all the greenhouse gas pollution they generate, offset by host country Peru’s protection of forest at three different reserves, organizers say.

Now the bad news: The Lima conference is expected to have the biggest carbon footprint of any U.N. climate meeting measured to date.....

Translating this to regular words, it means Lima got paid off?

Yes.. Maybe they got paid in carbon credit IOUs from
http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/shorebank.php
 Cheesy


hero member
Activity: 616
Merit: 500
The planet is fine, the people are fucked

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BB0aFPXr4n4
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386



UN Climate Conference Sets Record For Largest Carbon Footprint…




 The current U.N. climate talks will be the first to neutralize all the greenhouse gas pollution they generate, offset by host country Peru’s protection of forest at three different reserves, organizers say.

Now the bad news: The Lima conference is expected to have the biggest carbon footprint of any U.N. climate meeting measured to date.....

Translating this to regular words, it means Lima got paid off?
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



UN Climate Conference Sets Record For Largest Carbon Footprint…




 The current U.N. climate talks will be the first to neutralize all the greenhouse gas pollution they generate, offset by host country Peru’s protection of forest at three different reserves, organizers say.

Now the bad news: The Lima conference is expected to have the biggest carbon footprint of any U.N. climate meeting measured to date.

At more than 50,000 metric tons of carfb/phbon dioxide, the negotiations’ burden on global warming will be about 1 1/2 times the norm, said Jorge Alvarez, project coordinator for the U.N. Development Program.

The venue is one big reason. It had to be built.

Eleven football fields of temporary structures arose for the 13-day negotiations from what three months ago was an empty field behind Peru’s army’s headquarters. Concrete was laid, plumbing installed, components flown in from as far as France and Brazil.

Standing in the midday sun here can get downright uncomfortable, but the Lima sun is not reliable. That’s one reason solar panels were not used.

For electricity, the talks are relying exclusively on diesel generators.

Organizers had planned to draw power from Peru’s grid, which is about 52 percent fed by non-polluting hydroelectric power. “We worked to upgrade transformers and generators but for some reason it didn’t work,” said Alvarez.


http://www.usnews.com/news/business/articles/2014/12/09/lima-climate-talks-set-for-record-carbon-footprint




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legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
...
The science is settled, and what it has settled into is, not science.  It is something quite different, and quite alarming.

Well stated.

Over the last few days I've become aware of Murry Salby's work.  I found a talk from 2013 on youtube and was quit thought provoking to me.

  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ROw_cDKwc0

Only the intro is German.  It might not be surprising that Salby lost his job and his recent relevant papers fail somewhat mysteriously in the peer review process.

Talk about a fundamental reinterpretation!  Actually it makes a lot of sense that global temps drives CO2, and that the magnitude would be the integral of temp (or what I might be inclined to just call energy input...)  I mean, if one walks into a smokey kitchen, one expects that the longer they've forgotten about the burner the thicker the smoke will be...until the pan burning dry starts to factor in.

Among other things, the guy questions the ice core proxies for CO2 (...to the extent that they are proxies.)  It does seem to me that if long term diffusion is a factor then there should be observable and a gradation of artifacts as one walks back through the time sequences.  If diffusion is a shorter time phenomenon then it probably could be replicated in laboratory conditions I would think.  Although intense analysis of ice core proxy methodologies should have been done it would surprise me not much if they've been neglected as long as the putative climate change cult are getting the kinds of answers they need.

edit: Salbe -> Salby
Ha, yeah you really are digging into stuff.  I understand the ice core proxies, but they are nothing compared to the crap which is called tree ring proxies.

The important concept here is "proxy."  The idea is that we can look at something, and it will tell us something about the state of affairs a long time ago.  Actually "proxy" would be an excellent subject for a graduate level course or such.  It is very subtle sometimes, what the degrees of accuracy may be.  Or whether accuracy exists at all.

Personally I think all that is nonsense, you simply look at the planetary radiation balance, inflow and outflow of heat in the upper stratosphere.
legendary
Activity: 4690
Merit: 1276
...
The science is settled, and what it has settled into is, not science.  It is something quite different, and quite alarming.

Well stated.

Over the last few days I've become aware of Murry Salby's work.  I found a talk from 2013 on youtube and was quit thought provoking to me.

  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ROw_cDKwc0

Only the intro is German.  It might not be surprising that Salby lost his job and his recent relevant papers fail somewhat mysteriously in the peer review process.

Talk about a fundamental reinterpretation!  Actually it makes a lot of sense that global temps drives CO2, and that the magnitude would be the integral of temp (or what I might be inclined to just call energy input...)  I mean, if one walks into a smokey kitchen, one expects that the longer they've forgotten about the burner the thicker the smoke will be...until the pan burning dry starts to factor in.

Among other things, the guy questions the ice core proxies for CO2 (...to the extent that they are proxies.)  It does seem to me that if long term diffusion is a factor then there should be observable and a gradation of artifacts as one walks back through the time sequences.  If diffusion is a shorter time phenomenon then it probably could be replicated in laboratory conditions I would think.  Although intense analysis of ice core proxy methodologies should have been done it would surprise me not much if they've been neglected as long as the putative climate change cult are getting the kinds of answers they need.

edit: Salbe -> Salby
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



Climate Change … Who Cares?


Thanks to the blog of the irrepressible Hilary Ostrov, a long-time WUWT commenter, I found out about a poll gone either horribly wrong or totally predictably depending on your point of view. It’s a global poll done by the United Nations, with over six million responses from all over the planet, and guess what?



The revealed truth is that of the sixteen choices given to people regarding what they think are the important issues in their lives, climate change is dead last. Not only that, but in every sub-category, by age, by sex, by education, by country grouping, it’s right down at the bottom of the list. NOBODY thinks it’s important.

Now, people are always saying how the US is some kind of outlier in this regard, because polls in the US always put climate change down at the bottom, whereas polls in Europe generally rate it somewhat higher. But this is a global poll, with people chiming in from all over the planet. The top fifteen countries, in order of the number of people voting, were Mexico, Nigeria, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Yemen, Philippines, Thailand, Cameroon, United States, Ghana, Rwanda, Brazil, Jordan, and Morocco … so this appears to be truly representative of the world, which is mostly non-industrialized nations.

So the next time someone tries to claim that climate change is “the most important challenge facing the world” … point them to the website of the study, and gently inform them that the rest of the world doesn’t buy that kind of alarmist hogwash for one minute. People are not as stupid as their leaders think, folks know what’s important and what’s trivial in their lives, and trying to control the climate is definitely in the latter group.

The poll will be open until 2015, so you can register your own priorities …

My regards to everyone, I’m off for a staff Christmas dinner with the workmates of the gorgeous ex-fiancee, life is good.



http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/12/05/climate-change-who-cares/



legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386

Regarding Palin, be practical.  WOULDN'T climate change, if it existed, be a net positive for Alaska?  Smiley

Digging down into the political philosophies here, it is kind of interesting to note the generally recognized associations regarding 'change' between 'conservative, reactionary, etc' on one hand and 'liberal, progressive, etc' on the other.  Typically the former tends to be resistant to change while the latter more prone to embraces it.

When it comes to 'climate change' things are generally the reverse.  Of course there are many exceptions to the mapping between political bents and stance on climate change, but I think it is still safe to say that climate change gets more traction on the Left which is the playground of the more liberal progressive types.

I personally classify myself as a 'progressive' and I don't really have a knee-jerk negative reaction to the possibility of human induced changes.  Part of this is because I am kind of a realist, and part of it is that I recognize that environmental changes are a reality and would be with or without humans.  Change tends to not be a 'good' or 'bad' thing to me.  Mostly just interesting.  I do strongly believe that we should do our best to understand change in a realistic way and at times take logical actions, but I am prone to be negative about fundamentalism in almost any setting.  Fundamentalism with respect to ecology is especially off-putting since this should be the stomping ground of science and science is dear to me.

I'm at the point in my research where I'm pretty confident to say that 'climate science' is being used as a handy tool by those with broader social goals.  Many of these people are 'progressives' and true to form do want change on certain political fronts.  It is mostly an accident of fate that the fight against 'change' on the climate front happens to be of the most utility to these people at the moment.  Environmentalism is a sideshow.  That is not to say that most people involved in the involved in the 'crusade' don't care about the issues.  Most of them do care deeply about the environment (as framed by their sacred texts) and are not even aware of their status as tools in a larger project.  Many others are dimly aware of this reality but more or less favorable to the political changes which they think (probably incorrectly) that they are working towards.



I would venture to believe you would be against the redditors banning anyone not agreeing on the science on AGW being settled?

This is what this thread is about, beyond my personal political bias. It is not about if we love to kill polar bears for sport by letting them melt under tropical condition. It is not about loving a planet full of pollution.

So far this thread is showing that science is not settled yet, regarding AGW...
It is showing that the science is settled into a miasma of confusion where the very concept of testable scientific hypotheses has been replaced by political propaganda, polemics, often paid, mystical love of Gaia, and environmental hysteria.

The science is settled, and what it has settled into is, not science.  It is something quite different, and quite alarming.
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386

Regarding Palin, be practical.  WOULDN'T climate change, if it existed, be a net positive for Alaska?  Smiley

Digging down into the political philosophies here, it is kind of interesting to note the generally recognized associations regarding 'change' between 'conservative, reactionary, etc' on one hand and 'liberal, progressive, etc' on the other.  Typically the former tends to be resistant to change while the latter more prone to embraces it.

When it comes to 'climate change' things are generally the reverse.  Of course there are many exceptions to the mapping between political bents and stance on climate change, but I think it is still safe to say that climate change gets more traction on the Left which is the playground of the more liberal progressive types.

I personally classify myself as a 'progressive' and I don't really have a knee-jerk negative reaction to the possibility of human induced changes.  Part of this is because I am kind of a realist, and part of it is that I recognize that environmental changes are a reality and would be with or without humans.  Change tends to not be a 'good' or 'bad' thing to me.  Mostly just interesting.  I do strongly believe that we should do our best to understand change in a realistic way and at times take logical actions, but I am prone to be negative about fundamentalism in almost any setting.  Fundamentalism with respect to ecology is especially off-putting since this should be the stomping ground of science and science is dear to me.

I'm at the point in my research where I'm pretty confident to say that 'climate science' is being used as a handy tool by those with broader social goals.  Many of these people are 'progressives' and true to form do want change on certain political fronts.  It is mostly an accident of fate that the fight against 'change' on the climate front happens to be of the most utility to these people at the moment.  Environmentalism is a sideshow.  That is not to say that most people involved in the involved in the 'crusade' don't care about the issues.  Most of them do care deeply about the environment (as framed by their sacred texts) and are not even aware of their status as tools in a larger project.  Many others are dimly aware of this reality but more or less favorable to the political changes which they think (probably incorrectly) that they are working towards.



I would venture to believe you would be against the redditors banning anyone not agreeing on the science on AGW being settled?

This is what this thread is about, beyond my personal political bias. It is not about if we love to kill polar bears for sport by letting them melt under tropical condition. It is not about loving a planet full of pollution.

So far this thread is showing that science is not settled yet, regarding AGW...
Hey, look.  We're already for killing all the monkeys.

Now about those bears.....

Wink
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon

Regarding Palin, be practical.  WOULDN'T climate change, if it existed, be a net positive for Alaska?  Smiley

Digging down into the political philosophies here, it is kind of interesting to note the generally recognized associations regarding 'change' between 'conservative, reactionary, etc' on one hand and 'liberal, progressive, etc' on the other.  Typically the former tends to be resistant to change while the latter more prone to embraces it.

When it comes to 'climate change' things are generally the reverse.  Of course there are many exceptions to the mapping between political bents and stance on climate change, but I think it is still safe to say that climate change gets more traction on the Left which is the playground of the more liberal progressive types.

I personally classify myself as a 'progressive' and I don't really have a knee-jerk negative reaction to the possibility of human induced changes.  Part of this is because I am kind of a realist, and part of it is that I recognize that environmental changes are a reality and would be with or without humans.  Change tends to not be a 'good' or 'bad' thing to me.  Mostly just interesting.  I do strongly believe that we should do our best to understand change in a realistic way and at times take logical actions, but I am prone to be negative about fundamentalism in almost any setting.  Fundamentalism with respect to ecology is especially off-putting since this should be the stomping ground of science and science is dear to me.

I'm at the point in my research where I'm pretty confident to say that 'climate science' is being used as a handy tool by those with broader social goals.  Many of these people are 'progressives' and true to form do want change on certain political fronts.  It is mostly an accident of fate that the fight against 'change' on the climate front happens to be of the most utility to these people at the moment.  Environmentalism is a sideshow.  That is not to say that most people involved in the involved in the 'crusade' don't care about the issues.  Most of them do care deeply about the environment (as framed by their sacred texts) and are not even aware of their status as tools in a larger project.  Many others are dimly aware of this reality but more or less favorable to the political changes which they think (probably incorrectly) that they are working towards.



I would venture to believe you would be against the redditors banning anyone not agreeing on the science on AGW being settled?

This is what this thread is about, beyond my personal political bias. It is not about if we love to kill polar bears for sport by letting them melt under tropical condition. It is not about loving a planet full of pollution.

So far this thread is showing that science is not settled yet, regarding AGW...





legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon

Yep. Exactly what I wrote, EXCEPT for Sarah Palin and Condoleezza Rice in the choir. They are the polar opposite of all the other people presented here (bear not included)  Smiley

I would caution against taking on faith the principle that people of one political persuasion go one way on climate change and those of another go the other.  Whether 'climate change' is in total a scam or not, I am quite confident to say that it is being used as a lever which provides spiritually motivated armies for some and makes a huge amount of money through various machinations for many more.

Climate change has evolved into a very powerful political tool, and we find politicians who are competent and savvy making use of it in a variety of ways.  It's less of a progressive/reactionary issue than it is a slimeball/non-slimeball issue.  And all political stripes have their contingent of slimeballs.  I don't know Palin's and Rice's involvement but it would surprise me not at all of they were not making hay off the thing.

I think I've called attention to Hank Paulson's new global warming think-tank on this thread already.  When I was out digging a ditch and daydreaming yesterday I thought of this analogy:

  "The stealthy green-stripped red leopard made the kill and now the hyaenas and vultures are gathering around to tear at the carcass."


Regarding Palin, be practical.  WOULDN'T climate change, if it existed, be a net positive for Alaska?

Smiley

Yes. Canada. Northern Scandinavia. Siberia, etc...


legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386

Regarding Palin, be practical.  WOULDN'T climate change, if it existed, be a net positive for Alaska?  Smiley

Digging down into the political philosophies here, it is kind of interesting to note the generally recognized associations regarding 'change' between 'conservative, reactionary, etc' on one hand and 'liberal, progressive, etc' on the other.  Typically the former tends to be resistant to change while the latter more prone to embraces it.

When it comes to 'climate change' things are generally the reverse.  Of course there are many exceptions to the mapping between political bents and stance on climate change, but I think it is still safe to say that climate change gets more traction on the Left which is the playground of the more liberal progressive types.

I personally classify myself as a 'progressive' and I don't really have a knee-jerk negative reaction to the possibility of human induced changes.  Part of this is because I am kind of a realist, and part of it is that I recognize that environmental changes are a reality and would be with or without humans.  Change tends to not be a 'good' or 'bad' thing to me.  Mostly just interesting.  I do strongly believe that we should do our best to understand change in a realistic way and at times take logical actions, but I am prone to be negative about fundamentalism in almost any setting.  Fundamentalism with respect to ecology is especially off-putting since this should be the stomping ground of science and science is dear to me.

I'm at the point in my research where I'm pretty confident to say that 'climate science' is being used as a handy tool by those with broader social goals.  Many of these people are 'progressives' and true to form do want change on certain political fronts.  It is mostly an accident of fate that the fight against 'change' on the climate front happens to be of the most utility to these people at the moment.  Environmentalism is a sideshow.  That is not to say that most people involved in the involved in the 'crusade' don't care about the issues.  Most of them do care deeply about the environment (as framed by their sacred texts) and are not even aware of their status as tools in a larger project.  Many others are dimly aware of this reality but more or less favorable to the political changes which they think (probably incorrectly) that they are working towards.


I reached virtually identical conclusions in 2006.  Come to think of it, what caused me to examine the matter in depth was the extremely strong beliefs that "Global Warmers" had.  To anyone trained in the examination of theories and hypotheses, and the strong criticality which underlies scientific understanding, this was pretty suspect.
legendary
Activity: 4690
Merit: 1276

Regarding Palin, be practical.  WOULDN'T climate change, if it existed, be a net positive for Alaska?  Smiley

Digging down into the political philosophies here, it is kind of interesting to note the generally recognized associations regarding 'change' between 'conservative, reactionary, etc' on one hand and 'liberal, progressive, etc' on the other.  Typically the former tends to be resistant to change while the latter more prone to embraces it.

When it comes to 'climate change' things are generally the reverse.  Of course there are many exceptions to the mapping between political bents and stance on climate change, but I think it is still safe to say that climate change gets more traction on the Left which is the playground of the more liberal progressive types.

I personally classify myself as a 'progressive' and I don't really have a knee-jerk negative reaction to the possibility of human induced changes.  Part of this is because I am kind of a realist, and part of it is that I recognize that environmental changes are a reality and would be with or without humans.  Change tends to not be a 'good' or 'bad' thing to me.  Mostly just interesting.  I do strongly believe that we should do our best to understand change in a realistic way and at times take logical actions, but I am prone to be negative about fundamentalism in almost any setting.  Fundamentalism with respect to ecology is especially off-putting since this should be the stomping ground of science and science is dear to me.

I'm at the point in my research where I'm pretty confident to say that 'climate science' is being used as a handy tool by those with broader social goals.  Many of these people are 'progressives' and true to form do want change on certain political fronts.  It is mostly an accident of fate that the fight against 'change' on the climate front happens to be of the most utility to these people at the moment.  Environmentalism is a sideshow.  That is not to say that most people involved in the involved in the 'crusade' don't care about the issues.  Most of them do care deeply about the environment (as framed by their sacred texts) and are not even aware of their status as tools in a larger project.  Many others are dimly aware of this reality but more or less favorable to the political changes which they think (probably incorrectly) that they are working towards.

legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386

Yep. Exactly what I wrote, EXCEPT for Sarah Palin and Condoleezza Rice in the choir. They are the polar opposite of all the other people presented here (bear not included)  Smiley

I would caution against taking on faith the principle that people of one political persuasion go one way on climate change and those of another go the other.  Whether 'climate change' is in total a scam or not, I am quite confident to say that it is being used as a lever which provides spiritually motivated armies for some and makes a huge amount of money through various machinations for many more.

Climate change has evolved into a very powerful political tool, and we find politicians who are competent and savvy making use of it in a variety of ways.  It's less of a progressive/reactionary issue than it is a slimeball/non-slimeball issue.  And all political stripes have their contingent of slimeballs.  I don't know Palin's and Rice's involvement but it would surprise me not at all of they were not making hay off the thing.

I think I've called attention to Hank Paulson's new global warming think-tank on this thread already.  When I was out digging a ditch and daydreaming yesterday I thought of this analogy:

  "The stealthy green-stripped red leopard made the kill and now the hyaenas and vultures are gathering around to tear at the carcass."


Regarding Palin, be practical.  WOULDN'T climate change, if it existed, be a net positive for Alaska?

Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon

Yep. Exactly what I wrote, EXCEPT for Sarah Palin and Condoleezza Rice in the choir. They are the polar opposite of all the other people presented here (bear not included)  Smiley

I would caution against taking on faith the principle that people of one political persuasion go one way on climate change and those of another go the other.  Whether 'climate change' is in total a scam or not, I am quite confident to say that it is being used as a lever which provides spiritually motivated armies for some and makes a huge amount of money through various machinations for many more.

Climate change has evolved into a very powerful political tool, and we find politicians who are competent and savvy making use of it in a variety of ways.  It's less of a progressive/reactionary issue than it is a slimeball/non-slimeball issue.  And all political stripes have their contingent of slimeballs.  I don't know Palin's and Rice's involvement but it would surprise me not at all of they were not making hay off the thing.

I think I've called attention to Hank Paulson's new global warming think-tank on this thread already.  When I was out digging a ditch and daydreaming yesterday I thought of this analogy:

  "The stealthy green-stripped red leopard made the kill and now the hyaenas and vultures are gathering around to tear at the carcass."




I am not against the idea that Palin or Rice may profit from fighting the idea of AGW. You can make money selling books preaching against AGW. I just do not picture Palin and Rice in the same boat as pelosi and gore, unless they were trolling that church...

That's all the deeper analyzing I'll do on that flyer  Smiley



legendary
Activity: 4690
Merit: 1276

Yep. Exactly what I wrote, EXCEPT for Sarah Palin and Condoleezza Rice in the choir. They are the polar opposite of all the other people presented here (bear not included)  Smiley

I would caution against taking on faith the principle that people of one political persuasion go one way on climate change and those of another go the other.  Whether 'climate change' is in total a scam or not, I am quite confident to say that it is being used as a lever which provides spiritually motivated armies for some and makes a huge amount of money through various machinations for many more.

Climate change has evolved into a very powerful political tool, and we find politicians who are competent and savvy making use of it in a variety of ways.  It's less of a progressive/reactionary issue than it is a slimeball/non-slimeball issue.  And all political stripes have their contingent of slimeballs.  I don't know Palin's and Rice's involvement but it would surprise me not at all of they were not making hay off the thing.

I think I've called attention to Hank Paulson's new global warming think-tank on this thread already.  When I was out digging a ditch and daydreaming yesterday I thought of this analogy:

  "The stealthy green-stripped red leopard made the kill and now the hyaenas and vultures are gathering around to tear at the carcass."

legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon

There is nothing particularly wrong with this hypothesis.  It makes a lot of sense qualitatively.  To me at least, and certainly to the level necessary to 'believe that something might' be' blahing blah, blah, blah...

So then there is nothing wrong being a AGW skeptic, if those warmists created a belief system they follow blindly   Smiley

I'm not sure I understand your point, but I'd like to.



If I believe in God. I have to believe in satan. If an equation can point to a belief system (not science), it can also describe and confirm the polar opposite existence of its result (as it is a belief system).

Because there is more ice, AGW is proof is the same as because there is more ice, AGW is not proof.. When you chose to say science is settled, it is a belief system, and not science. Ask someone who works in quantum mechanic if the concept of reality as we perceive it is settled... Yet this very young field of science is so sure of itself it has declared to be the de facto truth of all science.






Yep. Exactly what I wrote, EXCEPT for Sarah Palin and Condoleezza Rice in the choir. They are the polar opposite of all the other people presented here (bear not included)  Smiley





legendary
Activity: 1260
Merit: 1002

There is nothing particularly wrong with this hypothesis.  It makes a lot of sense qualitatively.  To me at least, and certainly to the level necessary to 'believe that something might' be' blahing blah, blah, blah...

So then there is nothing wrong being a AGW skeptic, if those warmists created a belief system they follow blindly   Smiley

I'm not sure I understand your point, but I'd like to.



If I believe in God. I have to believe in satan. If an equation can point to a belief system (not science), it can also describe and confirm the polar opposite existence of its result (as it is a belief system).

Because there is more ice, AGW is proof is the same as because there is more ice, AGW is not proof.. When you chose to say science is settled, it is a belief system, and not science. Ask someone who works in quantum mechanic if the concept of reality as we perceive it is settled... Yet this very young field of science is so sure of itself it has declared to be the de facto truth of all science.

legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon

There is nothing particularly wrong with this hypothesis.  It makes a lot of sense qualitatively.  To me at least, and certainly to the level necessary to 'believe that something might' be' blahing blah, blah, blah...

So then there is nothing wrong being a AGW skeptic, if those warmists created a belief system they follow blindly   Smiley

I'm not sure I understand your point, but I'd like to.



If I believe in God. I have to believe in satan. If an equation can point to a belief system (not science), it can also describe and confirm the polar opposite existence of its result (as it is a belief system).

Because there is more ice, AGW is proof is the same as because there is more ice, AGW is not proof.. When you chose to say science is settled, it is a belief system, and not science. Ask someone who works in quantum mechanic if the concept of reality as we perceive it is settled... Yet this very young field of science is so sure of itself it has declared to be the de facto truth of all science.


legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386

There is nothing particularly wrong with this hypothesis.  It makes a lot of sense qualitatively.  To me at least, and certainly to the level necessary to 'believe that something might' be' blahing blah, blah, blah...

For N+1 phenomena in a chaotic system, N hypotheses can be promulgated which "make a lot of sense qualitatively".  The problem is one of cherry picking which of those hypotheses are presented in accordance with the desired narrative, instead of simply enlightening more people about the actual nature of chaotic systems.

It may be in many cases, that there is resistance to the concept of a mathematically chaotic system, that it is terrifying and against worldviews which are controllable, said worldviews being desirable for those of certain inclinations.

I'm not pretending to know anything about the increasing sea ice in the antarctic, but if it is or becomes and observable trend I certainly would not be inclined to lump it in with the (fairly small set of) things which I throw up my hands and write off to 'behavior in a chaotic system'.  A good start would be to explore the salinity data (if any.)
I'll call this the "leaves are falling down" logical fallacy.  The leaves are falling down off the trees, so the forests are dying! 

No, they are not.  The conclusion is not supported by the evidence.  A slightly longer view reveals cycles in which the leaves falling down is perfectly normal. 

But we have very poor knowledge of planetary climate cycles.  We started with satellite data in the 1970s.  Several of the important climate cycles have 60-80 year durations...



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