Everyone is a denier in this argument. Republicans who deny climate change on any level, and Democrats who deny the economic and standard-of-living depression that would result from doing everything necessary to dial back time (because they deny the expansion of nuclear energy, or absent doing everything necessary, deny the fact that we'll have no meaningful downward impact on global temperatures otherwise).
It didn't hurt Gore's old man was Occidental Petroleum proxy in Washington. His old man left him a bunch of 'dirty oil' money. What a creep.Gore is not a scientist that I'm aware of. He was trained at Vanderbilt as a journalist, to my knowledge. He's a politician who's made a veritable fortune selling propaganda as "science."
That makes total sense. The Climate Change movement can do without the theatrics of characters like RFK Jr. who's called for "deniers" to be imprisoned and Bernie Sanders, and the hot button issue piggy backers like Hillary.Not true. I believe in the expansion of nuclear energy (I would be ok with huge increases in nuclear energy), understand the potential economic impact, etc. In reality, thanks in part to the global recession, the U.S. can meet their targets. We are down in CO2 emissions from 2007 or 2008 (our peak in CO2 emissions, depending on your source). The real problem is China/India. Continued efficiency increases coupled with the gradual increase in renewable energy sources would be pretty realistic goals for the U.S. The doom and gloom cuts that you are worried about aren't really on the table. China, India, and the developing world are the ones that are really resisting any substantial cuts. In fact, the developed world (including US) are actually as a whole down from 1990 levels, mostly due to Europe, but still.
The only way for this to work is for this not to be a political issue. I have voted for democrats and republicans in my life. Government does not have to get huge for this to work.
From what I've read the common sense cuts are mainly a placebo and will not prevent us from piercing the 2 degree cap. Reference post #565 for example.Not true. I believe in the expansion of nuclear energy (I would be ok with huge increases in nuclear energy), understand the potential economic impact, etc. In reality, thanks in part to the global recession, the U.S. can meet their targets. We are down in CO2 emissions from 2007 or 2008 (our peak in CO2 emissions, depending on your source). The real problem is China/India. Continued efficiency increases coupled with the gradual increase in renewable energy sources would be pretty realistic goals for the U.S. The doom and gloom cuts that you are worried about aren't really on the table. China, India, and the developing world are the ones that are really resisting any substantial cuts. In fact, the developed world (including US) are actually as a whole down from 1990 levels, mostly due to Europe, but still.
The only way for this to work is for this not to be a political issue. I have voted for democrats and republicans in my life. Government does not have to get huge for this to work.
You dont have to be a scientist to be intelligent enough to realize that global warming is for real and a significant portion of it is most likely caused by human actions.Gore is not a scientist that I'm aware of. He was trained at Vanderbilt as a journalist, to my knowledge. He's a politician who's made a veritable fortune selling propaganda as "science."
So you are saying there will be landmark lawsuits and settlements? Who will be the beneficiaries? And who will be punished? Are the oil companies being poised for breakups?You dont have to be a scientist to be intelligent enough to realize that global warming is for real and a significant portion of it is most likely caused by human actions.
The global warming "debate" will wind up resolving itself just like the cigarette "debate" did during the 60s.
No, I never said that at all. Just making the comparison as it relates to corporate backing of deniers over science.So you are saying there will be landmark lawsuits and settlements? Who will be the beneficiaries? And who will be punished? Are the oil companies being poised for breakups?
Now I understand why Bill Gates said socialism is the answer. There's a lot of goodwill in keeping the government off your back.
Maybe you should fast forward about 40 years.:tongue:![]()
- 1998 – No matter if the science [of global warming] is all phony . . . climate change [provides] the greatest opportunity to bring about justice and equality in the world.” —Christine Stewart, Canadian Minister of the Environment, Calgary Herald, 1998
“The only thing new in the world is the history you do not know.”Maybe you should fast forward about 40 years.:tongue:
Science moves forward, not backwards
True, but dogma clings on for dear life.Science moves forward, not backwards
I think his post had more to do with politics than it did science (i.e. the use of climate change to achieve social justice ends).Science moves forward, not backwards
Still waiting for an explanation how carbon is a pollutant, but what do I know.… The fact is that even if every American citizen biked to work, carpooled to school, used only solar panels to power their homes, if we each planted a dozen trees, if we somehow eliminated all of our domestic greenhouse gas emissions, guess what – that still wouldn’t be enough to offset the carbon pollution coming from the rest of the world.
If all the industrial nations went down to zero emissions –- remember what I just said, all the industrial emissions went down to zero emissions -– it wouldn’t be enough, not when more than 65% of the world’s carbon pollution comes from the developing world.