To: stylin19a
you’re right, but the sad fact is reason and facts have practically lost- and the lie of ‘man-caused global warming’ is now the ‘new truth’ and anyone that doesn’t believe the malarky is deemed ‘anti-science’ because ‘a consensus of scientists believe man is to blame’ (Which by the way is another lie they have perpetrated- more scientists think nature is causing it- NOT man- the ‘consensus’ stems from just the scientists that worked on the IPCC report- and they even threw out those scientists in that group who disagreed with the findings so that they could say ‘the consensus of scientists believe man is to blame- i could point you to where they got exposed for that lie- but you can find it by typing in ‘most scientists do n ot believe man is to blame for climate change’
The climate change crowd are a bunch of dirty dirty liars- and sadly they have convinced a majority of people around hte world that we are to blame- and they ignorantly gobble it up as fact-
Check out climatedepot.org http://www.climatedepot.com/ they have tons of actual scientific info that refutes the claims that man is to blame
70 posted on
11/04/2017 9:15:40 PM PDT by
Bob434
To: Bob434
71 posted on
11/04/2017 9:44:10 PM PDT by
stylin19a
(Best.Election.Ever)
To: Bob434
I contacted katharine hayhoe, of the co-authors, about providing some context to the statement I was scratchin my head over. Here is her response:
"The fact that temperature and sea level was much higher back then is a serious cause for concern.
We all understand how it takes years, even decades, before we start to experience the effects of smoking a pack of cigarettes a day.
In the same way, it takes centuries for the Earth's climate system to equilibrate to the enormous amount of CO2 we are dumping into the atmosphere.
We will not see the full effects of our actions for a long time, but what the paleoclimate record tells us is that when that happens, the world will be a very different place.
Even if we could miraculously freeze levels of atmospheric CO2 at 400ppm, the amount of long-term change will be nearly unimaginable.
Two-thirds of the world's largest cities and the land that a substantial fraction of the world's population currently lives on will be under water."
72 posted on
11/07/2017 8:26:36 AM PST by
stylin19a
(Best.Election.Ever)
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