Has Global Warming Reached The Tipping Point of No Return?

by frankiespeakin 100 Replies latest jw friends

  • villabolo
    villabolo

    Frankie, I hear what you're saying but nature/the evolutionary process by itself could easily give us a race of psychopaths and sychophants. Even liberals like Edward Wilson, in his book on Sociobiology (last chapter on man) recognizes that our type of urban civilization is conducive to the evolution of psychopaths.

    Once upon a time in the tribal world those type of people would eventually have been killed for their pathological behavior. Nowadays, with the exception of a small proportion of psychopaths who are imprisoned, the majority of the rest not only escape that fate and live to reproduce but many of them actually prosper and outreproduce the general population. That is what "Nature" does, both then and now, depending on the population density. This is one reason, out of many, that I prefer small tribal/village types of society where everyone knows each other. It would prevent that type of demonic individual from coming into being let alone destroy the Society that tolerates him.

    You mentioned the lack of foresight our general population has. I agree but it's not going to get any better. That is why it's best to wait for this civilization to collapse and rebuild from the ground up.

    villabolo

  • journey-on
    journey-on

    Good god, villabolo! Sounds like the New System of Thangs! Can we finally get our pet lion? Uh? Pl-e-e-e-ase.

    I'm not keen on egalitarian communities. They sound so warm and fuzzy on the surface, but people are only created equal....they really don't stay that way in the fullest sense of the word. People need the push and pull of extreme differences to move forward; the competitive spirit to advance technologically; major challenges to overcome in order to grow as a species. Sure, we need to balance that with altruism for others and our planet, but an egalitarian society? No. Small individual egalitarian communities for people like you are okay, but forced genetic manipulation to "create" what somebody has decided is the ultimate lifestyle for all of society?...I think NOT.

  • villabolo
    villabolo

    journey-on:

    There would still be a wide variety of personality types. I disagree completely with the idea that "competitive spirit" is absolutely necessary for technological advancement. An individual who is the inventor type can use the opposite of "competitive spirit" namely altruistic cooperation to accomplish pretty much the same thing. Major challenges to be overcome? As I quoted previously "power over things not people". Small egalitarian societies for people like me would be destroyed by the current society for fear, by the elite, that it may catch on amongst their general population. And last but not least, there is no need to force genetic enhancements upon people who are attracted to that society precisely because its ideals include that type of eugenics.

    villabolo

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    My Dear Villabolo with the Kaleidoscope Eyes.

    It is true that you have read my transhuman musings. But all modification that I approve of is essentially individualistic: Voluntary self-modification--no different than body piercings and tattoos.

    As for hierarchy, it exists because it is necessary. Please, name a successful social animal that does not live in a hierarchical structure. Ants? Bees? Wolves? Hierarchy is built into the Universe. Say it ain't so!

    And no. I am not egalitarian. I am libertarian. The two exist in tension alongside each other.

    BTS

  • zagor
    zagor

    Personally I don't think we went that far that nature can't fix itself. Nature will always try to balance itself out eventually no matter what, even if it means melting both Antarctica and Greenland... BUT, confluence of too many different things are coming together now that can have disastrous consequences on OUR way of living. Just one of these things is our old economic model which is basically incompatible with any attempt we may have to remedy the situation.
    We have built the entire civilization on trade and intrinsic need for consuming more and more of goods, more stuff, more everything. In fact, we measure our progress by how much we have, which is like pouring water into bottomless bucket, we will never stop and say "ok now I've got everything I need".
    It is not only a fundamental characteristic of how people think, entire society is built around that so much so that we take it for granted, we see it as common sense, as the way things are. The trick with that is, once we see things as common sense we will always revert to it. Even if we try doing something else, something new, eventually the common sense prevails, unless we see immediate return on our investment of time and effort we won't abandon old ways, which ironically is a phrase that comes from the Economy, testifying further just how much such thinking is part of our psyche.

    The thing is, we don't know any other way forward. The only thing we can think of is to use less polluting methods in manufacture of more and more goods. And maybe that is the way things should be, after all, there has never been a civilization that has not eventually collapsed and failed, in fact we are attempting to do something that has never been done before - preserve our way of living and save our civilization from collapse. No people have ever managed to do that before, from Egypt to Easter Island they have all failed. Then again maybe that is what it takes to start doing things differently.

  • villabolo
    villabolo

    BTS:

    "My Dear Villabolo with the Kaleidoscope Eyes.

    It is true that you have read my transhuman musings. But all modification that I approve of is essentially individualistic: Voluntary self-modification--no different than body piercings and tattoos.

    Burns, I specifically stated that the Eugenics I was talking about would be voluntary. As far as individualism is concerned my version of society emphasizes The One, The Few and The Many. Individualism, amongst humans, is nothing without a Society to frame it in.

    As for hierarchy, it exists because it is necessary. Please, name a successful social animal that does not live in a hierarchical structure. Ants? Bees? Wolves? Hierarchy is built into the Universe. Say it ain't so!

    No hierarchy is not necessary in the ultimate sense of the word. It spontaneously evolved amongst almost every species because there was no Antihierarchical God to change things. However there is us and, just as we can make chemicals that do not exist in nature, so we can make genes/brains/characters that do not yet exist in nature.

    And more than that, I take your challenge of "Say it ain't so" and correct you with the fact that there is such a thing as individualistic bees. Read Edward Wilsons book on Sociobiology and he mentions a spectrum of bee species that range from asocial to parasocial all the way to eusocial-the ones we are familiar with.

    Hierarchy built into the Universe you say? Reminds me of the Pharoah who was proclaimed in Egyptian theology/ideology to be so crucial to the Universe that the whole Cosmos would collapse without him.

    And no. I am not egalitarian. I am libertarian. The two exist in tension alongside each other."

    From what I've heard Libertarians are too busy condemning the evils and inefficiency of Government and yet they cannot smell the stench of Corporations.

    villabolo

    PS: You're all welcome to start a new thread on Eugenics. This thread, and I admit that it's partly my fault, has veered way off the subject.

  • Mad Dawg
    Mad Dawg

    "Voluntary eugenics", ha ha, that is a good one.

  • What-A-Coincidence
    What-A-Coincidence

    who reads posts over 2 lines?
    simon should start giving out 2 line per post carbon credits

  • Mad Dawg
    Mad Dawg

    Don't ya just love people who want to force everyone else into their vision of society?

  • dmouse
    dmouse

    (In today's Express UK Newspaper)

    HERE are the 100 reasons, released in a dossier issued by the European Foundation, why climate change is natural and not man-made:

    1) There is “no real scientific proof” that the current warming is caused by the rise of greenhouse gases from man’s activity.
    2) Man-made carbon dioxide emissions throughout human history constitute less than 0.00022 percent of the total naturally emitted from the mantle of the earth during geological history.

    3) Warmer periods of the Earth’s history came around 800 years before rises in CO2 levels.

    4) After World War II, there was a huge surge in recorded CO2 emissions but global temperatures fell for four decades after 1940.

    5) Throughout the Earth’s history, temperatures have often been warmer than now and CO2 levels have often been higher – more than ten times as high.
    6) Significant changes in climate have continually occurred throughout geologic time.

    7) The 0.7C increase in the average global temperature over the last hundred years is entirely consistent with well-established, long-term, natural climate trends.

    Top of Form

    Bottom of Form

    8) The IPCC theory is driven by just 60 scientists and favourable reviewers not the 4,000 usually cited.

    9) Leaked e-mails from British climate scientists – in a scandal known as “Climate-gate” - suggest that that has been manipulated to exaggerate global warming

    10) A large body of scientific research suggests that the sun is responsible for the greater share of climate change during the past hundred years.

    11) Politicians and activiists claim rising sea levels are a direct cause of global warming but sea levels rates have been increasing steadily since the last ice age 10,000 ago

    12) Philip Stott, Emeritus Professor of Biogeography at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London says climate change is too complicated to be caused by just one factor, whether CO2 or clouds
    13) Peter Lilley MP said last month that “fewer people in Britain than in any other country believe in the importance of global warming. That is despite the fact that our Government and our political class—predominantly—are more committed to it than their counterparts in any other country in the world”.
    14) In pursuit of the global warming rhetoric, wind farms will do very little to nothing to reduce CO2 emissions
    15) Professor Plimer, Professor of Geology and Earth Sciences at the University of Adelaide, stated that the idea of taking a single trace gas in the atmosphere, accusing it and finding it guilty of total responsibility for climate change, is an “absurdity”

    16) A Harvard University astrophysicist and geophysicist, Willie Soon, said he is “embarrassed and puzzled” by the shallow science in papers that support the proposition that the earth faces a climate crisis caused by global warming.

    17) The science of what determines the earth’s temperature is in fact far from settled or understood.
    18) Despite activist concerns over CO2 levels, CO2 is a minor greenhouse gas, unlike water vapour which is tied to climate concerns, and which we can’t even pretend to control
    19) A petition by scientists trying to tell the world that the political and media portrayal of global warming is false was put forward in the Heidelberg Appeal in 1992. Today, more than 4,000 signatories, including 72 Nobel Prize winners, from 106 countries have signed it.

    20) It is claimed the average global temperature increased at a dangerously fast rate in the 20th century but the recent rate of average global temperature rise has been between 1 and 2 degrees C per century - within natural rates
    21) Professor Zbigniew Jaworowski, Chairman of the Scientific Council of the Central Laboratory for Radiological Protection in Warsaw, Poland says the earth’s temperature has more to do with cloud cover and water vapor than CO2 concentration in the atmosphere.

    22) There is strong evidence from solar studies which suggests that the Earth’s current temperature stasis will be followed by climatic cooling over the next few decades
    23) It is myth that receding glaciers are proof of global warming as glaciers have been receding and growing cyclically for many centuries

    24) It is a falsehood that the earth’s poles are warming because that is natural variation and while the western Arctic may be getting somewhat warmer we also see that the Eastern Arctic and Greenland are getting colder

    25) The IPCC claims climate driven “impacts on biodiversity are significant and of key relevance” but those claims are simply not supported by scientific research

    26) The IPCC threat of climate change to the world’s species does not make sense as wild species are at least one million years old, which means they have all been through hundreds of climate cycles
    27) Research goes strongly against claims that CO2-induced global warming would cause catastrophic disintegration of the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets.
    28) Despite activist concerns over CO2 levels, rising CO2 levels are our best hope of raising crop yields to feed an ever-growing population
    29) The biggest climate change ever experienced on earth took place around 700 million years ago
    30) The slight increase in temperature which has been observed since 1900 is entirely consistent with well-established, long-term natural climate cycles
    31) Despite activist concerns over CO2 levels, rising CO2 levels of some so-called “greenhouse gases” may be contributing to higher oxygen levels and global cooling, not warming
    32) Accurate satellite, balloon and mountain top observations made over the last three decades have not shown any significant change in the long term rate of increase in global temperatures

    33) Today’s CO2 concentration of around 385 ppm is very low compared to most of the earth’s history – we actually live in a carbon-deficient atmosphere
    34) It is a myth that CO2 is the most common greenhouse gas because greenhouse gases form about 3% of the atmosphere by volume, and CO2 constitutes about 0.037% of the atmosphere

    35) It is a myth that computer models verify that CO2 increases will cause significant global warming because computer models can be made to “verify” anything
    36) There is no scientific or statistical evidence whatsoever that global warming will cause more storms and other weather extremes
    37) One statement deleted from a UN report in 1996 stated that “none of the studies cited above has shown clear evidence that we can attribute the observed climate changes to increases in greenhouse gases”
    38) The world “warmed” by 0.07 +/- 0.07 degrees C from 1999 to 2008, not the 0.20 degrees C expected by the IPCC

    39) The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says “it is likely that future tropical cyclones (typhoons and hurricanes) will become more intense” but there has been no increase in the intensity or frequency of tropical cyclones globally

    40) Rising CO2 levels in the atmosphere can be shown not only to have a negligible effect on the Earth’s many ecosystems, but in some cases to be a positive help to many organisms
    41) Researchers who compare and contrast climate change impact on civilizations found warm periods are beneficial to mankind and cold periods harmful
    42) The Met Office asserts we are in the hottest decade since records began but this is precisely what the world should expect if the climate is cyclical

    43) Rising CO2 levels increase plant growth and make plants more resistant to drought and pests
    44) The historical increase in the air’s CO2 content has improved human nutrition by raising crop yields during the past 150 years

    45) The increase of the air’s CO2 content has probably helped lengthen human lifespans since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution
    46) The IPCC alleges that “climate change currently contributes to the global burden of disease and premature deaths” but the evidence shows that higher temperatures and rising CO2 levels has helped global populations
    47) In May of 2004, the Russian Academy of Sciences published a report concluding that the Kyoto Protocol has no scientific grounding at all.
    48) The “Climate-gate” scandal pointed to a expensive public campaign of disinformation and the denigration of scientists who opposed the belief that CO2 emissions were causing climate change

    49)
    The head of Britain’s climate change watchdog has predicted households will need to spend up to £15,000 on a full energy efficiency makeover if the Government is to meet its ambitious targets for cutting carbon emissions.

    50) Wind power is unlikely to be the answer to our energy needs. The wind power industry argues that there are “no direct subsidies” but it involves a total subsidy of as much as £60 per MWh which falls directly on electricity consumers. This burden will grow in line with attempts to achieve Wind power targets, according to a recent OFGEM report.

    51)
    Wind farms are not an efficient way to produce energy. The British Wind Energy Association (BWEA) accepts a figure of 75 per cent back-up power is required.

    52)
    Global temperatures are below the low end of IPCC predictions not at “at the top end of IPCC estimates”

    53) Climate alarmists have raised the concern over acidification of the oceans but Tom Segalstad from Oslo University in Norway , and others, have noted that the composition of ocean water – including CO2, calcium, and water – can act as a buffering agent in the acidification of the oceans.

    54) The UN’s IPCC computer models of human-caused global warming predict the emergence of a “hotspot” in the upper troposphere over the tropics. Former researcher in the Australian Department of Climate Change, David Evans, said there is no evidence of such a hotspot

    55) The argument that climate change is a of result of global warming caused by human activity is the argument of flat Earthers.

    56)
    The manner in which US President Barack Obama sidestepped Congress to order emission cuts shows how undemocratic and irrational the entire international decision-making process has become with regards to emission-target setting.

    57)
    William Kininmonth, a former head of the National Climate Centre and a consultant to the World Meteorological Organisation, wrote “the likely extent of global temperature rise from a doubling of CO2 is less than 1C. Such warming is well within the envelope of variation experienced during the past 10,000 years and insignificant in the context of glacial cycles during the past million years, when Earth has been predominantly very cold and covered by extensive ice sheets.”

    58)
    Canada has shown the world targets derived from the existing Kyoto commitments were always unrealistic and did not work for the country.

    59) In the lead up to the Copenhagen summit, David Davis MP said of previous climate summits, at Rio de Janeiro in 1992 and Kyoto in 1997 that many had promised greater cuts, but “neither happened”, but we are continuing along the same lines.
    60) The UK ’s environmental policy has a long-term price tag of about £55 billion, before taking into account the impact on its economic growth.

    61)
    The UN’s panel on climate change warned that Himalayan glaciers could melt to a fifth of current levels by 2035. J. Graham Cogley a professor at Ontario Trent University, claims this inaccurate stating the UN authors got the date from an earlier report wrong by more than 300 years.

    62)
    Under existing Kyoto obligations the EU has attempted to claim success, while actually increasing emissions by 13 per cent, according to Lord Lawson. In addition the EU has pursued this scheme by purchasing “offsets” from countries such as China paying them billions of dollars to destroy atmospheric pollutants, such as CFC-23, which were manufactured purely in order to be destroyed.

    63)
    It is claimed that the average global temperature was relatively unchanging in pre-industrial times but sky-rocketed since 1900, and will increase by several degrees more over the next 100 years according to Penn State University researcher Michael Mann. There is no convincing empirical evidence that past climate was unchanging, nor that 20th century changes in average global temperature were unusual or unnatural.

    64) Michael Mann of Penn State University has actually shown that the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice Age did in fact exist, which contrasts with his earlier work which produced the “hockey stick graph” which showed a constant temperature over the past thousand years or so followed by a recent dramatic upturn.

    65)
    The globe’s current approach to climate change in which major industrialised countries agree to nonsensical targets for their CO2 emissions by a given date, as it has been under the Kyoto system, is very expensive.

    66) The “Climate-gate” scandal revealed that a scientific team had emailed one another about using a “trick” for the sake of concealing a “decline” in temperatures when looking at the history of the Earth’s temperature.

    67)
    Global temperatures have not risen in any statistically-significant sense for 15 years and have actually been falling for nine years. The “Climate-gate” scandal revealed a scientific team had expressed dismay at the fact global warming was contrary to their predictions and admitted their inability to explain it was “a travesty”.

    68)
    The IPCC predicts that a warmer planet will lead to more extreme weather, including drought, flooding, storms, snow, and wildfires. But over the last century, during which the IPCC claims the world experienced more rapid warming than any time in the past two millennia, the world did not experience significantly greater trends in any of these extreme weather events.

    69)
    In explaining the average temperature standstill we are currently experiencing, the Met Office Hadley Centre ran a series of computer climate predictions and found in many of the computer runs there were decade-long standstills but none for 15 years – so it expects global warming to resume swiftly.
    70) Richard Lindzen, Professor of Atmospheric Sciences at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, wrote: “The notion of a static, unchanging climate is foreign to the history of the Earth or any other planet with a fluid envelope. Such hysteria (over global warming) simply represents the scientific illiteracy of much of the public, the susceptibility of the public to the substitution of repetition for truth.”

    71)
    Despite the 1997 Kyoto Protocol’s status as the flagship of the fight against climate change it has been a failure.

    72)
    The first phase of the EU’s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), which ran from 2005 to 2007 was a failure. Huge over-allocation of permits to pollute led to a collapse in the price of carbon from €33 to just €0.20 per tonne meaning the system did not reduce emissions at all.

    73)
    The EU trading scheme, to manage carbon emissions has completely failed and actually allows European businesses to duck out of making their emissions reductions at home by offsetting, which means paying for cuts to be made overseas instead.

    74)
    To date “cap and trade” carbon markets have done almost nothing to reduce emissions.

    75)
    In the United States , the cap-and-trade is an approach designed to control carbon emissions and will impose huge costs upon American citizens via a carbon tax on all goods and services produced in the United States. The average family of four can expect to pay an additional $1700, or £1,043, more each year. It is predicted that the United States will lose more than 2 million jobs as the result of cap-and-trade schemes.

    76)
    Dr Roy Spencer, a principal research scientist at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, has indicated that out of the 21 climate models tracked by the IPCC the differences in warming exhibited by those models is mostly the result of different strengths of positive cloud feedback – and that increasing CO2 is insufficient to explain global-average warming in the last 50 to 100 years.

    77)
    Why should politicians devote our scarce resources in a globally competitive world to a false and ill-defined problem, while ignoring the real problems the entire planet faces, such as: poverty, hunger, disease or terrorism.

    78) A proper analysis of ice core records from the past 650,000 years demonstrates that temperature increases have come before, and not resulted from, increases in CO2 by hundreds of years.

    79)
    Since the cause of global warming is mostly natural, then there is in actual fact very little we can do about it. (We are still not able to control the sun).

    80)
    A substantial number of the panel of 2,500 climate scientists on the United Nation’s International Panel on Climate Change, which created a statement on scientific unanimity on climate change and man-made global warming, were found to have serious concerns.

    81)
    The UK’s Met Office has been forced this year to re-examine 160 years of temperature data after admitting that public confidence in the science on man-made global warming has been shattered by revelations about the data.

    82)
    Politicians and activists push for renewable energy sources such as wind turbines under the rhetoric of climate change, but it is essentially about money – under the system of Renewable Obligations. Much of the money is paid for by consumers in electricity bills. It amounts to £1 billion a year.

    83)
    The “Climate-gate” scandal revealed that a scientific team had tampered with their own data so as to conceal inconsistencies and errors.

    84) The “Climate-gate” scandal revealed that a scientific team had campaigned for the removal of a learned journal’s editor, solely because he did not share their willingness to debase science for political purposes.

    85)
    Ice-core data clearly show that temperatures change centuries before concentrations of atmospheric CO2 change. Thus, there appears to be little evidence for insisting that changes in concentrations of CO2 are the cause of past temperature and climate change.

    86)
    There are no experimentally verified processes explaining how CO2 concentrations can fall in a few centuries without falling temperatures – in fact it is changing temperatures which cause changes in CO2 concentrations, which is consistent with experiments that show CO2 is the atmospheric gas most readily absorbed by water.

    87)
    The Government’s Renewable Energy Strategy contains a massive increase in electricity generation by wind power costing around £4 billion a year over the next twenty years. The benefits will be only £4 to £5 billion overall (not per annum). So costs will outnumber benefits by a range of between eleven and seventeen times.

    88)
    Whilst CO2 levels have indeed changed for various reasons, human and otherwise, just as they have throughout history, the CO2 content of the atmosphere has increased since the beginning of the industrial revolution, and the growth rate has now been constant for the past 25 years.

    89) It is a myth that CO2 is a pollutant, because nitrogen forms 80% of our atmosphere and human beings could not live in 100% nitrogen either: CO2 is no more a pollutant than nitrogen is and CO2 is essential to life.
    90) Politicians and climate activists make claims to rising sea levels but certain members in the IPCC chose an area to measure in Hong Kong that is subsiding. They used the record reading of 2.3 mm per year rise of sea level.

    91)
    The accepted global average temperature statistics used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change show that no ground-based warming has occurred since 1998.

    92) If one factors in non-greenhouse influences such as El Nino events and large volcanic eruptions, lower atmosphere satellite-based temperature measurements show little, if any, global warming since 1979, a period over which atmospheric CO2 has increased by 55 ppm (17 per cent).

    93) US President Barack Obama pledged to cut emissions by 2050 to equal those of 1910 when there were 92 million Americans. In 2050, there will be 420 million Americans, so Obama’s promise means that emissions per head will be approximately what they were in 1875. It simply will not happen.

    94)
    The European Union has already agreed to cut emissions by 20 percent to 2020, compared with 1990 levels, and is willing to increase the target to 30 percent. However, these are unachievable and the EU has already massively failed with its Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), as EU emissions actually rose by 0.8 percent from 2005 to 2006 and are known to be well above the Kyoto goal.

    95) Australia has stated it wants to slash greenhouse emissions by up to 25 percent below 2000 levels by 2020, but the pledges were so unpopular that the country’s Senate has voted against the carbon trading Bill, and the Opposition’s Party leader has now been ousted by a climate change sceptic.

    96)
    Canada plans to reduce emissions by 20 percent compared with 2006 levels by 2020, representing approximately a 3 percent cut from 1990 levels but it simultaneously defends its Alberta tar sands emissions and its record as one of the world’s highest per-capita emissions setters.

    97) India plans to reduce the ratio of emissions to production by 20-25 percent compared with 2005 levels by 2020, but all Government officials insist that since India has to grow for its development and poverty alleviation, it has to emit, because the economy is driven by carbon.

    98) The Leipzig Declaration in 1996, was signed by 110 scientists who said: “We – along with many of our fellow citizens – are apprehensive about the climate treaty conference scheduled for Kyoto, Japan, in December 1997” and “based on all the evidence available to us, we cannot subscribe to the politically inspired world view that envisages climate catastrophes and calls for hasty actions.”

    99) A US Oregon Petition Project stated “We urge the United States government to reject the global warming agreement that was written in Kyoto, Japan in December, 1997, and any other similar proposals. The proposed limits on greenhouse gases would harm the environment, hinder the advance of science and technology, and damage the health and welfare of mankind. There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of CO2, methane, or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth’s atmosphere and disruption of the Earth’s climate.”

    100)
    A report by the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change concluded “We find no support for the IPCC’s claim that climate observations during the twentieth century are either unprecedented or provide evidence of an anthropogenic effect on climate.”

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