Vidqun I notice you said that "The other group will be interested in $$$, control and depopulation with their Net Zero targets." But what about you? Do you have a vested financial interest in the fossil fuel industry? I don't know if that is case, but I ask the question since you say people should follow the money and that people should look to see if there are vested interests. Maybe you own a great many shares of stock of oil companies and coal mining companies and/or other fossil fuel companies. Maybe you are a coal miner. I don't know.
Regarding idea of a goal of "depopulation with their Net Zero targets" I think the following. I think the idea that there are people [including Bill Gates] who aim to depopulate (or drastically reduce the population) in order to achieve their Net Zero targets is a totally bogus idea. I see no evidence in support of that idea at all. But why are some people promoting the idea? Are they entirely doing so in order make money from it (or to prevent loosing money in investments in fossil fuel companies)? Are they doing so to make money from in YouTube videos or on various websites (such as from advertising) by increasing the number of visits to their web pages (or by increasing click views). Or, do they perhaps get a thrill from scaring people and are doing just for fun, without believing in it themselves?
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Here is a further thought, though a minor one.
Vidqun, in your post I notice that right after your words of "There are plenty more such forecasts:" you repeat precisely an example you mentioned earlier in your post. As a result you only provided one additional example of such forecasts instead of two more examples of such.
Here is another thought:
Regarding the example (of the forecast of Professor Wieslaw Maslowski) reported by the
BBC back in 2007 (see http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7139797.stm ), so what that the extreme forecast by one scientist of "northern polar waters
could be ice-free in summers within just 5-6 years" following the year 2007 didn't become fulfilled? That was just an idea of only one climate scientist, not the consensus idea of numerous climate scientists, nor is it the average of the various forecasts of climate scientists. Within each scientific field there are a range of ideas. I weigh the various ideas which I come across rather than jump to concluding that one particular idea of one scientist is correct. The same BBC article mentions a less extreme forecast (though still one which says there is a problem). It says that Professor Peter Wadham, who despite thinking that Professor Wieslaw Maslowski is "is more efficient because it works with data and it takes account of processes that happen internally in the ice", nonetheless says "In the end, it will just melt away quite suddenly. It might not be as
early as 2013 but it will be soon, much earlier than 2040. ... My thinking on this is that 2030 is not an unreasonable date to be thinking of."
The article then presents the view of another climate scientist, when the article says the following. 'And later, to the BBC, Dr Serreze added: "I think Wieslaw is probably a
little aggressive in his projections, simply because the luck of the
draw means natural variability can kick in to give you a few years in
which the ice loss is a little less than you've had in previous years.
But Wieslaw is a smart guy and it would not surprise me if his
projections came out."
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Vidqun, in one your posts you said the following. "Well, we have two narratives here. Somebody's lying. Ask yourself, what
would be the motives? Honest scientists are interested in the truth." There is another narrative besides lying and telling the truth, namely that of being sincere while making an incorrect statement/conclusion. When someone says something which is false, it is not necessarily a lie. A lie is specific kind of false statement, namely one which was intended to deceive. Every talking human alive makes mistakes and makes false statements (due to errors), even those of us who are very sincere and not liars.
Regarding the link you provided of https://electroverse.net/jan-2020s-antarctic-sea-ice-extent-on-par-with-1979-90-avg/ when I click on it on my home computer system (which I admit is very old) the web page which loads up says only "Invalid Request". The same notice appears even when I go to " https://electroverse.net/ " itself. Maybe the problem is with my home computer system; I don't know.