Global Warming or Global Bullshit?

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Here are pictures from the Global Warming Global Cooling Climate Change rally this weekend. Keep in mind, these people like to call conservatives “stupid people who don’t understand science.”
Read more at http://youngcons.com/7-pictures-of-...rming-rally-this-weekend/#iqJkKcvj71ZdM22p.99
 

Life's a bitch, then you die!
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Climate change is the boogie man of our time. But it seems Obama is the only one afraid.

Seems world leaders are busy — too busy, in fact, to attend the U.N. Climate Change Summit in New York today.

Apparently coalition building isn’t as easy as it used to be.

The White House says addressing global warning and climate change is a top priority, but it has failed to sway some top world leaders to that point of view.

Australia Prime Minister Tony Abbot, who is coming to Washington on Wednesday to meet with President Obama, won’t make the trip a day earlier to attend the summit, “My first duty in a sense is to the Australian parliament, and that’s where I’ll be early in the week,” he said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel can’t make it because of “scheduling reasons.”

Our northern neighbor, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, can’t devote a whole day to it, but he will attend the dinner that evening.

Japan and Russia also are noticeably absent. My guess is Vladimir Putin is more focused on building the Russian empire than reducing carbon emissions.

It’s true that more than 100 world leaders planned to attend, including British Prime Minister David Cameron. But if the goal of the summit is “to galvanize and catalyze climate action,” as U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon put it, one would think you need the world’s leading greenhouse gas producers to show up.

But they aren’t.

China is the world’s leading producer of greenhouse gases, and India ranks No.3. But neither Chinese President Xi Jinping or India Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in attendance.

They too have other priorities. As Heritage Foundation research has shown, poverty is a far larger and immediate concern for China and India than climate change.

When it comes to these two countries, Heritage expert David Kreutzer says, “Trading increased poverty for infinitesimal impacts on climate increasingly looks like a bad deal. The reality is, as the science underpinning global-warming hysteria fades, notable leaders are opting to focus on economic growth and domestic issues and skip the staged drama at the U.N.”
 
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Climate change is the boogie man of our time. But it seems Obama is the only one afraid.

Seems world leaders are busy — too busy, in fact, to attend the U.N. Climate Change Summit in New York today.

Apparently coalition building isn’t as easy as it used to be.

The White House says addressing global warning and climate change is a top priority, but it has failed to sway some top world leaders to that point of view.

Australia Prime Minister Tony Abbot, who is coming to Washington on Wednesday to meet with President Obama, won’t make the trip a day earlier to attend the summit, “My first duty in a sense is to the Australian parliament, and that’s where I’ll be early in the week,” he said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel can’t make it because of “scheduling reasons.”

Our northern neighbor, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, can’t devote a whole day to it, but he will attend the dinner that evening.

Japan and Russia also are noticeably absent. My guess is Vladimir Putin is more focused on building the Russian empire than reducing carbon emissions.

It’s true that more than 100 world leaders planned to attend, including British Prime Minister David Cameron. But if the goal of the summit is “to galvanize and catalyze climate action,” as U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon put it, one would think you need the world’s leading greenhouse gas producers to show up.

But they aren’t.

China is the world’s leading producer of greenhouse gases, and India ranks No.3. But neither Chinese President Xi Jinping or India Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in attendance.

They too have other priorities. As Heritage Foundation research has shown, poverty is a far larger and immediate concern for China and India than climate change.

When it comes to these two countries, Heritage expert David Kreutzer says, “Trading increased poverty for infinitesimal impacts on climate increasingly looks like a bad deal. The reality is, as the science underpinning global-warming hysteria fades, notable leaders are opting to focus on economic growth and domestic issues and skip the staged drama at the U.N.”


Yeah, but but Leonardo says it's twooo...

[h=1]Memo to Leonardo DiCaprio: Climate Change ‘Reforms’ Would Hurt People[/h] Scott Blakeman / @Scott_Blakeman / September 23, 2014 / 152 comments

polspphotos068098.jpg

Photo: Newscom

[h=2]Commentary By[/h] Scott Blakeman @Scott_Blakeman
Scott Blakeman is a research assistant in Domestic Policy Studies at the Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity at The Heritage Foundation.


United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon recently designated actor Leonardo DiCaprio as a “U.N. Messenger of Peace” for climate change, touting him as a “credible voice in the environmental movement.”
Upon receiving the designation, DiCaprio, who will give an acceptance speech at this week’s Climate Summit in New York City, said he feels a “moral obligation to speak out at this key moment in human history – it is a moment for action. How we respond to the climate crisis in the coming years will likely determine the fate of humanity and our planet.”
Can a Hollywood actor be a credible source when it comes to something as complex as climate science? Perhaps. However, simply being a popular Hollywood actor does not, in and of itself, make one an expert on climate change. In fact, it should raise a lot of red flags when people start turning to Hollywood for credible information.
The truth is the dire predictions that were once made by climate change alarmists haven’t come to fruition. Data simply does not show that the climate has been getting warmer, wetter or wilder at the accelerating pace some predicted it would. All the climate summits in the world and all the marches and rallies may ironically increase the collective carbon footprint, but they won’t change reality.
However, drastic measures taken to combat climate change could harm economic growth. Increased environmental regulations, carbon taxes and cap-and-trade schemes all harm the economy.
Where is the indignation from Hollywood over the harm these policies and others like them inflict on people who struggle simply to afford electricity and other sources of needed energy? Increased economic activity is one of the ways to improve quality of life for people in America and across the globe, but there will be less access to jobs, hospitals, schools and businesses if excessive carbon emissions regulations and other such schemes are enacted.
Perhaps this is why the top leaders of countries such as China and India are skipping the summit. These countries have some of the largest populations, segments of which do not have reliable access to energy, and emit much of the world’s carbon. Their absence from this week’s Climate Summit is telling.
Instead of being a “Messenger of Peace,” DiCaprio should aim to be a Messenger of the Market. The free market can improve peoples’ lives, create opportunity and prosperity and simultaneously help with stewarding the environment. That idea probably wouldn’t mesh well with DiCaprio’s progressive inklings, but it would actually help people live better lives.
 

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Yeah, but but Leonardo says it's twooo...

Memo to Leonardo DiCaprio: Climate Change ‘Reforms’ Would Hurt People

Scott Blakeman / @Scott_Blakeman / September 23, 2014 / 152 comments

polspphotos068098.jpg

Photo: Newscom

Commentary By

Scott Blakeman @Scott_Blakeman
Scott Blakeman is a research assistant in Domestic Policy Studies at the Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity at The Heritage Foundation.


United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon recently designated actor Leonardo DiCaprio as a “U.N. Messenger of Peace” for climate change, touting him as a “credible voice in the environmental movement.”
Upon receiving the designation, DiCaprio, who will give an acceptance speech at this week’s Climate Summit in New York City, said he feels a “moral obligation to speak out at this key moment in human history – it is a moment for action. How we respond to the climate crisis in the coming years will likely determine the fate of humanity and our planet.”
Can a Hollywood actor be a credible source when it comes to something as complex as climate science? Perhaps. However, simply being a popular Hollywood actor does not, in and of itself, make one an expert on climate change. In fact, it should raise a lot of red flags when people start turning to Hollywood for credible information.
The truth is the dire predictions that were once made by climate change alarmists haven’t come to fruition. Data simply does not show that the climate has been getting warmer, wetter or wilder at the accelerating pace some predicted it would. All the climate summits in the world and all the marches and rallies may ironically increase the collective carbon footprint, but they won’t change reality.
However, drastic measures taken to combat climate change could harm economic growth. Increased environmental regulations, carbon taxes and cap-and-trade schemes all harm the economy.
Where is the indignation from Hollywood over the harm these policies and others like them inflict on people who struggle simply to afford electricity and other sources of needed energy? Increased economic activity is one of the ways to improve quality of life for people in America and across the globe, but there will be less access to jobs, hospitals, schools and businesses if excessive carbon emissions regulations and other such schemes are enacted.
Perhaps this is why the top leaders of countries such as China and India are skipping the summit. These countries have some of the largest populations, segments of which do not have reliable access to energy, and emit much of the world’s carbon. Their absence from this week’s Climate Summit is telling.
Instead of being a “Messenger of Peace,” DiCaprio should aim to be a Messenger of the Market. The free market can improve peoples’ lives, create opportunity and prosperity and simultaneously help with stewarding the environment. That idea probably wouldn’t mesh well with DiCaprio’s progressive inklings, but it would actually help people live better lives.

DiCaprio has his work cut out for him, let us hope he's better at it than Kerry.
 

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Yeah, but but Leonardo says it's twooo...

Memo to Leonardo DiCaprio: Climate Change ‘Reforms’ Would Hurt People

Scott Blakeman / @Scott_Blakeman / September 23, 2014 / 152 comments

polspphotos068098.jpg

Photo: Newscom

Commentary By

Scott Blakeman @Scott_Blakeman
Scott Blakeman is a research assistant in Domestic Policy Studies at the Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity at The Heritage Foundation.


United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon recently designated actor Leonardo DiCaprio as a “U.N. Messenger of Peace” for climate change, touting him as a “credible voice in the environmental movement.”
Upon receiving the designation, DiCaprio, who will give an acceptance speech at this week’s Climate Summit in New York City, said he feels a “moral obligation to speak out at this key moment in human history – it is a moment for action. How we respond to the climate crisis in the coming years will likely determine the fate of humanity and our planet.”
Can a Hollywood actor be a credible source when it comes to something as complex as climate science? Perhaps. However, simply being a popular Hollywood actor does not, in and of itself, make one an expert on climate change. In fact, it should raise a lot of red flags when people start turning to Hollywood for credible information.
The truth is the dire predictions that were once made by climate change alarmists haven’t come to fruition. Data simply does not show that the climate has been getting warmer, wetter or wilder at the accelerating pace some predicted it would. All the climate summits in the world and all the marches and rallies may ironically increase the collective carbon footprint, but they won’t change reality.
However, drastic measures taken to combat climate change could harm economic growth. Increased environmental regulations, carbon taxes and cap-and-trade schemes all harm the economy.
Where is the indignation from Hollywood over the harm these policies and others like them inflict on people who struggle simply to afford electricity and other sources of needed energy? Increased economic activity is one of the ways to improve quality of life for people in America and across the globe, but there will be less access to jobs, hospitals, schools and businesses if excessive carbon emissions regulations and other such schemes are enacted.
Perhaps this is why the top leaders of countries such as China and India are skipping the summit. These countries have some of the largest populations, segments of which do not have reliable access to energy, and emit much of the world’s carbon. Their absence from this week’s Climate Summit is telling.
Instead of being a “Messenger of Peace,” DiCaprio should aim to be a Messenger of the Market. The free market can improve peoples’ lives, create opportunity and prosperity and simultaneously help with stewarding the environment. That idea probably wouldn’t mesh well with DiCaprio’s progressive inklings, but it would actually help people live better lives.

Didn't he die in the icy atlantic at one point.
 

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Hopefully our next generation is not this dumb. Geez, you people are ignorant.
 

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It's funny how people were smarter than you guys 5-6 decades ago. It's amazing the power of money and influence on the retard public. I'll continue listening to scientists and not clowns named festeringZit or Sheriff Joe. Lmao.

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People have long suspected that human activity could change the local climate. For example, ancient Greeks and 19th-century Americans debated how cutting down forests might bring more rainfall to a region, or perhaps less. But there were larger shifts of climate that happened all by themselves. The discovery of ice ages in the distant past proved that climate could change radically over the entire globe, which seemed vastly beyond anything mere humans could provoke. Then what did cause global climate change — was it variations in the heat of the Sun? Volcanoes erupting clouds of smoke? The raising and lowering of mountain ranges, which diverted wind patterns and ocean currents? Or could it be changes in the composition of the air itself?

In 1896 a Swedish scientist published a new idea. As humanity burned fossil fuels such as coal, which added carbon dioxide gas to the Earth's atmosphere, we would raise the planet's average temperature. This "greenhouse effect" was only one of many speculations about climate change, however, and not the most plausible. Scientists found technical reasons to argue that our emissions could not change the climate. Indeed most thought it was obvious that puny humanity could never affect the vast climate cycles, which were governed by a benign "balance of nature." In any case major change seemed impossible except over tens of thousands of years.
In the 1930s, people realized that the United States and North Atlantic region had warmed significantly during the previous half-century. Scientists supposed this was just a phase of some mild natural cycle, with unknown causes. Only one lone voice, the amateur G.S. Callendar, insisted that greenhouse warming was on the way. Whatever the cause of warming, everyone thought that if it happened to continue for the next few centuries, so much the better.


In the 1950s, Callendar's claims provoked a few scientists to look into the question with improved techniques and calculations. What made that possible was a sharp increase of government funding, especially from military agencies with Cold War concerns about the weather and the seas. The new studies showed that, contrary to earlier crude estimates, carbon dioxide could indeed build up in the atmosphere and should bring warming. Painstaking measurements drove home the point in 1960 by showing that the level of the gas was in fact rising, year by year.


Over the next decade a few scientists devised simple mathematical models of the climate, and turned up feedbacks that could make the system surprisingly variable. Others figured out ingenious ways to retrieve past temperatures by studying ancient pollens and fossil shells. It appeared that grave climate change could happen, and in the past had happened, within as little as a few centuries. This finding was reinforced by computer models of the general circulation of the atmosphere, the fruit of a long effort to learn how to predict (and perhaps even deliberately change) the weather. Calculations made in the late 1960s suggested that average temperatures would rise a few degrees within the next century. But the next century seemed far off, and the models were preliminary. Groups of scientists that reviewed the calculations found them plausible but saw no need for any policy action, aside from putting more effort into research to find out for sure what was happening.


In the early 1970s, the rise of environmentalism raised public doubts about the benefits of human activity for the planet. Curiosity about climate turned into anxious concern. Alongside the greenhouse effect, some scientists pointed out that human activity was putting dust and smog particles into the atmosphere, where they could block sunlight and cool the world. Moreover, analysis of Northern Hemisphere weather statistics showed that a cooling trend had begun in the 1940s. The mass media (to the limited extent they covered the issue) were confused, sometimes predicting a balmy globe with coastal areas flooded as the ice caps melted, sometimes warning of the prospect of a catastrophic new ice age. Study panels, first in the U.S. and then elsewhere, began to warn that one or another kind of future climate change might pose a severe threat. The only thing most scientists agreed on was that they scarcely understood the climate system, and much more research was needed. Research activity did accelerate, including huge data-gathering schemes that mobilized international fleets of oceanographic ships and orbiting satellites.


Earlier scientists had sought a single master-key to climate, but now they were coming to understand that climate is an intricate system responding to a great many influences. Volcanic eruptions and solar variations were still plausible causes of change, and some argued these would swamp any effects of human activities. Even subtle changes in the Earth's orbit could make a difference. To the surprise of many, studies of ancient climates showed that astronomical cycles had partly set the timing of the ice ages. Apparently the climate was so delicately balanced that almost any small perturbation might set off a great shift. According to the new "chaos" theories, in such a system a shift might even come all by itself — and suddenly. Support for the idea came from ice cores arduously drilled from the Greenland ice sheet. They showed large and disconcertingly abrupt temperature jumps in the past.


Greatly improved computer models began to suggest how such jumps could happen, for example through a change in the circulation of ocean currents. Experts predicted droughts, storms, rising sea levels, and other disasters. A few politicians began to suspect there might be a public issue here. However, the modelers had to make many arbitrary assumptions about clouds and the like, and reputable scientists disputed the reliability of the results. Others pointed out how little was known about the way living ecosystems interact with climate and the atmosphere. They argued, for example, over the effects of agriculture and deforestation in adding or subtracting carbon dioxide from the air. One thing the scientists agreed on was the need for a more coherent research program. But the research remained disorganized, and funding grew only in irregular surges. The effort was dispersed among many different scientific fields, each with something different to say about climate change.


One unexpected discovery was that the level of certain other gases was rising, which would add seriously to global warming. Some of these gases also degraded the atmosphere's protective ozone layer, and the news inflamed public worries about the fragility of the atmosphere. Moreover, by the late 1970s global temperatures had begun to rise again. Many climate scientists had become convinced that the rise was likely to continue as greenhouse gases accumulated. By around 2000, some predicted, an unprecedented global warming would become apparent. Their worries first caught wide public attention in the summer of 1988, the hottest on record till then. (Most since then have been hotter.) An international meeting of scientists warned that the world should take active steps to cut greenhouse gas emissions.


The response was vehement. Corporations and individuals who opposed all government regulation began to spend many millions of dollars on lobbying, advertising, and "reports" that mimicked scientific publications, in an effort to convince people that there was no problem at all. Environmental groups, less wealthy but more enthusiastic, helped politicize the issue with urgent cries of alarm. But the many scientific uncertainties, and the sheer complexity of climate, made room for limitless debate over what actions, if any, governments should take.

http://www.aip.org/history/climate/summary.htm
 

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Teaming up with Sheriff Joe. You must feel so proud of yourself, lol. What a loser.
 

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