B
Bill Sloman
OK, tell me who these "same people" are.
"The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2006/sep/19/ethicalliving.g2
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/The_Advancement_of_Sound_Science_Coalition
And show me the money.
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Exxon_Mobil
Oh, that's right -- you actually don't have even the slightest
semblance of a fact to back up your vague accusations.
Pity about that.
Sounds like a fallacy to me.
The fallacy is all yours.
Yet you can't show how.
I just did.
You can't help but go for the guilt-by-association semantic tarbrush,
eh?
The guilt is perfectly real, and well-established.
It's cheap and desperate,
It might be if it were wrong. It isn't.
and more importantly when you can't cite the specifics chapter and verse people can smell the desperation.
Since I've cited specifics from the start, which you were too dim to
recognise, it's your desperation that's getting on the nose.
In fact, it's stupid for you to even do that when you should know
that the central question of CAGW is the sensitivity number. Everyone
with any skin in the game at all knows that, and that is so unambiguous
all you have to do is state a real in the range 0.5 to 6 in this
context and everyone knows precisely what is referenced.
But you don't. And the 0.5 to 6 is way too high these days
I'll post a short paragraph as a disqualifier:
In 2007 the IPCC reported that scientists were more confident than
ever that humans were changing the climate. Although onlya small
fraction of the predicted warming had happened so far, effects were
already becoming visible in some regions -- more deadly heat waves,
stronger floods and droughts, heat-related changes in theranges and
behavior of sensitive species.
Poppycock. Those types of claims are of exactly the ilk I am speaking.
Even were there effects based on warming of the climate, they don't
speak to the *cause* of the warming, which is the question.
There's no question about the cause of the warming. If you want to
repeal the laws of physics to open the field to other potential
causes, feel free to open negotiations with the deity of your choice,
but don't expect to be taken seriously before you've established
contact.
Catastrophic. Anthropogenic. Global. Warming. OK, I do deny the
catastrophe, as would any sane person who doesn't buy into a 3+ degree
sensitivity number.
By coincidence, since you don't appear to be remotely sane.
Your theory, by the way, seems to indicate that positive feedback
dominates the climate system. Even if you could convince me that we
understand the powerfully complex and chaotic climate system enough to
predict the action of doubling the concentration of a single trace
gas, you'd still have a hard time convincing me. Because I know one
thing -- if positive feedback could cause such a system to spin out of
control, the system would not be nearly so stable as it has been.
Positive feedback is very rare in nature, and for obvious reasons.
Sure. We've only had an alternation of ice ages and interglacials for
the last few million years. The positive feedback it takes to get the
tiny Milankovitch changes in insolation to flip the average global
temperature by about 4K are quite dramatic, and self-limiting, since
the ice cover in the Northern Hemisphere can 't get down to the
equator, and hasn't vanished entirely (yet).
It's an interesting story and we've only recently started to get a
grip on exactly what happened at the end of the most recent ice age.
<snipped more irrelevant garbage>