And then Fox News will do a segment where they forgo any scientific or peer-reviewed research and instead point at some snow and go "See?! Global warming doesn't exist because it's cold right now!"
Ah. In that case they've got it backwards; volcanoes usually cause temporary pauses in warming because their plumes tend to be better at reflecting solar radiation into space than trapping heat in the atmosphere. The trend is usually reestablished within a few years as if nothing happened though.The White Hunter said:No the suggestion they tend to put forth is that the volcanoe does more damage than a few weeks of human air travel, which is absolutely not the case, by a few orders of magnitude.
Once people's feet get wet, things will get done.Floppertje said:You are naive my friend. just because we have the ability to reverse it, doesn't mean the political or societal will exists. Do you think people would give up their cars and airplanes and power stations to change something that's not all that tangible? I mean, if you're in a cage with a lion, you'll give up your steak dinner, but here you can't see the lion coming, and by the time you do, it's too late.Nimcha said:The UN is a political organisation so this guy hyperboles it a bit, but yeah it's not a surprise that whatever's going on is not going to just magically stop.
I see no reason to worry though. If we can cause it, we can reverse it.
I will then keep in mind for all future discussions that dick jokes = elegance.Zykon TheLich said:Kind of, what it comes down to is do you want a dick up the ass or 12? Would you at least like some lube? And would you prefer your fucking to come from a human dong or an elephant?Steve the Pocket said:Whenever someone comes out with stuff like this I want to ask them outright, "So are we just fucked at this point no matter what we do, or is there a deadline we ought to be aiming for?"
Edit: I see someone got in before me, but I feel a phrased things far more elegantly.
And that's the point where it's too late. Of course people's feet are already getting wet. But that's in places like Bangladesh and who cares about poor people? I'd guess that once places like New York and London start to feel damp, they'll take some half-assed preventative measures (and paint anyone who wants to do more as a hippy-communist)rather than implement structural changes. Apart from the political shenanigans, it's going to take more than Europe and the US to get aboard (no pun intended), you'll need places like Russia, China and India too, and they're even less concerned with the environment than we are.Nimcha said:Once people's feet get wet, things will get done.Floppertje said:You are naive my friend. just because we have the ability to reverse it, doesn't mean the political or societal will exists. Do you think people would give up their cars and airplanes and power stations to change something that's not all that tangible? I mean, if you're in a cage with a lion, you'll give up your steak dinner, but here you can't see the lion coming, and by the time you do, it's too late.Nimcha said:The UN is a political organisation so this guy hyperboles it a bit, but yeah it's not a surprise that whatever's going on is not going to just magically stop.
I see no reason to worry though. If we can cause it, we can reverse it.
Or if people start to lose money.
This pretty much sums up my thinking as well. People are so afraid of change even though we have no idea how this change will affect things. In the long run, humanity really isn't any more or less important than the millions of other species that have come before, during and after.Agayek said:I'm really not seeing the problem with large climate change/global warming. Well, to be more accurate, I really can't see why people keep kicking up a fuss over it. We'll either adapt to it like everything else on Earth will, or we'll die. Once that's done, the Earth will normalize and something vaguely like us may evolve once more, or something will evolve to take our place as the apex species in the warmer and wetter climate (woo, dinosaurs making a comeback!).
It's really not something to be overly worried about.
No. They've been fed This [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_Daiichi_nuclear_disaster]. It doesn't matter that the only fatalities were due to the earthquake and the tsunami. The idea[/i] is scary and we could all be radioactive!Jupiter065 said:Electricity production causes 1/3 of the greenhouse gas production, with Coal being the biggest offender and Natural Gas being a fairly close second (especially if you factor in methane leaks). If we switched every coal and natural gas plant to nuclear (as France did, in the same time frame as France did) this problem would be solved.
And if you think nuclear is worse in any metric than coal or natural gas (other than being slightly more expensive overall), then you've been fed some bad information.
The thing they also miss is that even if they were right and global warming is largely a result of natural causes, we're still royally fucked if we don't do anything about it, and there's a good possibility that a lot of people will die before things settle down. Smart people would want to do something about that regardless of the cause.Adam Jensen said:What climate skeptics fail to realize is that NOBODY WANTS THIS TO BE REAL! But it is. So instead of denying that the problem exists we should do something about it.
ObsidianJones said:No. They've been fed This [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_Daiichi_nuclear_disaster]. It doesn't matter that the only fatalities were due to the earthquake and the tsunami. The idea[/i] is scary and we could all be radioactive!
Or Terrorists [http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/indian-point-vulnerable-terror-attack-report-article-1.1428120]! They'll have a nuclear bomb that we can never get rid of.
For real.