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You can travel to the Arctic, Greenland or Antarctica and view the loss of ice for yourself but if that is not possible there are both individuals and organizations who keep track over long periods of time and some of that is even on film. One example in which I personally know some of those involved in such studies is the 2012 film "Chasing Ice" and nothing about those I know leads me to believe they would ever be a part of any slant, let alone hoax. One fellow I know was barely interested in the results being filmed and went only to see how setting up automated cameras to survive and function in severe weather conditions for many years was accomplished. To systematically write all such work off as part of a hoax or "vested interest" is agenda-ridden in itself. You seem to already know the outcome before you begin to "research". That's not Science. It';s not accurate nor responsible. I'm not attacking you. I'm asking you to examine your own biases as all of us must do in any honest quest for a sense of reality. You quoted a Taoist proverb asking the question - "What did your (or my) face look like before your grandparents (or my grandparents) were born?" and if we are talking literally about one's appearance then I would answer "That remains to be seen since the factors that shape that appearance are not yet accomplished fact, only diverse possibilities of Nature and Nurture". This is obviously so since your grandchildren wont have any faces, won't exist, should you or your children not have offspring for any of a wide variety of reasons. I would assume that given that reality one would spend some considerable effort in actually weighing the reality of a global threat, that despite differing numbers attributed by differing news sources for almost a century now, in that century the central theme remains solid and growing stronger and more evident. FWIW the residents of Pompeii had little to go on to assess the risk of their location since none of them had direct experience with volcanoes. Most likely had no indirect experience either. Maybe such information might have been available had not numerous libraries like that of Alexandria been burned as "blasphemy". Those residents of Pompeii even then, had libraries not been destroyed, may still have trusted far more in "the Will of the Gods" than Science. Noting similarities between you and those who chose not to leave immediately upon the first rumblings is not a personal attack any more than I am attacking those residents. They simply lacked information and frame of reference and assumed tomorrow would be just like today. Things change. |
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Regarding ice: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard...er-than-losses https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamesta.../#5642c5702892 https://www.independent.co.uk/news/s...s-8804911.html https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...-FREE-now.html “I've had a lot of worries in my life, most of which never happened.” ― Mark Twain |
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@ChuangTzu I don't really want to get involved in this conversation, but its worth pointing out that you are not going to get a complete picture if you focus on single details such as the amount of ice. The ecological destruction has been going on a long time, affects most (All?) ecosystems and its well documented that species are vanishing faster then they can be described. To be entirely blunt, your quotes while they can be nice are not remotely relevant to this topic and are not helpful to post. If you want some pointers to gain a broader perspective, look at how much the Sahara grew after the resources were stripped during colonization (Around 4 times the previous size), check out the massive destruction in tropical zones for lumber and cattle, the pacific gyre garbage patch, the amount of damage the use of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) have done on the ozone layer or even the massive deer overpopulation problems in the states when the native predators were largely wiped out.
Also, if you cherry pick old articles, you may not get relevant results. Environmental science moves quickly and new data is constantly being gathered and analyzed. For example see: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard...m-announcement https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/im...s-2018-minimum https://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/ However again, don't focus on individual details. An ecosystem consists of many related moving parts which rely and effect each other, the disappearance of a single component could have wide reaching consequences. |
Go back through this thread and the other similar threads, I am not focusing on singular details. The large picture gives much more relevant and truthful information. Interesting that you felt the need to qualify the relevance of the quotes, that implied that you did not understand them.
So here's two more: "Things are exactly as they should be."---Taoist/Zen Proverb. "All that's left to do in this moment is laugh."---Taoist/Zen Proverb PS: discussions like this thread are very important and unfortunately increasingly rare. |
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You can define Science however you like in your own mind but as soon as you use the terminology to communicate to others there is only one definition and while it isn't solely Western and depends considerably on Eastern work (especially Indian and Chinese) Science hasdn't been regional for almost 2 centuries. It is based on the same precepts everywhere since -Objective, Repeatable and falsifiable data collection and peer review, not Taoist or any other philosophy, though none of this has any bearing whatsoever on the validity (or hoax) of the conclusion that humans are having profound and unprecedented affects on Global Climate, especially since the Industrial Revolution and it is accelerating. Quote:
I'm extremely glad you chose to quote NASA (and first at that) since it is NASAs position that GLOBALLY climate change is powerfully affected by human activity and has resulted in increasing levels of temperature globally on average. This finding in Antarctica was not meant to contradict that Global view and demonstrates perfectly that scientists are not afraid to publish data that may be misconstrued, either by accident or agenda, as it was in the next three articles you linked, thus poking a large hole in Hoax Theory. As for the fourth link I saw no citation for the North Pole on the whole gaining ice cover which is actually what I have come to expect from dailymail.uk, agenda-ridden sensationalist lies and half-truths that do not stand up to scrutiny. For just one reference - See https://www.theguardian.com/technolo...ce-for-website If anything those articles linked are evidence FOR the validity of the conclusion that temperatures are rising on average and humans are the cause of the deflection from the normal swing. |
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You should reference Zhang Cheng, he lived during one of China's golden ages (Han Dynasty) was an astronomer, mathematician, engineer, geographer and inventor (and as most of the scientists were he was also a Taoist, which is the worlds oldest science). He is only one of many thousands of scientists from ancient China. Ref: http://people.chinesecio.com/en/arti...tent_81237.htm Don't forget I am not disagreeing that the climate is changing, this is a fact that is constantly in motion, and happens in predictable cycles. The disagreement is that this change is man made. Here is a question: What is the difference between the doomsday cults/radical Christians who believe that the world will end on a specific day, month or year (then have to pick another day, month, year when it doesn't) and the doomsday scientists who say the world will end by a certain year/decade etc... and then have to revise and postpone those dates? The planet is remarkably self correcting/self healing as are humans. Look at Chernobyl, after approx. three decades life is returning to that area, animals are being born (normally), trees regrowing, plants growing etc..., radiation levels are still too high for safe human habitation, but in time that will correct itself as well. The earth can heal itself, just takes time. Another thought, there is an assumption with the current climate change agenda that the CO2 levels are currently too high, and getting higher. This is based on a further assumption/hypothesis that there is an optimal level of CO2. What is the optimal level, how do we know what is optimal, who can say that we are not returning to an optimal level and the current and prior levels were sub optimal? How is man to determine if ice ages are bad or a warm tropical planet is bad? We have had both many times in the past, in fact, the earth constantly fluctuates between the two with many divisions and gradations in between. Ice age, mini ice age, tropical earth, sub tropical earth, massive amounts of hazardous chemicals in the air, to lower levels etc... Someone mentioned the Sahara desert as an example of climate change in this thread, however, this is flawed because approx. 6,000 years ago the Sahara desert was wet and tropical in nature, long before man invented the apparent machinery to destroy the climate. The Gobi desert in China has been growing steadily for thousands of years as well. These are examples of why mankind should pray for and be happy whenever it rains, rain is a blessing for mankind and all life, we are after all on a wet living planet. |
Hello again Chuang. I just woke up and began my daily ritual of checking email and logging in to the many forums to which I subscribe when I came across this response from you that if not the first time, then at least a standout for a long time that feels like an actual, forthright conversation instead of what seems to me a litany of status quo agenda driven spin doctoring. So first I want to thank you for that. It is appreciated and gives me a sense of who you are, a real person who can't be defined by any one pigeon hole spouting party line like some clone, a person I could easily befriend and enjoy long conversations on a wide variety of subjects.
The second thing I want to do is get myself a potent cup of coffee, wake up and give your thoughtful response the consideration it deserves. It may get long so it might only serve this thread for a very few, possibly just you and I but I'll let those chips fall where they may. Be right back... OK I'm back, enjoying my coffee and want to begin with just a wee bit of background as I imagine my posts engender a view of my perspective as almost totally one of Science and Math, cold and logical as that is a very large part of where I came from and who I am BUT I should point out that I am also 72 years old and therefore "a Child of The Sixties" when an explosion of Eastern influence took place and I was exposed to a great deal of Eastern Philosophy and looked deeper despite the untold number of girls who threw the I Ching for me with about as much effect as Astrology (also rather big for many back then, but not me). I did come away with respect for many parts and especially those closest to The Tao, not so much in it's religious application, but in it's metaphysical applications. I have had some success with acupuncture but it doesn't convince me Chi exists. I do see Yin/Yang around me a lot and at many levels but I am also aware that at the most fundamental level had such a balance been perfect, matter and anti-matter would have had a zero-sum ending and our Universe would never have materialized. I was enthralled by Carl Sagan's take on The Brahman Dream, where a day to Lord Brahma is roughly 9 Billion Years and his dream will last 100 of his years then dissolve while others dream their own Cosmic Dreams, an early take on the so-called Multi-Verse. A Muslim girlfriend of mine was fond of calling me "her zen atheist". Maybe that explains something but the point is I am not completely ignorant of, nor derisive of what is referred to as "Eastern Philosophy". For me problems arise when there is conflict between the Empirical and the Intuitive which I think is why Science is no longer equivalent to Philosophy and in fact, superior as a methodology at arriving at results consistent with reality. So, without further preface, let's begin... Quote:
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Therefore it is provable that there is considerable difference between the end point of "the arrow of climate" given those two scenarios. To continue to deny that is simply illogical and wrong... at the very least inadvisable considering the consequences. Frankly I don't care to argue whether New York will suffer 3 feet or 3 meters of rising ocean levels whether by 2030 or 2042. Either condition is catastrophic. Quote:
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https://www.asiasentinel.com/society...2040-doomsday/ grain of salt source https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/wei...Date-2200-Life Does this hysteria not harm the intention of causing change? Quote:
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hello dudes/dudettes.
temperatures here at finland have been at their highest point ever. (from the beginning of temperature measurements.) couple of days ago temperature were 21 celsius (that is 69.8 fahrenheit) when it should have been close to freezing, 0 celcius (that is 32.0 fahrenheit) i dont know if it is bcus global warming, but it is odd. winters here at finland are getting shorter imo. |
Bill Gates wrote recently wrote an interesting blog post*. He has some numbers relating to various industries and their impacts on climate change.
I don't know why, but I'm surprised by the methane produced by cattle. I guess my vegan friends totally told me so. * https://www.gatesnotes.com/Energy/My...climate-change |
Cattle and rice paddies are both huge sources of methane. Landfill sites too, but there is a solution for those, which is to put piping in and bleed off the gas for fuel. The resultant CO2 is less of a greenhouse gas than the methane was.
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If you have any serious interest in the subject of what an individual can do about Global Climate Change, after a short quote, I'll post a link tyo a reasonable proposal.
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Have fun with these charts...USA has some great air quality, some of the best in the world!
World Economic Forum https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2015/...-cleanest-air/ World Health Organization Ambient air pollution http://www.who.int/gho/phe/outdoor_air_pollution/en/ World Health Organization Concentrations of fine particulate matter http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.sdg.11-6-viz?lang=en |
Thanks ChuangTzu, that's great news and one that can be seen with one's own eyes if you've lived long enough to travel around the country in the 60s and 70s. It is really easy to view everyone as being pretty much like ourselves and everywhere/everytime being like it is near our homes, but then that'd exactly what "provincial" implies.
For a few years I lived in the country in the Rocky Mountains on 140 acres my brother and I bought in 1972. In 1970 he moved out there and I drove cross-country to visit. I could always tell when I was approaching a larger city but I wasn't prepared for the shock that was St. Louis at the time. The air was ORANGE! and the few people that I saw walking around all wore surgical masks or some kind of breathing or filtering apparatus. Later thinking of that would remind me of the dystopia pictured in HalfLife 2 but far worse. It made me wonder why anyone would...COULD live there and why they'd want to. In 1973 I took a job ranching for my good neighbor and friend, Jerry and he had a hilarious caricature poster of what the EPA's idea of a proper Cowboy should be. He wore a helmet with all manner of gadgets on it instead of a cowboy hat and the horse was covered in gear especially a wrap-around bumper. I laughed really loudly when I saw it (which was greeted with an appreciative smile by Jerry) which prompted a mild tirade about how silly and out-of-touch the EPA was. I agreed that they were but that it was an "illness of perspective" that we all must rise above if we can manage. He asked what I meant and was absolutely astounded and disbelieving when I told him that he had no clue how bad some situations were outside the realm of clean air and water we enjoyed (and often took for granted) in our little part of Western Colorado. There were towns near mining operations that were literally uninhabitable and further away, like in Cleveland, Ohio, there were rivers that had caught fire many times from being so polluted by industrial waste. I'm sure the inhabitants along those rivers were worried that tight regulations on dumping industrial waste in the river would cause them to cut back if not close down and that tghe area would be decimated economically and in what would feel like a single day the plants would close down, thousands would be out of work and the community would evaporate leaving only a derelict few while the pollution of the rivers was slow and incremental as well as seeming at worst, a lesser of evils. Those rivers haven't caught fire in decades and St Louis all but sparkles. The EPA did that and thankfully cowboys still get to wear cloth or straw hats. Checks and Balances is hugely important and these days it is far out of whack in ways that would shock the Founding Fathers. The stuffing of the Supreme Court and the vast powers of Corporations that can often exceed entire Nations was impossible to imagine in 1776 but we must live in it and deal with it since it appears focus on The Bottom Line is often so strong that it ignores growing threats. Before even the changes of the Industrial Age there was similar occurrence just because cities grew and nobody realized the lack of Community Hygeine including waste disposal and clean air and water would be a breeding ground for The Black Death and later Influenza. It wasn't apparently enough that it was unimaginably noxious. Millions had to die first. Hopefully enough of us have learned from that to not repeat that mistake of just looking around what's close and thinking "Hey. It's not so bad here." It's all connected. |
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