If it's all so corrupt and evil and insidious, why don't we have a coherent climate policy?
This is totally untrue, ridiculous and moronic for you to even post. Nobody is suggesting any serious policy that would do anything remotely like that. It's pretty obvious who has been duped, and it isn't those that accept the science.We don't have a coherent climate policy because some Americans haven't been dumbed down enough to miss the implications of any proposed method of dealing with anthropogenic global warming.
All the proposed solutions aim at returning Americans back to pre-industrial living standards and technology, with some notable exceptions, like Al Gore, who are exempt.
So, are you willing to give up heating fuel, electricity, and running water yet? If so, how are you still posting on TOL?
Gee, you're apparently unable to read and understand scientific information. Yes we've gone beyond the point of no return for SOME amount of warming for thousands of years. That doesn't mean that reducing emissions will not reduce the amount of warming in the future. In fact what you just posted should ENCOURAGE you to reduce emissions because all emissions have a long lasting effect. So the less we produce the less long lasting impacts we will have.If all our efforts to change any possible anthropogenic global warming, using the proposed methods of restricting emissions, will not have any effect for one thousand years, then it is ridiculous to spend any effort today in restricting emissions.
Looks like you are not able to apply critical thinking to global warming policies.:wave2:This is totally untrue, ridiculous and moronic for you to even post. Nobody is suggesting any serious policy that would do anything remotely like that. It's pretty obvious who has been duped, and it isn't those that accept the science.
Man may be responsible for a change from in atmospheric carbon dioxide from .00028 to .00038 of the total atmosphere.
Carbon dioxide may be a contributing cause to global temperatures. This is determined by measurements that show the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere rises and falls near the same time that the global temperatures rise and fall. However, the measurements show that the rise and fall in carbon dioxide trail the global temperature rise and fall by years or decades,
Political proposals for dealing with the threat of global warming...
Sure can. Your fallacy is applying a Eustatic based sea level measurement as if it was a local mean sea level (LMSL). That has nothing to do with atmospheric ppm.Hurricane Katrina was responsible for only about 0.0004 of the depth of the Gulf of Mexico. So, the conclusion is that it wasn't anything to worry about? Can you see the fallacy here?
Surprise back:Well, let's take a look...
Surprise.
You are an idiot if you think that political proposals have nothing to do with global warming policies. Here, read what my post was about again:Have nothing to do with the fact of warming itself. Let's not get sidetracked.
Of course, you were probably just trying to sidetrack everyone.Looks like you are not able to apply critical thinking to global warming policies.:wave2:
BTW, if you don't know why a small increase in CO2 makes a relatively big increase in temperature, I'll explain it to you. Hint: check the absorbance spectrum of CO2.
Sure can. Your fallacy is applying a Eustatic based sea level measurement as if it was a local mean sea level (LMSL).
Surprise back:
Political proposals for dealing with the threat of global warming...
You are an idiot if you think that political proposals have nothing to do with global warming policies.
Here, read what my post was about again:
Looks like you are not able to apply critical thinking to global warming policies.
W. Thüne, "Wettersatelliten widerlegen Treibhaus-These", (weather satellites refute greenhouse theory) VDI-Nachrichten, Nov.11, 1998The CO2 molecules in particular, with their absorption bands at 2.8 µm, 4.5 µm, and 15 µm, which are as characteristic and as unchangeable as a human fingerprint, have no effect on the daily course of temperature, because they cannot close the "open radiation window" between 7 and 13 µm. This would be valid even if the earth were surrounded by an atmosphere of pure carbon dioxide".
You are showing yourself to be a con man.Nope. What it says is that incremental changes in non-linear systems can have huge effects. A change in four-ten thousands in the sea devastated New Orleans. But there's another surprise you don't get yet.
Your graph does not show whether CO2 follows or precedes temperature. It looks like the graph was designed to avoid showing that, so you pretty much proved my point.(Graph shows that it is)
(proxy data inferred from 400,000 years ago)
Unfortunately, it's not 400,000 years ago. It's now. And over the last 300 years, temps have followed CO2, possibly because anthropogenic forcing is more important over just a few centuries. You pretty much proved my point for me.
It is not as straightforward as you are trying to make it appear.Willy is a bit behind the curve on his science for that one:
Here's a graph showing the aborbtion spectra for various greenhouse gases:
The three big ones are water vapor, methane, and CO2. Notice that carbon dioxide strongly absorbs infrared rays at wavelengths where the other two major greenhouse gases don't absorb at all. So any addition in CO2 causes a direct rise in temperature by capturing thermal energy not trapped at all by the other two. The fact is, infrared radiation is spread over that spectrum. And the reason the atmosphere is heated by CO2, is that it blocks infrared at wavelengths the other main greenhouse gases do not.
"Earth radiation", the upwelling infrared radiation emitted by the earth's surface, has a maximum near 10 microns.
http://www.iitap.iastate.edu/gccourse/forcing/spectrum.html
If you don't read the literature, you're easy prey for anyone with a story to tell.
You are showing yourself to be a con man.
The average elevation of the city is currently 1 to 2 feet below sea level.
Your graph does not show whether CO2 follows or precedes temperature.
Here is another graph of the data you are using, but it shows whether temperature or CO2 precedes the other:
It is not as straightforward as you are trying to make it appear.
The total atmosphere plot shows that a narrow window (except for an oxygen spike) exists in the range of wavelengths near 10 microns.
The depth of the Gulf did not change, nor was it "tiny changes in non-linear systems" that swamped the levees.But the levees were above sea level. A tiny change in the depth of the Gulf, caused by Katrina swamped the levees and devastated the city. As you learned, tiny changes in non-linear systems can have profound effects. Do a little research and learn about it.
Can't tell in the misleading graph you used.Actually, as anyone can see, the rise in CO2 preceded the rise in temps. C'mon.
Does the change in CO2 come before or after the change in temperature?But here they did a little bait-and-switch on you. That's not a temp/CO2 graph. It's a rate-of-change. So it's sensitive to seasonal and even monthly variations, Picture a race in which we're trying to find which car has the highest top speed. So both start at a line and accelerate at a signal. The first car to cross the finish line is the fastest, right? That's what your rate of change graph is saying. But it's not necessarily true. Think about why.
The depth of the Gulf did not change
You are being disingenuous.
The wind causes the water to pile up higher than the ordinary sea level.
Originally Posted by The Barbarian View Post
But here they did a little bait-and-switch on you. That's not a temp/CO2 graph. It's a rate-of-change. So it's sensitive to seasonal and even monthly variations.
Picture a race in which we're trying to find which car has the highest top speed. So both start at a line and accelerate at a signal. The first car to cross the finish line is the fastest, right? That's what your rate of change graph is saying. But it's not necessarily true. Think about why.
Does the change in CO2 come before or after the change in temperature?
That's what a storm surge is. It's a change in the depth of the water. That's why it rises over low-lying land. In this case, a few meters out of thousands made all the difference.
I don't think denial will do you much good.
Just a few meters deeper. But that was enough.
The point, which you seem to have lost again, is that very small changes can make a big difference. Hence, an essentially complete blocking of the 3.75-4.0 micron band of infrared does indeed warm things up.
:rotfl:Originally Posted by The Barbarian View Post
Actually, as anyone can see, the rise in CO2 preceded the rise in temps. C'mon.
Can't tell in the misleading graph you used.
Barbarian observes:
Pretty close to the same, isn't it? But it comes before. It's why those guys switched the actual temp graph with a rate-of-change graph.
They didn't like what the data show.
It's also why your German denier neglected to tell you what the meaning of that "window" was, or why CO2 blocks infrared at wavelengths not blocked by water vapor or methane. Lying by not telling the whole truth.
You must think everyone is stupid.
You cannot have a rate-of-change without a change to measure.
You also cannot admit that the red line (temperature) comes before the black line (CO2).
Okay, I take it back. You don't think others are stupid, it is you who are stupid.But of course, your guys didn't just graph the temperature and CO2 concentration, because, as you saw, that shows temps following CO2.
Actually, as the graph shows, it's not temperature and CO2, The graph of temp and CO2 has the temps rising after CO2 rises. That's why they finagled it into "rate of change."
:doh:I hope you climate skeptic tea drinkers continue to enjoy the extreme weather you voted for. You voted for it, you scream for it, you GOT IT. I think you need more and more and more of it, until you boil like the frog in the pot. You are condemning us all to this, you Republican guys in the American heartland. It's good that you are getting the worst of it. Again, you voted for it! And most of you are proud of how you voted!
:doh:
So, you wish we had shut down all the power plants in the United States because it might have an effect on the weather 100 years from now? It certainly would not have had any effect on this year's weather.