I wish global warming was real.........But it's not!

HarperCons

Council Member
Oct 18, 2015
1,865
74
48
There is absolutely no proof anywhere that any observed climate change has any relation to CO2 content added into the air by man. It's a theory which has not been able to predict with any accuracy any future events to date which tends to make me think it is not a very good theory if not a false one. It's only the ecotard fanatics which stick to it and worship it as if it was a god. It's a good thing climate scientists identify them self as such. It makes it easier to distinguish them from real ones. Sort of like Sanitation Engineer vs an Engineer.

you just literally said there is no proof CO2 has any relation to global warming... :lol:

The 97.?% of scientists confirming global warming is bullshît....
It's only 97.?% of those who bothered to answer the survey which is only 79 respondents of 3,946 who were asked to respond....

Read more..with your eyes and mind open if it's possible for you....
Joseph Bast and Roy Spencer: The Myth of the Climate Change '97%' - WSJ

This is as far as I'll go arguing with a fool.....Now in any more interaction I will continue ridiculing you if you continue on this path!

i don't care about some survey or some percentage of scientists who believe AGW, that may or may not be accurate. the fact is the vast majority of scientists know humans are the cause of global warming, through various studies.

Climate scientist...WTF is a climate scientist. Who offers degrees in climate science?
why do you ask the dumbest questions?
 

waldo

House Member
Oct 19, 2009
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36
oh my! A denier pity-party thread! The echo in here is strong... is deep!
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
you just literally said there is no proof CO2 has any relation to global warming... :lol:



i don't care about some survey or some percentage of scientists who believe AGW, that may or may not be accurate. the fact is the vast majority of scientists know humans are the cause of global warming, through various studies.



why do you ask the dumbest questions?
Mathematics has never been your strong point huh?
79 out of 3,947 scientist is what? 2%?......and 27 % of that is a vast majority?

Boy....is that koolaid ever strong..............

oh my! A denier pity-party thread! The echo in here is strong... is deep!
The bullshîtter is back
 

HarperCons

Council Member
Oct 18, 2015
1,865
74
48
Mathematics has never been your strong point huh?
79 out of 3,947 scientist is what? 2%?......and 27 % of that is a vast majority?

Boy....is that koolaid ever strong..............


The bullshîtter is back
is this guy really trying to argue right now that most scientists don't agree with AGW?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,211
14,250
113
Low Earth Orbit
Wow, a graph. Want to see a graph covering more than 160 years? One that shows us both warmer and cooler than today?
 

waldo

House Member
Oct 19, 2009
3,042
0
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Wow, a graph. Want to see a graph covering more than 160 years? One that shows us both warmer and cooler than today?

danger, danger! You're way too close to what you perpetually run away from... you know, your repeated refusal to draw association and attribution causal ties between your holy grail, the Holocene Optimum, and today's relatively recent warming.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,211
14,250
113
Low Earth Orbit
This is where you ignorance shines bright like the sun. You are confusing the Holocene epoch with Holocene optimum which was a short time during the Holocene.

When it comes to the epoch, we are still short of average post maunder minimum which was the coldest point in the past 12,000 years.

You drywallers make me laugh.
 

waldo

House Member
Oct 19, 2009
3,042
0
36
This is where you ignorance shines bright like the sun. You are confusing the Holocene epoch with Holocene optimum which was a short time during the Holocene.

When it comes to the epoch, we are still short of average post maunder minimum which was the coldest point in the past 12,000 years.

another run away, run away! You were all about the Optimum... you can dance your dance but you're still refusing to address just how you're attempting to draw associations/attributions between "whatever the hell period in the long distant past you want to dick around with" and today's relatively recent warming. Run away, run away dancingMan!

You drywallers make me laugh.

be all you can be dancingMan!
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
28,506
8,108
113
B.C.
another run away, run away! You were all about the Optimum... you can dance your dance but you're still refusing to address just how you're attempting to draw associations/attributions between "whatever the hell period in the long distant past you want to dick around with" and today's relatively recent warming. Run away, run away dancingMan!



be all you can be dancingMan!
Lets just say you are right and the climate is changing ,what is giving more of our money to government going to do to stop this ? And why can't they do it in their present budgets ?
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
Arrrgggghhh More charts from the usual dumb suspects.......as if anyone looks at them but stupid ideologues...

But I must say that since Yesterday.......

..................................................


I must say that I now have found the light and believe......
Ah Believe.....lordy, Ah Believe......Al Gore and Suzuki be praised and so his minions and sheeple Flossy and Waldo et al

Today anyways............

............





Next week.........? who knows?
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,908
1,906
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So much for global warming! As winter weather sweeps in, 'snow lover' reveals there's MORE of the white stuff left on Scottish mountains than there has been in 21 years

Iain Cameron uses his free time to count the number of snow patches left on mountains from the previous winter

The amateur snow researcher's data is compiled and published in the prestigious Royal Meteorological Journal

He has recorded an average of between six to 12 patches of snow each year since he started his research in 1994

But this year Mr Cameron, who works with a team of volunteers, noted 73 spots had survived from winter 2014


By Stephanie Linning for MailOnline
28 November 2015
Daily Mail

There were bumper levels of snow on Scottish mountains over the last 12 months, according to one enthusiast.

Amateur snow researcher Iain Cameron, 42, uses his free time to count the number of snow patches left on mountaintops from the previous winter.

His data is compiled and published in the prestigious Royal Meteorological Journal.


Stunning: A large snow patch recorded above Loch Avon in the Cairngorms, with two volunteers pictured right

Dedicated: Enthusiast Iain Cameron stands beneath an impressive snow patch seen on Creag Meagaidh in the Cairngorms

Bumper year: Some of the team seen photographing a patch at Geal-Charn in the Cairngorms, which has survived since last winter

Mr Cameron, an environmental manager for an aerospace company, said he has recorded an average of between six to 12 patches of snow since his records started in 1994.

But this year Mr Cameron, who works with a team of volunteers, noted 73 spots had survived from winter 2014.


The team tallied 33 individual patches across the Ben Nevis range, 17 across the Cairngorms, 12 in the north-west Highlands, three on Ben Alder, and eight near Loch Laggan.

And in the Grey Corries range in the far north, a sole surviving patch was recorded on Stob Coire an Laoigh.


Mr Cameron said: 'This year we counted 73 remaining patches across the whole of Scotland. It's the most we've seen since 1994, 21 years ago, which was quite an exceptional year.


'The only year which came near this year's figure was in 2000 where we totalled 41 surviving patches, but that's still far, far fewer than we recorded this year.


Natural beauty: Mr Cameron, an environmental manager for an aerospace company, works with a team of fellow enthusiasts


Read more: Snow researcher Iain Cameron reveals there's MORE on the Scottish mountains than in 21 years | Daily Mail Online
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
36
So much for global warming! As winter weather sweeps in, 'snow lover' reveals there's MORE of the white stuff left on Scottish mountains than there has been in 21 years

Iain Cameron uses his free time to count the number of snow patches left on mountains from the previous winter

The amateur snow researcher's data is compiled and published in the prestigious Royal Meteorological Journal

He has recorded an average of between six to 12 patches of snow each year since he started his research in 1994

But this year Mr Cameron, who works with a team of volunteers, noted 73 spots had survived from winter 2014


By Stephanie Linning for MailOnline
28 November 2015
Daily Mail

There were bumper levels of snow on Scottish mountains over the last 12 months, according to one enthusiast.

Amateur snow researcher Iain Cameron, 42, uses his free time to count the number of snow patches left on mountaintops from the previous winter.

His data is compiled and published in the prestigious Royal Meteorological Journal.


Stunning: A large snow patch recorded above Loch Avon in the Cairngorms, with two volunteers pictured right

Dedicated: Enthusiast Iain Cameron stands beneath an impressive snow patch seen on Creag Meagaidh in the Cairngorms

Bumper year: Some of the team seen photographing a patch at Geal-Charn in the Cairngorms, which has survived since last winter

Mr Cameron, an environmental manager for an aerospace company, said he has recorded an average of between six to 12 patches of snow since his records started in 1994.

But this year Mr Cameron, who works with a team of volunteers, noted 73 spots had survived from winter 2014.


The team tallied 33 individual patches across the Ben Nevis range, 17 across the Cairngorms, 12 in the north-west Highlands, three on Ben Alder, and eight near Loch Laggan.

And in the Grey Corries range in the far north, a sole surviving patch was recorded on Stob Coire an Laoigh.


Mr Cameron said: 'This year we counted 73 remaining patches across the whole of Scotland. It's the most we've seen since 1994, 21 years ago, which was quite an exceptional year.


'The only year which came near this year's figure was in 2000 where we totalled 41 surviving patches, but that's still far, far fewer than we recorded this year.


Natural beauty: Mr Cameron, an environmental manager for an aerospace company, works with a team of fellow enthusiasts


Read more: Snow researcher Iain Cameron reveals there's MORE on the Scottish mountains than in 21 years | Daily Mail Online
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Hmmm. Could be the very beginning of the next continental glacier to speed out over northern Europe. It's got to start somewhere.

A renewed ice advance is one of the corollaries of global warming. The Gulf Stream is deflected westward by the salinity of the Mediterranean outflow and Scandinavia, Britain get colder and colder until the next ice advance in the Northern hemisphere starts there.
 
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