Collarspace Discussion Forums


Home  Login  Search 

RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a successful future." --Leonardo DiCaprio, Actor


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a successful future." --Leonardo DiCaprio, Actor Page: <<   < prev  1 2 3 4 [5]
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 5:25:24 AM   
vincentML


Posts: 9980
Joined: 10/31/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth


The shame of it is, it will make the real job of controlling pollution and controlling the massive amount of carbon emission coming from the developing countries harder to corral, not easier. If they only came clean and acknowledge they lied, albeit for the always present 'good intent'; this could result in positive and truly global action. As it stands - its done nothing but polarize the sides further.


As I understand it the developing countries argue it is a form of neo-colonialism for the West to attempt to control and limit their (the BRIC's) manufacturing processes.

Vincent

_____________________________

vML

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. ~ MLK Jr.

(in reply to Mercnbeth)
Profile   Post #: 81
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 5:48:48 AM   
vincentML


Posts: 9980
Joined: 10/31/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: PenOnBeadedChain

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth
Well - you'd first have to provide one credited climatologist who can PROVE evidence of global warming. Not theorize it, not speculate, not form an opinion based upon data supporting that position, but disposing of other data that conflicts with their position.


See, as someone who has participated (and published) in peer-reviewed science and knows people in the climatology field, this is what I find so disheartening about the low level of understanding Americans have about what science even is.


Are we to be cowed into silence by your appeal to your own authority as "someone who has participated (and published) in peer-reviewed science and knows people in the climatology field?" Are we to quiver at your condescending and generalizing comments about our level of understanding? Ummmm.... nope. I will take a pass on those.

quote:

Mercnbeth, no one has ever "proven" the theory of gravity. It could turn out that planets and other heavenly bodies just suck, as some sort of compulsive habit (there's one people can have fun with here). Most philosphers will tell you, and rightly so, that no objective reality can be definitively established. The best we can do - and what scientists do every day - is develop theories, test them, generate evidence for or against those theories with every form of sensing and reasoning we possess as humans, and develop competing ones and test them.


But you fail to mention that the method of science requires the testing and rejecting of hypotheses with a certain degree of probability...oh say, maybe 95 -97% and not by summaries in which apparently data has been fudged before submission to political committees that ordered up the Science in the first place. Were any dissenting reports permitted? I don't think so.


quote:

This is what climate scientists have been doing for several decades now. The competing theories (solar forcing, random natural variation, interglacial cycle etc.), simply can't explain the sharp, quick increases we've seen as unprecedented (in human time) GHGs have built up in our atmosphere. This is why 97% of currently practicing climate scientists - and every major national and international science body - have concluded that humankind is driving this.


The rebuttal here is too easy. You know quite well that Science is not a process settled by majority vote.

The rest of your rant is just repeated condescention. Consider all of the pro-argument was generated from an error prone and exaggerated movie produced by a politician who claimed a ridiculous twenty foot rise in sea levels and now you argue against the popularizing of the anti-side. Balls, as they say.

Vincent



_____________________________

vML

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. ~ MLK Jr.

(in reply to PenOnBeadedChain)
Profile   Post #: 82
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 6:12:02 AM   
LadyEllen


Posts: 10931
Joined: 6/30/2006
From: Stourport-England
Status: offline
There is no uni-lateral methodology or deal at Copenhagen; the whole world is there to reach a multi-lateral deal which it is hoped will be legally binding.

Arguments that this is all about destroying the wealth creating base in the US are quite ridiculous - such destruction has been underway for some years now, driven by economics. Meanwhile the US has plenty to gain from a deal through restructuring and reestablishing its manufacturing base with technologically advanced green energy solutions.

E

_____________________________

In a test against the leading brand, 9 out of 10 participants couldnt tell the difference. Dumbasses.

(in reply to vincentML)
Profile   Post #: 83
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 6:24:59 AM   
Mercnbeth


Posts: 11766
Status: offline
quote:

the whole world is there to reach a multi-lateral deal which it is hoped will be legally binding.

Not the whole world; only the believers in a manipulated science, and those standing to gain financially from the outcome.

(in reply to LadyEllen)
Profile   Post #: 84
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 6:31:09 AM   
Sanity


Posts: 22039
Joined: 6/14/2006
From: Nampa, Idaho USA
Status: offline

What E wrote isn't true at all.

India insists they won't do anything to curb their economic growth, and its doubtful that China will curb their own growth in any meaningful way. They're content to encourage those of us who are trying to make a living in the the Western world to choke ourselves back to the point that they can assume control of what little industry we have remaining.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth

quote:

the whole world is there to reach a multi-lateral deal which it is hoped will be legally binding.

Not the whole world; only the believers in a manipulated science, and those standing to gain financially from the outcome.


_____________________________

Inside Every Liberal Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out

(in reply to Mercnbeth)
Profile   Post #: 85
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 8:14:34 AM   
Silence8


Posts: 833
Joined: 11/2/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Sanity


What E wrote isn't true at all.

India insists they won't do anything to curb their economic growth, and its doubtful that China will curb their own growth in any meaningful way. They're content to encourage those of us who are trying to make a living in the the Western world to choke ourselves back to the point that they can assume control of what little industry we have remaining.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth

quote:

the whole world is there to reach a multi-lateral deal which it is hoped will be legally binding.

Not the whole world; only the believers in a manipulated science, and those standing to gain financially from the outcome.



Yes, countries *agreeing* to cut emissions together will pose a huge problem for our present world system, one of competing self-maximizing interests.

Competition (even war) as the motive force for development was always a dubious foundation for human values -- you could say, actually, that it was exactly wrong.

Interestingly enough, though, this system represents an extremely small portion of human history, something like less than 1%. Applying the Hobbesian understanding of 'human nature' to primitive and archaic societies has never panned out, though many, many have tried.

Like an adolescent teenager, society is 'going through a phase'. Hopefully we'll snap out of it before jumping off a bridge.

(in reply to Sanity)
Profile   Post #: 86
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 8:32:26 AM   
vincentML


Posts: 9980
Joined: 10/31/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyEllen

There is no uni-lateral methodology or deal at Copenhagen; the whole world is there to reach a multi-lateral deal which it is hoped will be legally binding.

Arguments that this is all about destroying the wealth creating base in the US are quite ridiculous - such destruction has been underway for some years now, driven by economics. Meanwhile the US has plenty to gain from a deal through restructuring and reestablishing its manufacturing base with technologically advanced green energy solutions.

E


I think you are correct in some respect. If cap and trade becomes legislation in the USA it will create new wealth in the trading of "excess carbon credits." Already a young market exists, a new casino ready to explode into another bubble of more non-productuve wealth akin to trading and flipping technology IPOs in the '90s and real estate in the 2000s. Unfortunately, not a job creator amonst the Middle Classes. And as we learned recently, such casino wealth can be wiped out quite quickly.

Btw, how successful has the cap and trade market been in reducing carbon gas emissions in the EU? I hear it has not made much of a dent in meeting Kyoto targets. Can anyone inform?

Vincent

_____________________________

vML

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. ~ MLK Jr.

(in reply to LadyEllen)
Profile   Post #: 87
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 8:45:55 AM   
vincentML


Posts: 9980
Joined: 10/31/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Silence8



Yes, countries *agreeing* to cut emissions together will pose a huge problem for our present world system, one of competing self-maximizing interests.


Is this "countries agreeing" not just again another utopian dream never to become reality?

quote:

Competition (even war) as the motive force for development was always a dubious foundation for human values -- you could say, actually, that it was exactly wrong.


What has been the alternative to "competition" but top down planning? When has that been effective?

quote:

Interestingly enough, though, this system represents an extremely small portion of human history, something like less than 1%. Applying the Hobbesian understanding of 'human nature' to primitive and archaic societies has never panned out, though many, many have tried.


Unclear what you mean here. Hobbs applied his analysis to European nations and favored Monarchy. He was not a Liberal in the classic sense of democratic free markets.

quote:

Like an adolescent teenager, society is 'going through a phase'. Hopefully we'll snap out of it before jumping off a bridge.


Respectfully, this seems like speculation for a paper in Sociology 101.

Vincent

_____________________________

vML

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. ~ MLK Jr.

(in reply to Silence8)
Profile   Post #: 88
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 8:59:48 AM   
Silence8


Posts: 833
Joined: 11/2/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML


quote:

ORIGINAL: Silence8



Yes, countries *agreeing* to cut emissions together will pose a huge problem for our present world system, one of competing self-maximizing interests.


Is this "countries agreeing" not just again another utopian dream never to become reality?

quote:

Competition (even war) as the motive force for development was always a dubious foundation for human values -- you could say, actually, that it was exactly wrong.


What has been the alternative to "competition" but top down planning? When has that been effective?

quote:

Interestingly enough, though, this system represents an extremely small portion of human history, something like less than 1%. Applying the Hobbesian understanding of 'human nature' to primitive and archaic societies has never panned out, though many, many have tried.


Unclear what you mean here. Hobbs applied his analysis to European nations and favored Monarchy. He was not a Liberal in the classic sense of democratic free markets.

quote:

Like an adolescent teenager, society is 'going through a phase'. Hopefully we'll snap out of it before jumping off a bridge.


Respectfully, this seems like speculation for a paper in Sociology 101.

Vincent


This kind of speculation is better than the kind that predominates on the market, I'd wager.

In terms of agreeing -- on so many things societies can agree, it's not clear that why emissions can't also be one of them. Constantly with this subject I feel as if I'm jumping through ideological diversions and loopholes. It's good exercise, admittedly, but -- there's a limit.

An example -- look at how many countries have adopted financial bailouts that parallel the U.S. one. That's the joke -- how fast we all 'agreed' to save the top 0.1%. Again, again, again -- we already have a command economy -- this would be a great time for the people to take the reins.

Partly, it comes down to the metaphysics of it all -- the history of human conflict has always been over the 'fictitious' commodities, those commodities that don't resemble things like chairs, tables, and chocolate bars. First land, then labor, then water, air, sunshine, and, now, temperature. The commons. For a virtual example, look at what's happening with the internet...

The whole system was built to spill.


(in reply to vincentML)
Profile   Post #: 89
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 9:01:07 AM   
Kirata


Posts: 15477
Joined: 2/11/2006
From: USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: AnimusRex

I suppose you believe in the so-called "Round Earth Theory" as well.

Now there's a crazy bunch! Everybody knows it's an oblate spheroid.

K.

(in reply to AnimusRex)
Profile   Post #: 90
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 9:08:44 AM   
Brain


Posts: 3792
Joined: 2/14/2007
Status: offline
Good! This means Obama can sign whatever he wants in Copenhagen and he doesn't need congressional approval!

And another thing that's good is I hope it makes Stephen Harper, a George Bush lapdog, look bad.

EPA: Greenhouse gases endanger human health - Yahoo! News

Officials tell The Associated Press that the Environmental Protection Agency has concluded greenhouse gases are endangering people's health and must be regulated.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091207/ap_on_bi_ge/us_epa_climate


(in reply to Mercnbeth)
Profile   Post #: 91
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 9:34:46 AM   
pahunkboy


Posts: 33061
Joined: 2/26/2006
From: Central Pennsylvania
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Brain

Good! This means Obama can sign whatever he wants in Copenhagen and he doesn't need congressional approval!

And another thing that's good is I hope it makes Stephen Harper, a George Bush lapdog, look bad.

EPA: Greenhouse gases endanger human health - Yahoo! News

Officials tell The Associated Press that the Environmental Protection Agency has concluded greenhouse gases are endangering people's health and must be regulated.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091207/ap_on_bi_ge/us_epa_climate




Treaties do have to go thru congress.   And in a way it is mute because some states simply wont comply.   You dod realize you personally are a menace.  You emit this toxin and that is a dyer threat to me. So- to resolve this- best to stop breath out carbon dioxide.

(in reply to Brain)
Profile   Post #: 92
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 9:37:06 AM   
pahunkboy


Posts: 33061
Joined: 2/26/2006
From: Central Pennsylvania
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Silence8


quote:

ORIGINAL: pahunkboy

quote:

ORIGINAL: PenOnBeadedChain

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth
Well - you'd first have to provide one credited climatologist who can PROVE evidence of global warming. Not theorize it, not speculate, not form an opinion based upon data supporting that position, but disposing of other data that conflicts with their position.


See, as someone who has participated (and published) in peer-reviewed science and knows people in the climatology field, this is what I find so disheartening about the low level of understanding Americans have about what science even is. Mercnbeth, no one has ever "proven" the theory of gravity. It could turn out that planets and other heavenly bodies just suck, as some sort of compulsive habit (there's one people can have fun with here). Most philosphers will tell you, and rightly so, that no objective reality can be definitively established. The best we can do - and what scientists do every day - is develop theories, test them, generate evidence for or against those theories with every form of sensing and reasoning we possess as humans, and develop competing ones and test them.

This is what climate scientists have been doing for several decades now. The competing theories (solar forcing, random natural variation, interglacial cycle etc.), simply can't explain the sharp, quick increases we've seen as unprecedented (in human time) GHGs have built up in our atmosphere. This is why 97% of currently practicing climate scientists - and every major national and international science body - have concluded that humankind is driving this.

Every one of the red herrings you folks regularly bring up - suddenly excited like little children who've learned a new thing - have been looked at long ago, and are a continuing part of the complex picture the climatology community takes into account in their work. Just because YOU (speaking generally now) got interested in this just last week or last year when your favorite talk radio host got worked up about it, doesn't mean the scientific community doesn't take it into account as a matter of routine course in their models, discussions, and publications.

It's getting silly and tiresome. Greenhouse gases have residence times of many decades. Waiting till the world is in total, undeniable and irrevocable chaos will be too late to head off a lot more pain later.

This is one reason, by the way, that the Pentagon - yes, those ACORN-loving commie-pinko America-hating crusty generals in the DoD - are all over this as a national security issue. Yes, it's true. They're also in on Obama's nefarious plot to steal your money and give it to America-mocking Frenchmen to spend while drinking wine and laughing at you. They have been an integral part of The Big Plot since the Bush Administration, by the way:

http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1730759_1731383_1731632,00.html

So this is the bad news. You're surrounded. 97% of the climatology community, the major scientific organizations, that evil mainstream media, the military, even the damned insurance industry (who knows they stand to get soaked from all of this).

http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/national/2008/03/12/88138.htm

It's just you, Glenn Beck, and the oil industry left. The last valiant "patriot holdouts". Don't think Big Oil doesn't appreciate your pro-bono work on their behalf, though. Oh, they won't share in the millions extra in profits they pull in with each month we hold off on action - they're not that appreciative. But they do applaud the tireless, devoted work you are doing to contribute to the delay in making changes.

You're kids won't though (if you have them).



What a bunch of hot air.



Ironic as this is the most cogent post on this thread.

It's a coherent argument; it might seem alien and strange, since you've never made one.


Hurray Goldman Saches!     They stand to make billions off of this scheme!   Hip hip hurray!   I hope you are not using any power.  Heat or lights- if so you are a threat.   and as to my posts- my posts are among the most read on this board.   Well- 13000 of them are.

(in reply to Silence8)
Profile   Post #: 93
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 1:40:10 PM   
vincentML


Posts: 9980
Joined: 10/31/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Silence8


An example -- look at how many countries have adopted financial bailouts that parallel the U.S. one. That's the joke -- how fast we all 'agreed' to save the top 0.1%. Again, again, again -- we already have a command economy -- this would be a great time for the people to take the reins.


Aw crap! You raised a good point on adopting the skewed financial bailouts but then you spoiled it with your last two comments.

A command economy? Hardly. Market run amuck? Yes. Socialism for the rich, yes.

A great time for the people to take over the reins? As in say the French Revolution? Shall we permit a bunch of fishwives to lead the charge on Wall Street? ~smiles~

quote:

Partly, it comes down to the metaphysics of it all -- the history of human conflict has always been over the 'fictitious' commodities, those commodities that don't resemble things like chairs, tables, and chocolate bars. First land, then labor, then water, air, sunshine, and, now, temperature. The commons. For a virtual example, look at what's happening with the internet...The whole system was built to spill.


Seems to me the "fictitious" commodities as you call them are those used to build the synthetic commodities: chairs, tables, and chocolate bars. Don't forget beer and sambucca, my personal favorite.

The problem is we could always measure and place a value on land, labor, and water. We disagree on how to measure and value temperature. There's the rub.

Seems it took only a little graphing slight of hand to dispense with the inconvenient Medieval Warming and the Little Ice Age. A little curve smoothing and poof! All gone. Nevermind the Norsemen settled Greenland and the Thames froze over to permit ice festivals off shore.

Vincent

_____________________________

vML

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. ~ MLK Jr.

(in reply to Silence8)
Profile   Post #: 94
RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a s... - 12/8/2009 1:46:36 PM   
vincentML


Posts: 9980
Joined: 10/31/2009
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Brain

Good! This means Obama can sign whatever he wants in Copenhagen and he doesn't need congressional approval!

And another thing that's good is I hope it makes Stephen Harper, a George Bush lapdog, look bad.

EPA: Greenhouse gases endanger human health - Yahoo! News

Officials tell The Associated Press that the Environmental Protection Agency has concluded greenhouse gases are endangering people's health and must be regulated.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091207/ap_on_bi_ge/us_epa_climate




Truthfully, you are not that naive. All international treaties are subject to advice and consent of the Senate.... Checks and Balances. Take a look at the Constitution.

Yes, he can sign Executive Orders which can then be rescinded by the next President. And ignored by everyone else in the meanwhile. What's he gonna do, call out the troops? Big effen deal.

Vincent

< Message edited by vincentML -- 12/8/2009 1:48:33 PM >


_____________________________

vML

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. ~ MLK Jr.

(in reply to Brain)
Profile   Post #: 95
Page:   <<   < prev  1 2 3 4 [5]
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: Climate Cover-Up: It’s an imperative read for a successful future." --Leonardo DiCaprio, Actor Page: <<   < prev  1 2 3 4 [5]
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.078