RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (Full Version)

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eihwaz -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/3/2011 7:01:25 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Termyn8or
"Blanketing deserts with a reflective material
Launching giant mirrors into space orbit
fertilizing the ocean with iron to grow CO2-eating plankton
brightening ocean clouds with sea-salt particles to reflect the sun
feeding sulfates into the atmosphere via a kilometers-long (miles-long) hose attached to a tethered balloon "

HAHAHAHAHAHAHA, you people are all going to DIE !

Come on Man, tell me this came from Saturday night live or some shit.

T^T

Highlander II: The Quickening (1991)
A corporation creates an electromagnetic shield to protect the earth after the earth's ozone layer disappears.  Unfortunately the shield also condemns the planet to a state of constant darkness and high average global temperature and humidity, causing humanity to fall into decline. "Highlander II: The Quickening," Wikipedia




cuckoldmepls -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/3/2011 7:14:40 PM)

Maybe someone should remind them that it was considerably warmer back in the days of the dinosours. It is most likely that we are only returning to our normal temperature after the last Ice Age ended. In fact, they have found evidence of fossilized forests above the arctic circle. It doesn't take an Einstein to figure out that mankind has accelerated it, but certainly we were headed in that direction to begin with.

If you want to help minimize global warming, first you have to go with nuclear power, and secondly you have to minimize the world's population and especially ours, since we are 6% of the world's population but we use 26% of the worlds energy. In fact, we could have been energy independent 20 years ago if it were not for unlimited immigration policies.




jlf1961 -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/3/2011 7:16:37 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cuckoldmepls

Maybe someone should remind them that it was considerably warmer back in the days of the dinosours. It is most likely that we are only returning to our normal temperature after the last Ice Age ended. In fact, they have found evidence of fossilized forests above the arctic circle. It doesn't take an Einstein to figure out that mankind has accelerated it, but certainly we were headed in that direction to begin with.

If you want to help minimize global warming, first you have to go with nuclear power, and secondly you have to minimize the world's population and especially ours, since we are 6% of the world's population but we use 26% of the worlds energy. In fact, we could have been energy independent 20 years ago if it were not for unlimited immigration policies.




Those fossilized forests are from the time when North American was MUCH further south. Unless of course you refuse to accept the theory of plate tectonics and continental drift.

Cuck, it was much nicer when you were not posting.

And, for your unenlightened mind, unlimited immigration policies do not exist in this country, and for the record, (please do your own research) the United States cannot produce enough oil to sustain itself, regardless of how many fucking illegals come into the country.

Christ I cannot believe that someone could be so dumb.




eihwaz -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/3/2011 7:16:49 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife
quote:

ORIGINAL: truckinslave

The reason, it is clear to me, is that AGW/climate change is not a science to many of its strongest proponent but a religion, with its roots in simple hatred of mankind.


[...]  And maybe you can also explain what Kurzweil has to do with climate change.

quote:

ORIGINAL Futurist Ray Kurzweil isn't worried about climate change, PBS need to know, The Daily Need, 16 Feb 2011
One of my primary theses is that information technologies grow exponentially in capability and power and bandwidth and so on. If you buy an iPhone today, it’s twice as good as two years ago for half that cost. That is happening with solar energy — it is doubling every two years. And it didn’t start two years ago, it started 20 years ago. Every two years we have twice as much solar energy in the world.

Today, solar is still more expensive than fossil fuels, and in most situations it still needs subsidies or special circumstances, but the costs are coming down rapidly — we are only a few years away from parity. And then it’s going to keep coming down, and people will be gravitating towards solar, even if they don’t care at all about the environment, because of the economics.

So right now it’s at half a percent of the world’s energy. People tend to dismiss technologies when they are half a percent of the solution. But doubling every two years means it’s only eight more doublings before it meets a hundred percent of the world’s energy needs. So that’s 16 years. We will increase our use of electricity during that period, so add another couple of doublings: In 20 years we’ll be meeting all of our energy needs with solar, based on this trend which has already been under way for 20 years.

People say we’re running out of energy. That’s only true if we stick with these old 19th century technologies. We are awash in energy from the sunlight...

2035 is 24 years. I am saying we can meet all our energy needs from solar in 20 years.





domiguy -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/3/2011 9:08:42 PM)

cuckold, pops, wilbur, truckinslave.


who are the counterparts to these bastions of free thought on the left side of Cm?




TheHeretic -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/3/2011 9:51:58 PM)

Their name is Legion, FFS.

Or perhaps we should call them Hydra, 'cuz I have lopped off seven heads with a single blow, and always, there are more.




popeye1250 -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 12:17:03 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: TheHeretic

Yes, Popeye, but Gore has put out a press release since then, claiming he gave all that money away to a climate change alliance charity. He may be a slimy, charlatan whore, but he's their slimy charlatan whore, and his press release is gospel to them.


Oh I'm sure he did Heretic! Sans the, "whore money for when I'm outta town fund."




Aneirin -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 1:23:19 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961


quote:

ORIGINAL: Aneirin

As long as the meterologists cannot say for certain what will happen from day to day regards the weather, I have a lot of trouble believing in climate models, bearing in mind the base line used.

We do not know the history of this world, sure, we can get an idea from such sciences as dendrochronology and core samples taken in various parts of the world, but what does that show, anything other than the fact that the climate changes as it does in accordance with the nature of the planet.

As to man's influence sure I agree our need/greed for resources has perhaps created problems that cannot be corrected in our species lifespan, but who said our lifespan will prevail, we weren't here from year dot, maybe we won't be here at the full stop.

But the success of humanity is that we have learned to adapt to our enviroment, so if the world warms or cools, we will adapt and that is that.



Actually you should look into Paleoclimatology, there is a history of earth's climate in ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica, not to mention ocean corals, tree rings and other evidence from other sources.

The problem with an artificially accelerated climate change is that it impacts species that cannot adapt to the changing climate, like coral which have been dieing do to warmer ocean water. There is also a rise in CO2 in the ocean that is having an impact on it.

The human race, with its tendency to pollute has done a lot of harm, it will take generations to correct it.




And now humanity knows pollution is causing a problem, we are aware and one hopes we are doing something about it, or else we are just as stuffed as before. If the awareness is being acted on, then in generations if the program is kept up with then maybe things will be back as they should be.

But if the pollution problem is not being acted on, then what everyone is going on about, is just hot air.




truckinslave -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 5:08:35 AM)

quote:

those who are trying to save the environment hate mankind?


You don't pick that up at the edges? The whiff of misanthropy is there- one of Tom Clancy's novels was based on carrying the eco-terrorism movement to its logical satirical conclusion.

Kurzweil has to do with the solution, not the cause.




Hillwilliam -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 5:11:27 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: truckinslave

quote:

those who are trying to save the environment hate mankind?


You don't pick that up at the edges? The whiff of misanthropy is there- one of Tom Clancy's novels was based on carrying the eco-terrorism movement to its logical satirical conclusion.

Kurzweil has to do with the solution, not the cause.

Pssssssst trucker.... those novels are FICTION.




truckinslave -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 5:13:03 AM)

In the days of the dinosaurs?

The Spanish grew oranges north of Savannah Ga for over a hundred years. Try that today.




truckinslave -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 5:17:51 AM)

Pssssst HW..... Clancy saw the same thing I did, the "whiff of misanthropy" and extrapolated from there. Actually, in many cases it's more than a whiff. I'm something of a misanthrope myself- it's hard for me to understand how the world could fail to be a better place with a permanent human population of less than a billion.




DomKen -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 9:13:01 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: TheHeretic

Care to respond to the meat of the article, Ken, rather than sticking to your comfortable talking points?

What are your thoughts, for example, on a tethered balloon, with a miles long hose, spewing contaminants into the upper atmosphere to deflect sunlight?

You got a better idea?




jlf1961 -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 11:47:35 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: truckinslave

In the days of the dinosaurs?

The Spanish grew oranges north of Savannah Ga for over a hundred years. Try that today.



why are the conservatives so adept at revising history. There were NEVER any Spanish colonies north of Florida. Try again.

Oranges were never grown by anyone north of Savannah. Indigo, cotton, and other large plantation crops were grown in the southern colonies.





DomKen -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Congressmen (4/4/2011 4:55:59 PM)

So the GOP house called in one of the very few AGW skeptics with any cridibility left and lo and behold he confirmed AGW.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-climate-berkeley-20110404,0,772697.story




eihwaz -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 5:08:26 PM)

FR

This just in.

quote:

ORIGINAL "The Truth, Still Inconvenient," by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, 3 April 2011
Prof. Richard Muller of Berkeley, a physicist who has gotten into the climate skeptic game, has been leading the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project, an effort partially financed by none other than the Koch foundation. And climate deniers — who claim that researchers at NASA and other groups analyzing climate trends have massaged and distorted the data — had been hoping that the Berkeley project would conclude that global warming is a myth. Instead, however, Professor Muller reported that his group’s preliminary results find a global warming trend “very similar to that reported by the prior groups.” 

[...]
[Professor Muller's] climate-skeptic credentials are pretty strong: he has denounced both Al Gore and my colleague Tom Friedman as “exaggerators,” and he has participated in a number of attacks on climate research, including the witch hunt over innocuous e-mails from British climate researchers. Not surprisingly, then, climate deniers had high hopes that his new project would support their case.

You can guess what happened when those hopes were dashed...

See, also, "Republicans Get Inconvenient Replies at Climate Hearing," The New York Times, 31 March 2011

"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." -- Philip K. Dick









TheHeretic -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Congressmen (4/4/2011 6:23:43 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

So the GOP house called in one of the very few AGW skeptics with any cridibility left and lo and behold he confirmed AGW.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-climate-berkeley-20110404,0,772697.story



I think they've looked at about 2% of the data so far, Ken. That's your normal standard of proof, isn't it?




rulemylife -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 6:32:46 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cuckoldmepls

... and secondly you have to minimize the world's population and especially ours....



Maybe you should take one for the cause.

Practice what you preach.






rulemylife -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Congressmen (4/4/2011 6:45:36 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TheHeretic


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

So the GOP house called in one of the very few AGW skeptics with any cridibility left and lo and behold he confirmed AGW.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-climate-berkeley-20110404,0,772697.story



I think they've looked at about 2% of the data so far, Ken. That's your normal standard of proof, isn't it?


You amaze me Richie.

The GOP brought in a scientist who they thought would support their views, but surprise!

And now you are trying to discredit the very scientist that previously supported what you want to believe.

Another big surprise.




Hippiekinkster -> RE: Meeting of the Mad Scientists (4/4/2011 6:48:44 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: eihwaz

FR

This just in.

quote:

ORIGINAL "The Truth, Still Inconvenient," by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, 3 April 2011
Prof. Richard Muller of Berkeley, a physicist who has gotten into the climate skeptic game, has been leading the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project, an effort partially financed by none other than the Koch foundation. And climate deniers — who claim that researchers at NASA and other groups analyzing climate trends have massaged and distorted the data — had been hoping that the Berkeley project would conclude that global warming is a myth. Instead, however, Professor Muller reported that his group’s preliminary results find a global warming trend “very similar to that reported by the prior groups.” 

[...]
[Professor Muller's] climate-skeptic credentials are pretty strong: he has denounced both Al Gore and my colleague Tom Friedman as “exaggerators,” and he has participated in a number of attacks on climate research, including the witch hunt over innocuous e-mails from British climate researchers. Not surprisingly, then, climate deniers had high hopes that his new project would support their case.

You can guess what happened when those hopes were dashed...

See, also, "Republicans Get Inconvenient Replies at Climate Hearing," The New York Times, 31 March 2011

"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." -- Philip K. Dick


Thanks, E.W.

I found this passage quite interesting:
"As he put it this morning, “The issue in my mind is not are we seeing it but what is the degree. If it is on the high end we do have to engage very rapidly although we also have to engage with other countries” (because the brunt of new emissions will be in developing nations).

Republicans on the committee sought to draw him out on whether he saw a conspiracy to overstate climate claims, but received a nuanced reply:

You asked about a conspiracy…. I don’t believe there’s a conspiracy. But I do belive that many of the scientists in this field are so deeply concerned about what they found that they work as advocates…. I fear that the scientists are not trusting the public enough…. The bad effect of this then is that the pbulic loses some of its trust in science."





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