jason812 wrote:Warmer climate = more grass = more cows = more hamburgers, and I like a tasty burger. So let's make more CO2
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jason812 wrote:Warmer climate = more grass = more cows = more hamburgers, and I like a tasty burger. So let's make more CO2
Good! The last time it rained live polar bears things got really nasty.Syntyr wrote:I dont know about you guys but it is raining dead polar bears over here in Sugarland!
jason812 wrote:Warmer climate = more grass = more cows = more hamburgers, and I like a tasty burger. So let's make more CO2
This is where I stand too. Good science depends on questioning and testing. Name-calling is political, and I see no reason to expend resources wallowing around in it.Pariah3j wrote:The other point that led me to believe it's complete bull, is the whole 'climate deniers' label they love to use if you question their science or methodology... No one is claiming that the Climate is not or does not change. We only are debating on the rate it's changing and how much if any impact humans may or may not have...
Caltech Michelin LectureIn science, consensus is irrelevant. What is relevant is reproducible results. the greatest scientists in history are great precisely because they broke with the consensus. there's no such thing as consensus science. If it's consensus, it isn't science. If it's science, it isn't consensus.
I believe the ice core samples and other methods have shown that CO2 levels in the past have been much higher than current levels with no ill effects. There is a point where it is bad, but that point is a lot higher than we are sitting now or are likely be.apvonkanel wrote: While these are accurate statements, there are countless chemicals that are safe at minute levels in the human body yet even at sub-percent increases become fatal. We're looking at trace chemical that has increased by more than 1/3 of it's original recorded level. For comparison's sake, we're looking roughly at the equivalent of an ounce of a substance in a 150 lb body.
Has anyone talked about binary oxygen or just dioxide?bblhd672 wrote:Obviously a ban on dihydrogen oxide is needed.
Drilled ice samples have shown that CO2 levels have been higher in the past, but those levels predate humanity.MechAg94 wrote:I believe the ice core samples and other methods have shown that CO2 levels in the past have been much higher than current levels with no ill effects. There is a point where it is bad, but that point is a lot higher than we are sitting now or are likely be.apvonkanel wrote: While these are accurate statements, there are countless chemicals that are safe at minute levels in the human body yet even at sub-percent increases become fatal. We're looking at trace chemical that has increased by more than 1/3 of it's original recorded level. For comparison's sake, we're looking roughly at the equivalent of an ounce of a substance in a 150 lb body.