Originally posted by french frank
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Farage Murdoch Gove Boris
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An_Inspector_Calls
Last edited by Guest; 18-03-13, 12:23.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI'm no apologist for Mr Gove and am not inclined to believe that there won't be yet another U-turn on this, but on what basis does such a move mark him out as a "hero" and "savant" and in what? The climate has always been changing and it's unlikely to stop doing so because Mr Gove decides to remove it from a schoolteaching syllabus! To cut this out of the national curriculum or indeed any other kind of schoolteaching curriculum is tantamount to implying that climate either doesn't change at all or it's not a factor in the study of geography or maybe even both. How absurd is that?
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I continue to think that climate change is partly man-made and that the huge increase in net producers of CO2 (people) is the main cause.
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Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostIn my experience, if you have a problem it's usually best to assess the causes and weigh up the solutions to avoid wasting effort on either non-problems or wrong solutions.
then we should take steps to try and minimise it's adverse effects on the poorest people......
Arguing over hockey sticks really wont help those living in low lying Pacific Islands for example
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIt just marks him out as more of a dickhead than we previously thought ........
http://www.badscience.net/2013/03/he...tion-minister/Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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An_Inspector_Calls
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSo given that climate change exists
then we should take steps to try and minimise it's adverse effects on the poorest people......
Arguing over hockey sticks really wont help those living in low lying Pacific Islands for example
When you talk of adverse effects on poor people I take it you're referring to diverting food supplies from the poor so we can run our cars on ethanol, that sort of thing? Building windmills on peat lands so that we interfere with the drainage, kill the peat and thereby release more CO2 . . . ?
Don't let's think (where did that get us), just DO SOMETHING!
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI continue to think that climate change is partly man-made and that the huge increase in net producers of CO2 (people) is the main cause.
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amateur51
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostAs The Guardian has a distinct tendency to constantly annoy others with its wearying 'politically-correct' liberal dogmatism, some of those others might consider themselves at least mildly entitled to occasionally experience a little bit of schadenfreude at its expense.
Unimportant and even unworthy, maybe, but understandable most certainly.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt would seem that there's a very close correlation between people who stand to benefit in the short term from doing nothing about climate change (politicians in rich countries, corporations profiting from fossil fuels etc.) and people who claim that it isn't happening and/or seek to suppress research into it and any unfavourable evidence produced thereby. That should already tell us something. The more time spent squabbling over the causes of climate change, the more catastrophic its consequences will be, however it was caused. All the verbose sophistry in the world isn't going to alter that.
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amateur51
Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View Post
In my experience, if you have a problem it's usually best to assess the causes and weigh up the solutions to avoid wasting effort on either non-problems or wrong solutions.
I know you're a bam-pot but at least be a consistent bam-pot!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt would seem that there's a very close correlation between people who stand to benefit in the short term from doing nothing about climate change (politicians in rich countries, corporations profiting from fossil fuels etc.) and people who claim that it isn't happening and/or seek to suppress research into it and any unfavourable evidence produced thereby. That should already tell us something. The more time spent squabbling over the causes of climate change, the more catastrophic its consequences will be, however it was caused. All the verbose sophistry in the world isn't going to alter that.
Another thing that occurs to me is the short-sightedness and complacency that I can only assume to have been born of sheer laziness of the now very rich fossil fuel producing countries in not having looked at less expensive alternatives in the past; had Middle Eastern countries, for example, invested some of their eye-wateringly massive oil revenues in solar energy research and development, they might be trying still to hold the rest of us to ransom for these rather than for their oil (which, whilst being far more environmentally sound, would still be as politically unwelcome).
That said, one of the major fallouts from the way things are generally done now is the dependency culture that seek to ensure that those nations that have the oil reserves stay rich on the backs of selling their wares to other nations, rich and poor alike (although clearly that's much more of a matter of politics and economics than of environmental considerations). It's broadly the same kind of crippling infrastructure that enables some half dozen energy suppliers to hold almost all the cards in UK. Some of this stranglehold could and can be loosened to some extent by those who aim to provide their own energy for their own use and become far less dependent upon the diktats of large energy supply corporations and I'm all for that; it won't sole the problem as a whole, but the less dependency there is on fossil fuels, the less of a stranglehold rich countries and large corporations will be able to maintain.
The fact that environmental air pollution could be drastically reduced by replacing fossil fuel use with other energy sources ought in any case to provide sufficient impetus for individuals, companies and countries to espouse environmentally acceptable alternative forms of energy; the fact that so few of them seem even to be addressing this aspect of the problem further endorses the view that you express in your first sentence.Last edited by ahinton; 18-03-13, 12:52.
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amateur51
Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostDo you accept such statements without thinking? Presumably you might have seen some of the recent data on the subject, read the assessment papers, overheard some of the scandals revealed in the climate science arena and perhaps concluded that just possibly all was not well in the climate science world?
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amateur51
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostDo you find it impossible to post a comment without using crude language?
Crude language, as you so prissily put it, is occasionally a useful rhetorical device when dealing with head-in-the-sand merchants like you, Mr Pee.
Back to the Formula One on the Sky with you
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Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostLast time I looked, by world standards, rich countries like Germany, the UK (most of western Europe in fact), and the US were doing lots about climate change
Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View Postso your correlation seems somewhat specious
Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostIn my experience, if you have a problem it's usually best to assess the causes and weigh up the solutions to avoid wasting effort on either non-problems or wrong solutions.
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Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostDo you accept such statements without thinking? Presumably you might have seen some of the recent data on the subject, read the assessment papers, overheard some of the scandals revealed in the climate science arena and perhaps concluded that just possibly all was not well in the climate science world?
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostDo you find it impossible to post a comment without using crude language?
or as someone else put it
"In my life
Why do I give valuable time
To people who don't care if I live or die ?"
and
what I said was the toned down version
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