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Katharine Hayhoe: "..Much of This is Intended to Intimidate." Posted by: greenman3610
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Latest comments made on this video:
By: vmgqie. on 05 Jan 12, 12:14:18
@greenman3610 like fuck leaving greenhouse gases as the only answer what about the suns output. You must have invested in a solar? company Mr bullshitman oh a Mr greenman
By: Galv140577. on 29 Aug 11, 20:21:53
Carbon tax is a disgusting crime against Humanity. CO2 whether man-made or? otherwise doesn't drive global climate, it never has, it never will, the Sun does... The Great Global Warming Swindle [Full Film] watch?v=T8KgbUvsC_o
By: greenman3610. on 07 Feb 11, 21:18:29
@metsfreak4life I'm? not looking for quetzalcoatl to show up in 2012, but with another el nino, and potentially a peak solar cycle, it could be a hot year indeed.
By: metsfreak4life. on 07 Feb 11, 20:46:27
@greenman3610 thanks it just would have been awesome if we could chronicle every single el nino over the last hundred of years but yes there is ample evidence what caused these warm waters in the past is most liekly not causing them now. and I? expect the next el nino to occur in the fall of 2012 coinciding with what the mayans considered to be the end of the world as we know it. itll be very interesting to see what happens there and what happens years from now when skeptics finally accept AGW
By: greenman3610. on 07 Feb 11, 17:41:05
@metsfreak4life oscillations are just that - oscillations. they go up and come down. there is evidence that ocean heat is increased, so each el nino has a bigger sink to draw on. instrumental records uniformly show warming over the last 150 years, and reconstructions are pretty clear that temps are higher now than they have been in 2000? years or so. We know why temps have varied in the past, and we know none of those drivers are now active, leaving greenhouse gases as the only answer.
By: metsfreak4life. on 07 Feb 11, 06:04:23
I love your clips greenman. Just out of curiousity, is there any way in which we could measure el ninos/la ninas going back hundreds of years. If we have what do they say. If not, would it be possible that changes in the ELSO (el nino osciliation) could be causing the warming as opposed to CO2, or the chance that maybe increased CO2 triggers bigger el ninos. Just something I want to? throw out there. Keep up the good work!!! Mike
By: greenman3610. on 12 Dec 10, 19:59:12
@Astrostevo not exactly, but? if you take a look at some of the more recent ones, I continue to expand on more of the same developments.
By: Astrostevo. on 12 Dec 10, 11:28:36
Have you revised updated this one recently,? Greenman?
By: greenman3610. on 04 Dec 10, 21:42:24
@PissedFechtmeister I am communicating the mainstream position endorsed by every mainstream scientific group on the planet. The planet is warming unequivocally, and the evidence comes? not just from human measurements,but also from changes in natural systems that are consistent with warming.
By: PissedFechtmeister. on 04 Dec 10, 21:22:39
The counterargument to current global cooling is (correctly) based on people cherry picking 1998 as a? starting point for their trend analysis. Yet Greenman cherry picks a few months of warmth to claim that warmING is still happening. There's been no warming trend for the past decade.
By: greenman3610. on 20 Sep 10, 14:23:36
@Richard482? awesome book. highly recommended. for a quick intro you can google george monbiot, climate, tobacco
By: Richard482. on 20 Sep 10, 13:14:30
@ariesmajor To answer that question read a book called Merchnats of Doubt. The hard back version is out with the authors? working on the improved paper edition at the moment. The book has a website if your interested
By: greenman3610. on 02 Apr 10, 21:07:01
@Ripley747? I confess - it was sarcasm.
By: Ripley747. on 02 Apr 10, 18:32:21
LOL. Was this sarcasm, Greenman? You say "Even our most distinguished journalists have been taken in...", then you show a reporter from Fox News. LOL. Am I the only one who finds humor in this or is this? intentionally added and I'm a little slow on the draw? Either way, it's funny.
By: zlatanskye. on 30 Mar 10, 21:50:47
"El Nino is expected to? strengthen and last through Northern Hemisphere winter 2009-10" ROLF HAHAHAHAHA
By: ScientiaVeritasEtLux. on 12 Mar 10, 20:26:20
"warming was at a? greater rate prior to humans producing significant amounts of green? house gases" No it wasn't. Sure there was a bit of a stand-still in the rise around the forties and fifties, but variability like this is to be expected. The rate of warming increase in the past few decades has been greater than it was, say, in the twenties .
By: ScientiaVeritasEtLux. on 12 Mar 10, 20:15:21
"Like how scientists were predicting an? ice age about 40 years ago?" Check out greenman3610's video "In the 70s, They said there'd be an Ice Age" "CO2 accounts for only .038% of earth's atmosphere. It has much much less of a warming effect than, for example, methane." CO2 still has a significant effect on climate. As for methane, it's already being found that in the waters north of Siberia, methane is bubbling up from the ocean-bottom. This is caused by the increasing ocean temps.
By: namordecai. on 12 Mar 10, 20:11:14
@ScientiaVeritasEtLux Lastly, warming was at a greater rate prior to humans producing? significant amounts of green house gases, which suggests that after humans started producing green house gases, the rate of warming decreased, which might even lead one to conclude humans have somehow been slowing global warming. ha ha
By: namordecai. on 12 Mar 10, 20:10:07
@ScientiaVeritasEtLux Easy to predict? Like how scientists were predicting an ice age? about 40 years ago? Furthermore, it's been discovered that the ocean, as it warms, gives off a great deal of CO2, which helps explain why, in the much warmer ancient past, the earth was warmer with much more CO2. Much of the causation is backward, here. Furthermore, CO2 accounts for only .038% of earth's atmosphere. It has much much less of a warming effect than, for example, methane.
By: ScientiaVeritasEtLux. on 12 Mar 10, 18:17:43
I said weather is variable. However, the general global climate trends are pretty easy to predict. They've been predicted for the past half century. And humans have done/are doing much more than "next to nothing" to affect global temperatures. We've single-handedly increased CO2 levels by about 40%. This has serious effects on climate. And you say the correlation between GHG's and warming is lacking. This couldn't be? farther from the truth. Do a bit more research.
By: namordecai. on 12 Mar 10, 18:02:11
Yes, it is hugely variable and the effects of global warming (assuming humans are causing a significant amount) can't be predicted. For all we know, it will be good for the environment? in the long run. For all we know, we could be averting an ice age or ameliorating the effects of one. Judging by the lack of correlation to green house gas output and warming, humans are doing next to nothing to effect global temperatures.
By: ScientiaVeritasEtLux. on 12 Mar 10, 17:59:08
could happen. I'm personally not counting on it. But weather is hugely variable, and I wouldn't say it's impossible. What I am? counting on is increasing temperatures and droughts in sub-saharan africa and potentially more flooding in the american south (as has been occurring recently)
By: namordecai. on 12 Mar 10, 17:42:52
I'm counting on more record? cold winters like the one in China last year.
By: Richard482. on 03 Mar 10, 13:07:35
But what's? important is what's causing it now
By: treeplanter99. on 23 Feb 10, 17:32:09
you're the one denying? science. scientists have explanations for all the former warming and cooling. but when they tell you this one is manmade you claim they're wrong.