planetsave.com — Leading experts at the 2009 Aspen Environment Forum called ocean acidification caused by high levels of CO2 emissions a “planet changer”, and predicted that all coral in the ocean would be in danger of dying off by mid-century if we continued to burn fossil fuel at our current rate.
Mar 29, 2009 View in Crawl 4
zacharytelschowMar 30, 2009
Gosh, I can't believe I've never seen it before! Every single scientist in the world agrees with your point of view and there isn't a single dissenter!Buried for absurd and outright lies regarding "consensus."
benoldaysMar 30, 2009
hahah dam gingers
branditaMar 30, 2009
Some problems require more government intervention to solve, not everything can be solved by standing back and letting the free market run its course. The free market is an important driver of many solutions but not those that involve externalities.
danwgreMar 30, 2009
Where is your proof that previous natural changes in atmospheric CO2 have always occurred slowly over millions of years?
Closed AccountMar 31, 2009
I wouldn't be willing to bet a $14T economy and the prosperity of 300 million people on your tautology.
whitehattrickMar 31, 2009
What a blatantly bulls**t argument. Unbelievable. You think you can just call my argument an opinion, and thus you debunk me? Here's a pro tip, if you don't have a counter argument, because you're wrong and there isn't a counter argument, but wish to continue the perpetuation of what you know is wrong, don't reply. It makes you look like an idiot and ends up making the other persons argument win because you have proven you have no rebuttal. What I speak of is well proven, no debate about any of it, the science isn't inconclusive, as opposed to what you speak of. I can't take the irony. You have more paragraphs calling me names than anything else. It is a fact that all living organisms effect our climate, and in many different ways from the gases they produce to the reflectivity of their outward appearance. Hundreds of trillions of living organism, each effecting the climate in multiple ways. The sun's output dwarfs the climate impact of the additional c02 emitted by humans. Earth's wobble around the sun dwarfs the climate impact of c02 emitted by humans. Earth's albedo dwarfs the climate impact of c02 emitted by humans. A single volcano dwarfs the climate impact of c02 emitted by humans. Galactic occurrences we don't even know exist affect our climate. Nearly everything effects the climate. We can't measure most of it and we cant even begin to imagine the stuff that effects our climate that we don't know about. The fact the you didn't believe that trillions of variables effect our climate says it all. You don't know much, surely aren't a scientist, and surely shouldn't be in a debate you know nothing about. It is the blind following of politicians and the regurgitation of their propaganda which is the heart of the worlds biggest problems, *real* problems.
oboshoeMar 31, 2009
@eartherWow, you've got the universe all figured out.That first year in college is great isn't? Take another bong hit and think about "we don't know" really means. Go look up the word "arrogance" before you exhale to. You really think that saying we don't know is equal to arrogance?But I should have known you were omnipotent, what with a "green" screen name of Earther.
imjgaltstillMar 31, 2009
@Zadadka the irony of a global warming myrmidon pontificating about the frivolous industrial attitude that allows you to decry the lifestyle which gives you the freedom to park your ass in front of a computer complaining that the use of energy by our society will be our doom is not lost on me.Do you have a salt water fish tank?
Closed AccountMar 31, 2009
You want science? This is science!Look!... I'm Greenfyre!... I can paste links too!<a class="user" href="http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/monckton_papers/" rel="nofollow">http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/monckton_papers/</a>