Well that's it, the science is settled...
#1
Well that's it, the science is settled...
If the feds could tax stupidity, Debbie Stabenow could balance the treasurie's books:
DETNEWS | Weblogs | Henry Payne's Sketchbook
Detroit, Mich. - Michigan just experienced its coldest July on record; global temperatures haven't risen in more than a decade; Great Lakes water levels have resumed their 30-year cyclical rise (contrary to a decade of media scare stories that they were drying up due to global warming), and polls show that climate change doesn't even make a list of Michigan voters' top-ten concerns.
Yet in an interview with the Detroit News Monday, Senator Debbie Stabenow (D., Mich.) - recently appointed to the Senate Energy Committee - made clear that fighting the climate crisis is her top priority.
"Climate change is very real," she confessed as she embraced cap and trade's massive tax increase on Michigan industry - at the same time claiming, against all the evidence, that it would not lead to an increase in manufacturing costs or energy prices. "Global warming creates volatility. I feel it when I'm flying. The storms are more volatile. We are paying the price in more hurricanes and tornadoes."
DETNEWS | Weblogs | Henry Payne's Sketchbook
Detroit, Mich. - Michigan just experienced its coldest July on record; global temperatures haven't risen in more than a decade; Great Lakes water levels have resumed their 30-year cyclical rise (contrary to a decade of media scare stories that they were drying up due to global warming), and polls show that climate change doesn't even make a list of Michigan voters' top-ten concerns.
Yet in an interview with the Detroit News Monday, Senator Debbie Stabenow (D., Mich.) - recently appointed to the Senate Energy Committee - made clear that fighting the climate crisis is her top priority.
"Climate change is very real," she confessed as she embraced cap and trade's massive tax increase on Michigan industry - at the same time claiming, against all the evidence, that it would not lead to an increase in manufacturing costs or energy prices. "Global warming creates volatility. I feel it when I'm flying. The storms are more volatile. We are paying the price in more hurricanes and tornadoes."
#4
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Jul 2007
Position: Permanently scarred
Posts: 1,707
If the feds could tax stupidity, Debbie Stabenow could balance the treasurie's books:
DETNEWS | Weblogs | Henry Payne's Sketchbook
Detroit, Mich. - Michigan just experienced its coldest July on record; global temperatures haven't risen in more than a decade; Great Lakes water levels have resumed their 30-year cyclical rise (contrary to a decade of media scare stories that they were drying up due to global warming), and polls show that climate change doesn't even make a list of Michigan voters' top-ten concerns.
Yet in an interview with the Detroit News Monday, Senator Debbie Stabenow (D., Mich.) - recently appointed to the Senate Energy Committee - made clear that fighting the climate crisis is her top priority.
"Climate change is very real," she confessed as she embraced cap and trade's massive tax increase on Michigan industry - at the same time claiming, against all the evidence, that it would not lead to an increase in manufacturing costs or energy prices. "Global warming creates volatility. I feel it when I'm flying. The storms are more volatile. We are paying the price in more hurricanes and tornadoes."
DETNEWS | Weblogs | Henry Payne's Sketchbook
Detroit, Mich. - Michigan just experienced its coldest July on record; global temperatures haven't risen in more than a decade; Great Lakes water levels have resumed their 30-year cyclical rise (contrary to a decade of media scare stories that they were drying up due to global warming), and polls show that climate change doesn't even make a list of Michigan voters' top-ten concerns.
Yet in an interview with the Detroit News Monday, Senator Debbie Stabenow (D., Mich.) - recently appointed to the Senate Energy Committee - made clear that fighting the climate crisis is her top priority.
"Climate change is very real," she confessed as she embraced cap and trade's massive tax increase on Michigan industry - at the same time claiming, against all the evidence, that it would not lead to an increase in manufacturing costs or energy prices. "Global warming creates volatility. I feel it when I'm flying. The storms are more volatile. We are paying the price in more hurricanes and tornadoes."
#7
This is wonderful, I am feeling a tingle up my leg now that the debate is over and we have been offered this proof straight from the most ample and sensitive source on the planet. I hope we can soon establish reeducation camps in that model city of correct thinking, Detroit. Perhaps they can offer many of us early retirement once we have admitted our errors. I would be more than happy to devote my life to a more comfortable and ample behind for the good and wise Senator.
I fear the volatility has really just begun though, and it may get much worse before correct thinking can save what is left of mankind.
I fear the volatility has really just begun though, and it may get much worse before correct thinking can save what is left of mankind.
#8
So, when the media takes one bit of information, like a crash, and calls the entire aviation system unsafe, we get all up in arms because we know that LONG TERM data says it is safe.
ONE month of record cold temps is enough to make an entire decision on global warming? I'm not saying global warming is or is not happening. What I'm saying is that it is not smart to say "Well that's it, the science is settled..." based on one month, in one state.
This is my only argument in favor of attempting to reduce emissions (not supporting any specific means of doing that). We know that the smog that we put in the air is not good for the environment. It depletes the ozone, etc. I think we can agree that it is harmful, whether its causing global warming or not. That said, shouldn't we take steps to reduce the harm we are causing the environment? I didn't say, shouldn't we take steps to harm our environment at the cost of harming our economy, but shouldn't we look into steps that work for us and the economy? Wind and solar power, better insulation of homes, and other things that make us more efficient?
ONE month of record cold temps is enough to make an entire decision on global warming? I'm not saying global warming is or is not happening. What I'm saying is that it is not smart to say "Well that's it, the science is settled..." based on one month, in one state.
This is my only argument in favor of attempting to reduce emissions (not supporting any specific means of doing that). We know that the smog that we put in the air is not good for the environment. It depletes the ozone, etc. I think we can agree that it is harmful, whether its causing global warming or not. That said, shouldn't we take steps to reduce the harm we are causing the environment? I didn't say, shouldn't we take steps to harm our environment at the cost of harming our economy, but shouldn't we look into steps that work for us and the economy? Wind and solar power, better insulation of homes, and other things that make us more efficient?
#9
Ok, but some of us are feeling the volatility in our rumps, shouldn't that count for something?
You may not have caught the humor here, nobody is saying a month of data( but we are looking at a decade of data that says it isn't happening) or a tingle in a fat lady's rump is proof of anything.
If you believe it is harmful, stop flying your plane, stop driving and stop using electricity. Let us know how that works out for us.
I mean if you believe, you should take immediate action. Right? Take those steps you mentioned and solve the problem. We are counting on you.
Wind and solar won't get it done, can you like nuclear?
You may not have caught the humor here, nobody is saying a month of data( but we are looking at a decade of data that says it isn't happening) or a tingle in a fat lady's rump is proof of anything.
If you believe it is harmful, stop flying your plane, stop driving and stop using electricity. Let us know how that works out for us.
I mean if you believe, you should take immediate action. Right? Take those steps you mentioned and solve the problem. We are counting on you.
Wind and solar won't get it done, can you like nuclear?
Last edited by jungle; 08-14-2009 at 06:38 PM.
#10
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AZFlyer
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11-22-2008 02:57 AM