Global Warming?

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Global Warming?

Postby SirKent » 15 Jun 2007 20:21

I figured there would already be a topic for this, but when I used the handy search feature, nothing came up. So congratulations, GoNintendo, on your first debate on global warming (at least since the downtime)!

I'm a huge proponent to stopping global warming/climate change/the environmental crisis. If you haven't seen Al Gore's A Series of Unfortu-- err, An Inconvenient Truth, I would highly recommend it.

I'd also like to point out this video. While not as terrifying as it promises, it makes a very good point. The risks inherent in failing to act far outweigh any other consequences. Even if global warming is a crock (probably not), we wind up with a cleaner planet and the boost to the economy that'll inevitably come with the research and introduction of the new technology. If it's not a crock and we don't do anything about it, we may lose everything.

As Al Gore put it, when weighing gold bars (the economy) against the entire planet, "there is no choice".
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Postby el_sean » 15 Jun 2007 20:54

I started a thread like this before the whole forum went ka-put. No hard feelings though. :wink:

While I have my own beliefs about the Earth's future, I feel that nothing we can do or ever have done has ever affected the Earth's climate to an extent that would destroy the whole Earth. Granted, if you nuke the planet enough, you could do some serious damage, but I think we need to put a few things in perspective:

1. CO2 is a very common compound on Earth. So common, that the Earth's Ocean's are filled to the brim with the stuff. Oceans absorb and release tons and tons of CO2 depending on the climate at that time. The hotter the planet, the more CO2 released, the colder the planet, the more CO2 absorbed. This explains why rising temperatures and increasing CO2 levels tend to run together. The oceans release a ton of CO2, way more than how much us as a people release. To put it into perspective of how much CO2 is released... A single volcano eruption would produce more CO2 than all of the world's CO2 emissions for a whole year. Even a volcano eruption is a drop in the water when compared to how much is released by the oceans each year.

2. Cows produce Methane, which is considered to make up 18% of these Greenhouse gasses. Sounds like we need to get rid of those cows instead...

3. Plants need CO2 to live, just like how we need Oxygen to live. So in this theory, we should see a boost in plant life because of the warmer climate and the abundance of CO2.

4. The Earth has several different orbits. We have our primary orbit around the sun, our secondary orbit around the milky way galaxy, and possibly a third orbit around whatever the milky way galaxy orbits. Each orbit will bring us closer and farther to heat sources, which would explain why the Earth is getting warmer: Because we are entering summer in our second orbit. It also explains the ice age.

5. The weather is very unpredictable. Enough said.

I personally don't believe that anything is wrong. I believe that mankind has trained itself to believe that the Earth is a fragile thing that's easily broken through the things we do. Earth is not as fragile as you think.
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Postby Count Bleck » 15 Jun 2007 22:35

Climates have always been going up and down. Not so long ago they were calling Global Cooling a fact! Here are your choices, bold adventurer.

1. Listen to your pal, Al.

2. Listen to both serious views on global warming, because anti-global-warmingists are silenced.

3. Blow up the sun!
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Postby SirKent » 16 Jun 2007 01:54

el_sean wrote:I started a thread like this before the whole forum went ka-put. No hard feelings though. :wink:

While I have my own beliefs about the Earth's future, I feel that nothing we can do or ever have done has ever affected the Earth's climate to an extent that would destroy the whole Earth.

Hence why I said "since the downtime" ;)

I fully agree. There is nothing humanity can do that will destroy the planet. On the other hand, we very much have the power to destroy ourselves, or at least a very large chunk of us. We can make our home inhospitable to human life.

1. CO2 is a very common compound on Earth. So common, that the Earth's Ocean's are filled to the brim with the stuff. Oceans absorb and release tons and tons of CO2 depending on the climate at that time. The hotter the planet, the more CO2 released, the colder the planet, the more CO2 absorbed. This explains why rising temperatures and increasing CO2 levels tend to run together. The oceans release a ton of CO2, way more than how much us as a people release.

Yes, as the ocean is heated it releases more CO2. But guess what carbon emissions from pollution are doing? As we heat the planet, we encourage other factors to contribute as well. We heat, the ocean heats, it gets even hotter, lather, rinse, repeat.

To put it into perspective of how much CO2 is released... A single volcano eruption would produce more CO2 than all of the world's CO2 emissions for a whole year. Even a volcano eruption is a drop in the water when compared to how much is released by the oceans each year.

Actually, that's incorrect. According to David Suzuki, within 20-50 years, the Alberta tar sands alone will be producing as much greenhouse gas as all of the world's volcanoes combined.

2. Cows produce Methane, which is considered to make up 18% of these Greenhouse gasses. Sounds like we need to get rid of those cows instead...

Animals venting themselves is a natural occurrence that is biologically necessary. Us driving around in SUVs and HUMMERs isn't. We can live perfectly fine without that.

3. Plants need CO2 to live, just like how we need Oxygen to live. So in this theory, we should see a boost in plant life because of the warmer climate and the abundance of CO2.

Except we're also causing the majority of deforestation--the remainder being caused primarily by insects, like the pine beetle problem on the west coast, but that was also a result of climate change affecting the beetle population.

4. The Earth has several different orbits. We have our primary orbit around the sun, our secondary orbit around the milky way galaxy, and possibly a third orbit around whatever the milky way galaxy orbits. Each orbit will bring us closer and farther to heat sources, which would explain why the Earth is getting warmer: Because we are entering summer in our second orbit. It also explains the ice age.

May-hap so. I'll have to look into this. The change seems way too drastic to be plausible though. It makes more sense that it's a localized effect.

5. The weather is very unpredictable. Enough said.

It sure is, but it's also chartable. Look at the trends. Yes, the temperature goes up and down in a cycle, but it still climbs. If you haven't seen An Inconvenient Truth, do it. There is a very nice graph laid out showing the current trend. It shows basically this:

As the temperature climbs, the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere climb as well. Scientists can measure the amount of CO2 from thousands of years ago using ice core samples, and it shows that we're at about the same level of CO2 in the atmosphere (and thus temperature) as the Earth was at prior to the last ice age.

You can say it's cyclical all you want. It doesn't change the fact that the temperature is still climbing.

I personally don't believe that anything is wrong. I believe that mankind has trained itself to believe that the Earth is a fragile thing that's easily broken through the things we do. Earth is not as fragile as you think.

The Earth isn't fragile at all. It's survived countless collapses and do-overs. Ecosystems, on the other hand, are incredibly fragile. You introduce a foreign species and it can completely upset the balance, wiping out large populations of organisms that were already there. It's happened before. Nature will eventually correct the balance, but in this case, it could mean that it'll do it without us as well as countless other species on the planet. I don't know how much anyone else cares about the animal population, but for the first time in recorded history, we're seeing polar bears drown because there is so little ice in the Arctic during the summer. If the polar bear population drops, the population of other animals (seals, for example) will be allowed to climb. These animals are then allowed to over hunt/graze, diminishing the populations of other species, which in turn affects whatever else relates to them and so on and so forth.

2. Listen to both serious views on global warming, because anti-global-warmingists are silenced.

No, "anti-global-warmingists" typically work for oil companies or their sympathizers. It has been a goal of the oil industry to create doubt about whether global warming is real, and they've succeeded.


I'm not some salivating Al Gore lover, but if anybody hasn't seen An Inconvenient Truth, they really shouldn't be speaking on this issue. If you've seen the movie and still doubt it, then that's another matter (possibly psychiatric). If you know about the problem and are just totally apathetic towards the situation and could care less if humanity is wiped out, that's a much more respectable opinion than "it's not gonna happen", because at least it's not denying the facts.

The point still remains though: we can do nothing, or we can act. The consequences of being wrong are what you have to face, and the evidence is overwhelmingly against us. We can risk *gasp* spending money on cleaner technology that will benefit the world and the economy regardless of whether global warming is an issue or not, or we can risk sea levels rising 20 feet (just from Greenland melting, and it's already started), millions of people displaced, entire ecosystems collapsing and having to reset themselves and countless species dying off or becoming endangered. Scientists are calling the current era we're in the "Holocene extinction event", and we're the main cause of it. The last was the "Cretaceous-Tertiary" and it's what wiped out the dinosaurs.

You know Florida? If we do nothing and it goes against us, Florida is gone. So is California, British Columbia, most of Scandinavia... basically any coastal region is gone. That's just from the flooding. We then having shifting climates, torrential storms, droughts, and the social issues that will stem from massive turmoil and human displacement.

Also, going back to Greenland melting, if that happens, Europe goes into an ice age. I'll let you look up why for yourselves, as I'm not here to spoon feed you.

So, which sounds worse? Being subjected to the horrors of green cars and alternative fuels, or complete and utter chaos? Those are the stakes. That's what your opinions risk.


EDIT: One final thing I thought I'd mention. You know Venus? You know how it's hotter than Mercury, despite being further away from the sun? You know why that is? It's because Venus lacks plate tectonics like the Earth, which aids in releasing built up pressure under the surface. Because of this, all of Venus' pressure is released in violent volcanic eruptions, which pump CO2 into the atmosphere. CO2 heats up the atmosphere. It's undeniable. An abundance will create a totally inhospitable world. We only have to look a few thousand miles away to see the greatest example of global warming in effect.
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Postby SteveC1990 » 16 Jun 2007 04:44

I believe that there is global warming... floods in belfast this week... like seriously!

However, before there were cars etc the was warming and cooling of the planet... its a natural cycle... look at venus the second planet from the sun yet it is the warmest due to global warming... oh yeah... we dont drive HUMMERS round on that planet...

EDIT: just saw the thing about venus above... yet it is still the warmest planet. I get ur explaination but can i ask how do we know that it doesn't have plate tetonics?


That said, CO2 emmissions can add to global warming (even though i believe it is very slightly) so i dont mind helping out our planet using "greener" fuel etc.

I remember watching a programme which linked global warming and cooling closer to the force of the suns magnetic field... i'l post a link if i get one!
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Postby el_sean » 16 Jun 2007 11:24

If you are going to counter anyone's arguments, you better produce facts. I got these straight from wikipedia.

First, Alberta...
For every barrel of synthetic oil produced in Alberta, more than 80 kg of greenhouse gases are released into the atmosphere

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alberta_tar_sands

Yikes, that's alot, but wait...

Gas emissions from volcanoes are a natural contributor to acid rain. Volcanic activity releases about 130 to 230 teragrams (145 million to 255 million short tons) of carbon dioxide each year. Volcanic eruptions may inject aerosols into the Earth's atmosphere. Large injections may cause visual effects such as unusually colorful sunsets and affect global climate mainly by cooling it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcano

If you do the math, 230 teragrams is aproximately 230,000,000,000,000 grams of CO2. 80 Kilograms is 80,000. In order to equal the amount of CO2 released by volcanoes alone, we'd have to extract and burn 2,875,000,000 barrels of oil each year.

Keep in mind these three things:
1. That volcano number was just CO2. That number for Alberta was all the greenhouse gasses.

2. Oil came from dead plants, which means that CO2 was in the atmosphere at one time anyway. In fact, that could be the main reason why we have oil in the first place, because there was so much dead plant matter millions of years ago from the large amount of CO2.

3. That was one volcano. If one volcano is producing that much CO2, and CO2 is as devastating to the environment as Al Gore said, then there is nothing we can to to stop the Earth from burning up. Not all the Kyoto Protocols or anything.

As for the Earth's many orbits theory I explained earlier, the best way to show this is by graphing 5sin(x)+5cos(.3x) into a graphing calculator. The sine function represents our natural seasons: One year, while the cosine represents Earth's second orbit: Earth's second summer. If I saw that data about the Earth's temperatures rising, I'd probably fall for Global warming too. When both sine and cosine are high, this represents a peak, which would be the equivalent of a double summer for Earth.

As for Venus.... Venus is the closest planet to the sun that has an atmosphere. Mercury has so little atmosphere, that the place freezes in the shadows and boils in direct sunlight. The atmosphere allows the planet to disperse the heat.

I don't believe in Greenhouse gasses for many reasons, but the main reason is that there are too many conflicting facts that don't add up to CO2.
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Postby cortjezter » 17 Jun 2007 17:11

just a quick thought... it's been noted that the earth itself isn't physically very fragile, but its ecosystems are.

despite all of the numbers floating around about what animals or natural activities are producing however much in greenhouse gases, it should be noted that all of those are exactly that--natural, and they provide the proper balance. it's when humans start contributing to these numbers--in any amount, that things start getting off kilter, perhaps not necessarily causing the warming (yes, it could be part of the regular climate cycle of the earth), but our interference is at the very least accelerating what is normally a hundreds or thousands of years shift.
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Postby thewster » 18 Jun 2007 17:24

I don't think Global Warming is a reality. I think some people are just paranoid.
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Postby Count Bleck » 19 Jun 2007 21:19

The climate changes automatically, man doesn't control it NEARLY as hugely as they think. It's gone up, it's went down. And Al, glaciers DO fall. Naturally. It's not global warming. It's a political game.

The world is going to end but certainly not by global warming!
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Hmm...

Postby 8 bit » 21 Jun 2007 13:12

I also believe this is something natural to the Earth (about the second summer).

But, I too think maybe global warming is the perfect excuse we as humans need to really start taking care of our planet. Sure, we cannot destroy it, but we can sure make a lot of damage, hurting ourselves in the process.

Now all this Inconvenient Truth stuff... people that HAVE watched the movie seem SO convinced, it makes me think there could be other interests involved (future presidential elections, perhaps?). But as long as it makes people wake-up and start doing something for the sake of our planet, I'm all for it.

We depend too much on oil, and that's a fact. The US and other countries want to keep it that way, sadly.
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Postby NintendoWiiForever » 21 Jun 2007 13:31

it is pretty natural for earth to change over as long period of time.

there was a time when there was very little oxygen on earth and tons in the water. eventually that changed and animals moved to the land. there was so much oxygen that animals and bugs were big because the oxygen rich air could support there big bodies....again it changed due to the explosion of creatures living on land...oxygen went down in the air and bugs when from 6 feet to 2 inches.

this stuff happens all the time and i think what ever happens happens...life will find a way
im not saying we should try to stop it...but we should not act like it is unnatural
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Postby cortjezter » 21 Jun 2007 17:33

i understand some people may simply ignore scientific facts in favour of their own beliefs--however informed or not they may be.

the fact of the matter is yes, the earth's climates do change over time...the idea and problem with 'global warming' is that the current trend is not that the world is getting warmer, but that it's happening at very unnatural speeds. instead of taking 5-10, 000 years, the same level of catastrophic changes are projected to happen within 100 or so. that unnatural rate is more the argument and problem behind global warming, not whether it is happening.
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Postby Anonymous » 14 Jul 2007 00:56

But no one really knows what going to happen! Al gore says that all kids' futures are going to be horible! The world going to be melting and we're going to suffer! But someone else (idk who) said it's a cycle (aka patter! We all have heard about the ice age and the all that solid frozen ice and then it all melts away!

I'm not really sure anymore! They all make good points!
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Postby SteveC1990 » 14 Jul 2007 05:30

I remember my someone telling me that forty years ago when they were in school people were shouting "Theres gonna be another ice age" now its "Global Warming". As i said before i believe there is global warming but we are not causing it as much as we are lead to believe... Global warming has become a business - many governments are making money from it!
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Postby dbroad » 15 Jul 2007 11:42

The amount of gas animals produce depends on their food, if you look at how we feed cattle nowadays (fodder and artificial grain) compared to the normal grass you see that we are actually causing cows to give out an extra 35% CO2 then they would naturally. It sounds small but considering a cow will give off more CO2 a year then a car does then times it by the number of cows(more than the number of cars) it shows that it is a problem as only 75% of that figure of CO2 emitted by cows is due to natural emissions. Global Warming is mainly due to whatever else we do other than fossil fuel usage.
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Postby NeoBaTWare » 18 Jul 2007 18:07

Basically I believe that Global Warming is a natural process. But us humans are altering it and speeding it up at an unnatural pace.
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Postby el_sean » 04 Oct 2007 15:11

cortjezter wrote:i'm pretty sure we've had global warming debates in another thread, but just my two cents:

honestly, it doesn't really matter whether humankind is affecting the environment and climate. we should be living better and more sustainable either way. doesn't matter if auto emissions are causing ice masses to melt quicker than ever before; we should be looking to alternate forms of transportation.. cleaner, more efficient anyway.

an analogy: it doesn't matter whether you're thin or thick; eating healthy is just a smart way to live.


You locked the thread before I could add a few words. There's a problem with the whole debate: People are looking at this and are thinking "We have to do something!" rather then focus on important details. You're right Cort, we all are looking for better, more efficient tools that are better than previous ones. If we weren't, we'd be using steam powered trains and horse-drawn buggies. These technologies will come in time. The problem is that they are looking at a controversial topic and are fighting over their opinion without listening to the other side. I'll be the first to admit it, I'm biased, but then again we all are. At the very least, I can study both sides before I block the other out.

The whole goal is preservation, right? If I was an atheist, I'd believe that this is everything we have. If that's the case, then we have to keep an eye out for the future to continue the species. The people who are for cleaning up the atmosphere are tackling the wrong topic. Instead of selling them on alternative fuels or some other issue we agree with, they tack on Global Warming, and they lose the sale because they are too focused on a topic that people disagree on.

You know, the people who are worried about global warming are taking this the wrong way. If they really want to get people to their side, they need to focus on the consumers instead. Seriously, who here loves paying $3.12 for a gallon of gasoline? People can only stand high gas prices only for so long. Even President Bush started funding more efficient alternate forms of fuel, we just have to let things run their course. We should focus on technology development and less on how CO2 affects the environment. You can't lose when you have a Win-Win situation like this because how can you argue that high prices on gas is a good thing?

I really hope we can come to an agreement here. People aren't stupid, ignorant morons; we just have differing opinions. Just because you can't sell me on your opinion doesn't mean that I'm uneducated or ignorant. Instead of poking or repairing holes in the Global Warming argument, lets all agree that we know too little about the subject to have a definite answer and just end this debate.
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Postby aighead » 05 Oct 2007 02:01

OK, hopefully I don't mess this one up... ;)

The following is a quote from cort in the other thread...

but i will say that aighead's point wasn't missed. in fact it seems he wasn't quite getting mine, because he just kept repeating his own.

MY point is that it doesn't matter what people WANT to do when it comes to the environment, pollution, etc. since it's a public space, there shouldn't be any choice when it comes to whether you are allowed to pollute or not. global warming isn't fake...it's a simple matter of science. the only question is its cause, and while nature plays a role for sure, humankind HAS in fact evolved to a point where it can have an effect on the world, and it's that increased role that is in question; nobody can quite measure that.


I feel we are beating similar dead fish here and not necessarily understanding what each other is trying to say... I "get" your point, it's just not what I believe. I agree that we should attempt to build and live better and healthier lives, but we should be doing that by ourselves and not being made to be involved, especially when we haven't really proven anything. When you make people do something like that it tends to get into the realm of gov't involvement (and this ties in with el_sean above) and forced regulations. There are too many politicos out there that will use manmade global warming as a soapbox to preach from and eventually wear down human beings right to think for themselves. This all leads to a nation and world that is much too dependent on our leaders, who I don't trust nearly as much as myself or many folks I know.

People should be encouraged to be responsible for their actions, not forced. Forcing means you need to hold hands and keep an eye out to make sure things are being done properly all the time. Adults do not need to behave that way.

Another analogy I thought of earlier today is: Why should I be forced to pay for Santa to deliver toys if I don't think Santa is real? Does that make sense? People are welcome to believe in whatever cause they want, but until it is proven to me to be the way, I'm going to feel the way I feel. Saying that folks MUST do something one way (in this faith based aspect) is quite fundamentalist (yeah in the religious sense), and potentially dangerous in the wrong hands.

That is not saying that every big company in the world should be free to dump whatever toxic waste they want into the rivers, it's obvious that that causes serious problems to the environment, but to say we as a race can significantly alter the temperature of our planet is unfounded for as much passion as is going into it. And it's that passion that slowly eats at our human rights to make decisions for ourselves and presumes that we need the government to take care of us.

I've got a feeling this post will still be misconstrued... Hopefully it makes sense. :D
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Postby Count Bleck » 05 Oct 2007 14:37

Global warming is real, just not in the end-of-the-world disaster movie thriller crisis we're taking it as. Don't you get it? They make those movies to SCARE us. While I have nothing against solar power, wind power, etc. (in fact, I think they're awesome), global warming is being used as a MAJOR political scandal, especially with the '08 elections.

Al Gore is a global warming god to people as of now. He says he's not going to run for president in '08. Gee, I'd really like to believe that. That man is being VERY careful on what he says. Why do you think he refuses to talk with people in interviews over global warming? He doesn't want to make a mistake, or his reputation will go down the drain. He'll probably jump in at the last minute and say he's running. I wouldn't be surprised.

I also have nothing against fighting against pollution. We live on this planet, why not take care of God's green earth? But remember; 30 years ago Global Cooling was the major thing and scientists were saying then that it WAS going to happen, we WERE going into a second ice age. Global Cooling? Global Warming? What's after this, Global Neutraling? Crazy!

As far as oil goes, it's another scam to get more money into the governments greedy claws. My favorite saying? "Screw the caribou! Drill Alaska!" Cookie to anyone who's heard that before.
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Postby Esnel Pla » 05 Oct 2007 21:38

Regardless of whether or not global warming is "real" or not, its ridiculous to just shrug it off and keep burning fossil fuels.

Regardless of whether or not the planet is simply going through a natural heating trend or not, we are living a fools paradise because we are dependant on an energy source that WILL simply disappear one day.

Regardless of Al Gore, George W. Bush, or anyone else, we need to change how we get most of our power and we need to do that pronto. Ethanol IS a viable alternative, but NOT from corn, as corn is a horrible source of ethanol and the grain alcohol it produces does not contain enough calories to warrant the energy put into making it and the amount of topsoil it is killing off. Cellulose ethanol made from weeds and such is the only real alternative, as it won't kill the Earth OR be a waste of power to harness AND create a better fuel than corn ethanol.
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Postby sharkh20 » 13 Dec 2007 19:16

Esnel Pla wrote:Regardless of whether or not global warming is "real" or not, its ridiculous to just shrug it off and keep burning fossil fuels.

Regardless of whether or not the planet is simply going through a natural heating trend or not, we are living a fools paradise because we are dependant on an energy source that WILL simply disappear one day.

Regardless of Al Gore, George W. Bush, or anyone else, we need to change how we get most of our power and we need to do that pronto. Ethanol IS a viable alternative, but NOT from corn, as corn is a horrible source of ethanol and the grain alcohol it produces does not contain enough calories to warrant the energy put into making it and the amount of topsoil it is killing off. Cellulose ethanol made from weeds and such is the only real alternative, as it won't kill the Earth OR be a waste of power to harness AND create a better fuel than corn ethanol.


To say that we are living a fool's paradise is just silly. I feel that people just don't want to be bothered by it because they already have so much on their plate physically or mentally.

On global warming, I feel at this time that it is a non-issue that has just been used for fame and glory. Nobody can prove why it is there. Only hypotheses and guesses.
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Postby PikminFan7 » 26 Dec 2007 13:28

all we have to do is plant tons of trees and they will eat up all the co2.
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Postby aighead » 27 Dec 2007 10:31

Ah, the ol' carbon offset! But what happens when those tree start dying and then we have a global termite epidemic!! Oh no!
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Postby LuigiGBA » 27 Dec 2007 10:35

sharkh20 wrote:
Esnel Pla wrote:Regardless of whether or not global warming is "real" or not, its ridiculous to just shrug it off and keep burning fossil fuels.

Regardless of whether or not the planet is simply going through a natural heating trend or not, we are living a fools paradise because we are dependant on an energy source that WILL simply disappear one day.

Regardless of Al Gore, George W. Bush, or anyone else, we need to change how we get most of our power and we need to do that pronto. Ethanol IS a viable alternative, but NOT from corn, as corn is a horrible source of ethanol and the grain alcohol it produces does not contain enough calories to warrant the energy put into making it and the amount of topsoil it is killing off. Cellulose ethanol made from weeds and such is the only real alternative, as it won't kill the Earth OR be a waste of power to harness AND create a better fuel than corn ethanol.


To say that we are living a fool's paradise is just silly. I feel that people just don't want to be bothered by it because they already have so much on their plate physically or mentally.

On global warming, I feel at this time that it is a non-issue that has just been used for fame and glory. Nobody can prove why it is there. Only hypotheses and guesses.


People ignore things that make them feel bad.
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Postby PikminFan7 » 27 Dec 2007 11:12

aighead wrote:Ah, the ol' carbon offset! But what happens when those tree start dying and then we have a global termite epidemic!! Oh no!


you get planes to fly around the earth spraying termite spray everywhere and all the termites will die and replant the trees.
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