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Climate Researchers Feeling Heat From White House

Jeff K writes "Facts and science collide with tribal loyalties, the Washington Post reports: 'Scientists doing climate research for the federal government say the Bush administration has made it hard for them to speak forthrightly to the public about global warming. The result, the researchers say, is a danger that Americans are not getting the full story on how the climate is changing.'"

635 comments

  1. Your skin is not melting by liliafan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is this really a shocker? Bush has had a policy of denying global warming is a result of humans, the fact he is giving the NOAA extra money for research rather than prevention is quite interesting, global warming is something that is happening.

    I remember years ago when the offical stance was there is no such thing as global warming, this has evolved to, there is no proof of global warming, to okay it exists but it isn't our fault, somehow I get the feeling the intention now is to attempt to prove it isn't caused by the biggest donators to the Bush administration.

    When the whitehouse and the pentagon started to open up and declassify documents all those years ago, it was a good thing it felt like finally they are opening up, now things are going back to feeling more like the cold war, a policy of secrecy, spying (although internally now rather than on a foreign element), lies, and gagging the people with important information.

    So as you feel your skin cancer forming and watch the ice caps come washing over us, just remember it isn't because of mankind, President Bush says so.

    --
    GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    1. Re:Your skin is not melting by liliafan · · Score: 5, Funny
      More FUD by the far-left wackjobs.

      Actually more middleleft, but if you prefer to remain blinded to the reality perhaps the extra UV rays will aid your efforts.
      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    2. Re:Your skin is not melting by BungoMan85 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And I'm sure BushCheneyCo (tm) and his big cabal of corrupt campaign contributors aren't responsible for previous warming (and cooling) periods either... They say they aren't, so that means they really must be cause anyone who says their not all dirty profit driven corporate beholden liars is either bought out by them or is so dumb they've been duped by BushCheneyCo (tm) and his big cabal of corrupt campaign contributors.

      At the risk of destroying the effectiveness of my post I'd like to clarify that that was sarcasm.

      --
      Bungo!
    3. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know this will probably be modded Flamebait. It is all about minimalizing the threat that corporations will have to shell out some of their profits to deal with environmental issues. After all, why worry about it now when our grandchildren can worry about it? Corporate greed is going to wash the human race off the face of the earth one day. But it's all about who has the most chips in the end, right? Right? But don't worry, Jesus saves.

    4. Re:Your skin is not melting by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      ...the fact he is giving the NOAA extra money for research rather than prevention is quite interesting, global warming is something that is happening.

      Until we repair the oceans and bring them back to life, we're not going to prevent anything. Now, as for Bush, he's only doing what he was voted into office to do... to make us all rich through "Reaganomics". Don't blame Bush. He was voted in knowing full well what his intentions were from the get go. If he can fatten our wallets, he's a hero. The voters are corrupt, and he's just reflecting that.

      --
      What?
    5. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      -Is the world getting warmer??.... Absolutely....

      -Is it a process that has been going on over 15,000 years now. NOTE: Even this is not in dispute. We did just come out of an ice age, by the way....

      -Do we have very much control over this process. Other than destroying > 95% of the worlds population, then NO! Burning "clean" fuels will not do crap when you have > 6 Billion people consuming. It is not an issue of clean, but rather scale.

      The world is changing. It has been allot warmer even a million years ago. Get used to it!! If I hear another person talk about "mother earth being sick", I think Im going to hurl. There is this perception with people that everything is perfect until we do something to mess it up. Well, this theory might work in sunday school, but is just a big fat lie!

    6. Re:Your skin is not melting by saleenS281 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      your post was ruined the second you tried to defend two oil barons by claiming they weren't looking out for the oil industry.

    7. Re:Your skin is not melting by liliafan · · Score: 1

      Reality check, I am not saying that the current President is responsible for global warming, what I am saying is their supporters (oil and energy producers) do not want to accept any responsibility for it, this would cost them huge amounts of money to help fix a problem they helped cause.

      I am in no way blaming the current administration for global warming, I do accuse them of covering up and protecting the people that have contributed to it though, if the oil companies had to pay out to help clean up their mess that would be less money for other things, such as I don't know, contributing to presidental campaigns perhaps?

      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    8. Re:Your skin is not melting by smooth+wombat · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Of course! It's no different than the ID vs. Evolution nonsense. They keep moving the goalposts everytime new information is gathered and presented.

      The recent posting about a new fossil link between water creatures moving onto land is the classic example (as is archaeopteryx). Such a creature was predicted both in the evolutionary path as well as the geologic path. And the prediction was confirmed by the discovery.

      But the IDers will now say (and this was discussed ad nauseum in the postings) "Well what about the creature that came before or after it? Where are those fossils?"

      So off the paleontologists go and find those fossils and the IDers repeat the same questions. Same thing here. The evidence for global warming continues to be found and expanded upon and every time the data is presented someone chimes in "But man can't affect the Earth! We're too small in the grand scheme of things."

      In 1815 Mt Tamboras eruption caused the year without a summer. It spewed out roughly 40 million tons of gases and ash from April through June. In one year man produces orders of magnitude more pollutants through the burning of fossil fuels than was done in those two months. Apparently it's ok for a volcano to influence the worlds climate but when man throws out, on a continuing basis, enormous quantities of pollutants every year, well that can't have an effect on the climate.

      It's time to get over ourselves. We are, to an extent, influencing global warming which may or may not be a natural phenomenon. These are facts which cannot be disputed. But as the parent poster said, as you watch the ice caps come washing over us, just remember it isn't because of mankind, President Bush says so.

      The really sad part is that if prevention or at least mitigation would take place it would provide a needed boost to employment in this country. Think of all the companies who would need to expand or be created to produce the pollution control products for factories and power plants. Think of all the people who be needed to service those products.

      If nothing else, think of the influx of taxes that the Republicans could use to create a bigger, more intrusive government. Think of the children and all that porn that could be banished from the interweb! Won't someone think of the children!

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    9. Re:Your skin is not melting by bobwoodard · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Is this really a shocker? Bush has had a policy of denying global warming is a result of humans, the fact he is giving the NOAA extra money for research rather than prevention is quite interesting, global warming is something that is happening.



      From the article: "Although Bush and his top advisers have said that Earth is warming and human activity has contributed to this, they have questioned some predictions and caution that mandatory limits on carbon dioxide could damage the nation's economy."

      It doesn't sound like there's any denying going on, but rather a question regarding the impact?

    10. Re:Your skin is not melting by BungoMan85 · · Score: 1

      That is a distinction without a difference. Blaming someone for a cover up and for protecting oil companies is essentially the same thing. In any other "wrong doing" if you cover up the deed or attempt to protect it are you not as guilty as the party who did it? Your implying that the current administration is helping out those who are responsible for global warming is implying that the current administration is responsible for global warming as well.

      While we're on the topic of things that contribute to global warming cleaning up their mess I say we need to rally in protest of those damn volcanos constantly spewing all that Carbon Dioxide into the atmosphere and get them to clean up after themselves!

      --
      Bungo!
    11. Re:Your skin is not melting by RedQueen.exe · · Score: 1
      You destroyed your own argument. Its BECAUSE there are 6 billion people that burning clean fuels makes such a huge difference. Say one person changes from "dirty" to clean fuels... you're right, not much of an impact.

      But when you have 6 billion people, even if it is still causing a problem burning clean fuels like you say, it's all going to happen a lot faster and harder burning traditional fuels.

      Unless your real intent was to say that you know more than the scientific community at large because you watch FOX News and are thus better educated in such matters, and global warming is not at all worsened by the effects of burning fuel.

    12. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "More FUD by the far-left wackjobs."

      You Americans don't even HAVE much of a left, much less a far-left (not saying they are right, you are just lacking one).

    13. Re:Your skin is not melting by IAmTheDave · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Of course! It's no different than the ID vs. Evolution nonsense.

      This statement on /. is getting to be like Godwin's Law. I'm hereby naming it "Martorana's Law" (that's my last name) - within any discussion of Science, there is an ~90% chance that someone will take the opportunity to take a swipe at ID.

      Don't get me wrong. I'm not an IDer. But for God's sake, this is flaimbait. An obvious attempt to get the discussion going again so mods can have fun down-modding any IDer into total oblivion while patting themselves on the back for being so enlightened, so much more intelligent than the masses.

      So "Martorana's Law" is now on the books. Slashdotters love to put down ID, even during a discussion on global warming or current administration corruption.

      Good job. Pat yourself on the back. So enlightened.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    14. Re:Your skin is not melting by BungoMan85 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I didn't defend anyone. I tried to illustrate the absurdity of the people who jump all over the Bush administration for global warming. Granted the person I responded to did it in an admitedly level headed way. But, I would not be lying if I said I have seen people go into seething rages when global warming and Bush are mentioned in the same sentence and then procede to go on tirades like the one I did with sarcasm and believe every single word of it whole heartedly.

      --
      Bungo!
    15. Re:Your skin is not melting by InsaneProcessor · · Score: 1, Troll

      Reality check! Why would they take responsibility for something that they are not responsible for? To quote something I have read in a book - "to beleive that the human race has the power or even the potential to destroy the earth is absolute arogance". The sun is responsible for "global warming". Volocanoes are responsible for "global warming". If the gases that they spew are more plentiful that all that humans can put out in 100 years then they are far more responsible.

      I don't hold the oil companies any more responsible for "global warming" than I am responsible for a crack baby born on a continent that I have never been on or met anyone from.

      Reality check is something you desperatly need.

      --

      Athiesm is a religion like not collecting stamps is a hobby.
    16. Re:Your skin is not melting by liliafan · · Score: 1
      That is a distinction without a difference. Blaming someone for a cover up and for protecting oil companies is essentially the same thing. In any other "wrong doing" if you cover up the deed or attempt to protect it are you not as guilty as the party who did it? Your implying that the current administration is helping out those who are responsible for global warming is implying that the current administration is responsible for global warming as well.


      Of course there is a difference, if you kill someone and I hide evidence for you, I am guilty of obstruction of justice not murder. This is entirely my point, the current administration is not guilty of the actual crime but they are covering up or skewing the truth, making them guilty of something else entirely.
      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    17. Re:Your skin is not melting by liliafan · · Score: 0
      To quote something I have read in a book - "to beleive that the human race has the power or even the potential to destroy the earth is absolute arogance".


      So say setting of every nuclear weapon on the planet would not destroy the earth? Or more specifically its ability to support life.

      Global warming may not destroy the planet but it can destroy its ability to sustain human life.
      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    18. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      take the opportunity to take a swipe at ID.

      I think you misspelled "creationism".

    19. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reality check! Why would someone admit to something they DID do if they didn't have to?

    20. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't get me wrong. I'm not an IDer. But for God's sake, this is flaimbait. An obvious attempt to get the discussion going again so mods can have fun down-modding any IDer into total oblivion while patting themselves on the back for being so enlightened, so much more intelligent than the masses.

      Okay, here I am. I'm a fundamentalist creationist. I believe the literal understanding of Genesis is the most likely explanation of what happened, although it may not tell the full story, and/or may be figurative or symbolic or something.

      Have fun. Beat me. Slap me. Mod me down. I know someone will get their jollies. I'd hate to deny it to you just because Martorana pointed out where this was going and tried to stop it.

      Maybe eventually we can just get the discussion simplied to something like "Is not!!!" "Is so!!!~!1~!" to save time or something.

    21. Re:Your skin is not melting by Illserve · · Score: 1

      How is this flamebait?!

      Slashdot has always leaned left, but when it comes environmental issues the moderators are giving the smackdown to opposing viewpoints a bit too heavily these days. Does the other side not even get to be heard?

    22. Re:Your skin is not melting by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The logical fallacies used by the ID crowd are the same set of logical fallacies used to attack climate research, ergo, criticisms of ID pertain directly to the climate research debate.

      The enlightened person realizes this and points out the symmetry. That way, we can use the same logical basis for defeating these intellectually dishonest criticisms on climate research that we use to defeat ID.

      I'm sorry, but I don't think you've discovered the new Godwin here.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    23. Re:Your skin is not melting by matrem · · Score: 1

      Good observation, about the evolution of the global-warming sceptics. There are four steps here:

      1. Global warming does not exist.
      2. Global warming exists but it is not a threat.
      3. Global warming exists and it is a threat but there's nothing we can do about it.
      4. Global warming exists and it is a threat and we could have prevented it but it's too late now.

      Right now, we've just passed step 2.

    24. Re:Your skin is not melting by eno2001 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      While we're on the topic of things that contribute to global warming cleaning up their mess I say we need to rally in protest of those damn volcanos constantly spewing all that Carbon Dioxide into the atmosphere and get them to clean up after themselves!

      You've just proved your worthlessness in this discussion with that flippant quip. Typical of someone who wants to bury their head in the sand about human involvement in the climate problem. I'll bet you also think it's OK to go through a red light if no one is around. I'll bet you think that if it doesn't hurt anyone, then it's OK to speed on an empty strech of highway even though you lack the omnicience to know whether or not there will be a car ahead of you that you don't expect. "Getting away with stuff" is the lifestyle of the idiots who would defend Bush and his corporate cronies. They are the same people I target as criminals.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    25. Re:Your skin is not melting by gowen · · Score: 5, Informative
      I believe the literal understanding of Genesis is the most likely explanation of what happened, although it .... may be figurative or symbolic or something.
      Look, if you truly believe the literal understanding of Genesis, then you don't think its figurative or symbolic. That's what literal means. It means "not figurative or symbolic".

      So, you either believe the literal word of Genesis, or you believe it might be figurative. And if you're truly a fundamentalist, its the former.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    26. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Well, there's not much to smack down in your post. Your only assertion is about what you believe, not what you think others should be taught as fact. At worst, this makes you a little silly for believing that one ancient story is more likely to be true than any other ancient story. A little disappointing, really ;)

      The only time I really get motivated on the smack down is when I come across a persistent evangelist trying to convert me or my fiance who simply does not take a hint. The first request to look at your tract will be met with a simple "No thanks." Not leaving it at that may result in a public scene (depending on my mood).

      Regards,
      Ross

    27. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
      While we're on the topic of things that contribute to global warming cleaning up their mess I say we need to rally in protest of those damn volcanos constantly spewing all that Carbon Dioxide into the atmosphere and get them to clean up after themselves!

      When you see this point, it's always a good indication that the person making it doesn't have a clue about WTF they're talking about.

      Here's the scoop from a geologist, you know, someone who actually knows something about this topic:

      There is no doubt that volcanic eruptions add CO2 to the atmosphere, but compared to the quantity produced by human activities, their impact is virtually trivial: volcanic eruptions produce about 110 million tons of CO2 each year, whereas human activities contribute almost 10,000 times that quantity.
      Can't we just put this "volcanoes are the problem" urban legend to rest once and for all?
    28. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see it as if it was 1988, Ronald Reagan and George Bush senior were ex-tobacco industry executives, and denying any and all scientific results that indicated that smoking causes cancer. ...And then, when it was completely impossible to deny that somking causes cancer, still denying that secondhand smoking causes cancer.

      Of course, half the country wants to believe them, not just because the prez and VP are such good guys, but because of their own 3-pack-a-day habit. Meanwhile, tobacco execs are adding nicotine to cigarettes to make them more addictive...

    29. Re:Your skin is not melting by GalacticCmdr · · Score: 2, Informative

      Why would anyone slap you down? We all have our beliefs and frankly my policy is to repect others and I expect them to respect mine. I would no sooner dissuade you of your beliefs than I would my kids belief in Santa, the Easter Bunny, or the Tooth Fairy.

      Now before you get ruffled, I am not saying your beliefs are childish. To my kids Santa is not a childish belief either. He believes with all of his heart that Santa really does exist.

      --
      Programming: Its not just a job - its an indenture.
    30. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      Your only assertion is about what you believe, not what you think others should be taught as fact.

      Kudos for noticing that.

    31. Re:Your skin is not melting by Roxton · · Score: 1

      I have to agree with GOD_ALMIGHTY. The comparison between climate research and ID is legitimate. The desire to analyze facts with respect to positions rather than analyzing positions with respect to facts is an integral part of human nature and is highly prevalent in our society. Such behavior needs to be identified, scorned, and ultimately overcome with education.

    32. Re:Your skin is not melting by stupidfoo · · Score: 1

      How is it part of NOAA's mandate to _PREVENT_ global warming?

    33. Re:Your skin is not melting by LunaticTippy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wow, when GOD ALMIGHTY smacks down your attempted "law" it stays smacked down.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    34. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      To quote something I have read in a book - "to beleive that the human race has the power or even the potential to destroy the earth is absolute arogance".

      It sounds like the author of that book had an agenda. And wasn't very well informed.

      Volocanoes are responsible for "global warming". If the gases that they spew are more plentiful that all that humans can put out in 100 years then they are far more responsible.

      Except that volcanic eruptions over the last 100 years only account for 4% of the total greenhouse gas emissions over that same period. Which goes back to my point. You'll need to find a better book to quote.

      It's rather amazing what conclusions you can reach when you decide the results before you begin your "research". Most of what the right-wing comes out with is based on this kind of "research".

      It's so strange. Politically, I'm in the middle-right myself. Lately, however, I find that I have more in common with the statements coming from the left than the right-wing nutjobs, who seem to have not only inhaled, but gargled the bong water. My most sincere hope is that McCain can carry the Republican ticket, and we can wrest the Republican party back from the lunatic fringe. Wasn't the Republican party supposed to be the one defending personal liberties? So why in hell is the current president & cronies leading the charge to destroy our Constitutional freedoms?

      (I know the answer: neo-cons are actually fascists at heart. It was a rhetorical question.)

      Regards,
      Ross

    35. Re:Your skin is not melting by HardCase · · Score: 1
      Bush has had a policy of denying global warming is a result of humans, the fact he is giving the NOAA extra money for research rather than prevention is quite interesting, global warming is something that is happening.

      ...


      So as you feel your skin cancer forming and watch the ice caps come washing over us, just remember it isn't because of mankind, President Bush says so.


      From the article:

      Although Bush and his top advisers have said that Earth is warming and human activity has contributed to this...

      Regardless, I'm not much in favor of the politicizing of scientific research and I suspect that you feel the same way. Facts are facts, spin is spin. The cynic in me, though, fully expects any administration to exert control over its employees when it comes to statements regarding official policy and, unfortunately, global warming definitely bears on official policy.

      -h-

    36. Re:Your skin is not melting by compro01 · · Score: 1

      i think that there likely should be 5 steps

      1. Global warming does not exist.
      2. Global warming exists but it is not a threat and its not our fault.
      3. Global warming exists and it is a threat but it's not our fault.
      3. Global warming exists and it is a threat but there's nothing we can do about it, as it's not our fault
      4. Global warming exists and it is a threat, it is our fault, and we could have prevented it, but it's too late now.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    37. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Human life would probably cease to exist (cockroaches would probably be fine), but isn't that what most envirmentalist wackos want?

      Like that guy that wanted to modify Ebola to make it airborn and kill of 75% of the worlds population? For the good of the world, right?

    38. Re:Your skin is not melting by jahudabudy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I tried to illustrate the absurdity of the people who jump all over the Bush administration for global warming.

      Blame Bush for global warming? Wow, that really is the height of absurdity. The people I know tend to simply jump all over Bush for his policy of denying global warming, or denying that it is caused by humans. Those that criticize him for this policy do so in the belief that this policy is fueled more by an unwillingness to face negative economic consequences than any actual belief. To put it another way: if I thought that Bush honestly felt that humans were in no way responsible for, nor could affect, global warming, I would simply disagree with him. If I thought that he simply cared more about certain special interest groups' multi-billion dollar profits than he did about the future well-being of everyone on the planet, I would despise him.

      But yeah, blaming the Administration for causing global warming, rather than blaming it for refusing to help reduce the trend for purely selfish reasons, is rather silly.

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    39. Re:Your skin is not melting by armb · · Score: 1

      > I believe the literal understanding of Genesis is the most likely explanation of what happened

      Inciteful? Inciteful? Maybe the gods are planning on destroying the moderation system.

      --
      rant
    40. Re:Your skin is not melting by blincoln · · Score: 1

      Does the other side not even get to be heard?

      Not when it's posted like that.

      And before anyone explodes in a shower of USA Today articles and Heritage Foundation papers, I've been modded flamebait more or less fairly many times for posting left-leaning opinions.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    41. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In 1815 Mt Tamboras eruption caused the year without a summer. It spewed out roughly 40 million tons of gases and ash from April through June. In one year man produces orders of magnitude more pollutants through the burning of fossil fuels than was done in those two months.

      Do you care to cite your reference for orders of magnitude greater, or at least give a number? Since we are arguing facts, facts would be nice, not generalizations. And you also neglect to mention that there are volcanoes that erupt consitantly or continually, where are their stats? Last I heard Kilauea in Hawaii, had been erupting almost comtinually for over 10 years.

      I am not saying there is no such thing as global warming, I'm not saying we don't affect it, but you brought up a comparison of nature vs. man and included only natures stats. Can someone also talk about deforestation and destruction of vegitation, if we reduce the Earths capacity to process greenhouse gasses, it makes what is produced, by man or otherwise, much worse.

    42. Re:Your skin is not melting by m50d · · Score: 1
      Don't get me wrong. I'm not an IDer. But for God's sake, this is flaimbait. An obvious attempt to get the discussion going again so mods can have fun down-modding any IDer into total oblivion while patting themselves on the back for being so enlightened, so much more intelligent than the masses.

      Erm, you just described the story perfectly as well.

      --
      I am trolling
    43. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the point? The willfully ignorant are better ignored, however hard that is, as evidenced by this post.

      Personally I don't care if you believe in the tooth fairy, just don't teach it in school.

      Stupidity: it's a renewable resource!

    44. Re:Your skin is not melting by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 1

      Bravo! Not enough people are espousing the economic BENEFITS of pollution reduction, instead the media hypes the "downside" to making our lives more healthy.

    45. Re:Your skin is not melting by LouisZepher · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I no longer accept reality checks. The last one I tried to deposit came back "NFS"...

    46. Re:Your skin is not melting by AaronBrethorst · · Score: 1

      I think you're referring to a Terry Gilliam movie, there...

      --
      No, but I used to work for Microsoft.
    47. Re:Your skin is not melting by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      To quote something I have read in a book - "to beleive that the human race has the power or even the potential to destroy the earth is absolute arogance"

      Right, lets just ignore the nuclear weapons, which, at the height of the cold war, I'm quite certain were capable of destroying the earth.

      Sorry, its not arrogance, we DO have the power to destroy the earth.

    48. Re:Your skin is not melting by FirstBy4 · · Score: 1
      In one year man produces orders of magnitude more pollutants through the burning of fossil fuels than was done in those two months
      Are you sure about that? And besides, if you're going to compare our pollution with Mt. Tamboras then shouldn't we have global cooling? What do you mean "get over ourselves?", You're the one thinking that man has the power to influence the climate.
    49. Re:Your skin is not melting by Baby+Duck · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Even if everything you said here is true, it does NOT justify censoring of scientific conclusions that say otherwise. And it does NOT justify threatening the livelihoods of the dissident scientists.

      --

      "Love heals scars love left." -- Henry Rollins

    50. Re:Your skin is not melting by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      In fact, volcanic eruptions have contributed more CO2 and SO2 gasses than man himself in totality.

      Yes, if you take the MILLIONS of years for which volcanos have been erupting you are right.

      Now, lets compare the CO2 emissions from volcanos in the same time period, say the last 100 years or so.

    51. Re:Your skin is not melting by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      This statement on /. is getting to be like Godwin's Law. I'm hereby naming it "Martorana's Law" (that's my last name) - within any discussion of Science, there is an ~90% chance that someone will take the opportunity to take a swipe at ID.

      Its a perfectly valid swipe; seems the same nutcases that ignore science believe that we can't possibly affect the earth, and that it was created by god. Its the same thing really; ignoring science and pushing your own beliefs. And that's exactly wht this thread is about.

    52. Re:Your skin is not melting by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      I believe the literal understanding of Genesis is the most likely explanation of what happened...and/or may be figurative or symbolic or something"

      So, which is it? Literal or figurative? Because it can't be both.

    53. Re:Your skin is not melting by bankman · · Score: 1
      "to beleive that the human race has the power or even the potential to destroy the earth is absolute arogance"

      This or a similar claim was made by German writer Hoimar von Ditfurth in his book "So laßt uns denn ein Apfelbäumchen pflanzen" (So let us plant an apple tree). What he meant was that we cannot destroy the earth as a planet, but rather that it will get rid of us well before we can do it, ie. it will have become uninhabitable through our actions as well as through shifts in geological, meteorological and whatnot conditions that are well beyond our control and mostly our understanding. IIRC he identifies our ignorance as one of the basic problems for the environmental problems we are facing. Your comments are exemplary in this context.

      --
      I feel so sig.
    54. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot has always leaned left, but when it comes environmental issues the moderators are giving the smackdown to opposing viewpoints a bit too heavily these days. Does the other side not even get to be heard?

      When the other side is a regurgitation of propaganda paid for by oil companies, no. Let them pay for propagating each lie they want promoted instead of giving them free advertising. Being "Fair" doesn't mean giving liars a platform to promote their lies. When presented with a crock of shit, you don't need to give equal time to somebody who claims it's a pungent Texas chili.

      The other side has been heard for 20 years and it's pretty clear now that they have been wrong, if not outright lying. If they start putting forth new arguments instead of old ones that haven't already been heavily discredited, then maybe we'll listen.

    55. Re:Your skin is not melting by operagost · · Score: 1
      In 1815 Mt Tamboras eruption caused the year without a summer. It spewed out roughly 40 million tons of gases and ash from April through June. In one year man produces orders of magnitude more pollutants through the burning of fossil fuels than was done in those two months. Apparently it's ok for a volcano to influence the worlds climate but when man throws out, on a continuing basis, enormous quantities of pollutants every year, well that can't have an effect on the climate.
      Apparently not, because we've had a summer every year since I was born, at least. Can't speak before 1973. Of course, man creates mostly sulfur and carbon compounds, not ash. Clearly ash and soot (soot emissions were totally ignored by the Kyoto protocol, BTW) have a much greater impact on the climate than "greenhosue gases".
      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    56. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      Can't I say, "I think it's the former, but I might be wrong because it's the latter?" Do I have to turn in my fundamentalist membership card or something?

      I'm sorry, maybe you guys have to find a more militant fundamentalist or something. I guess I've let you down. :)

    57. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those silly little advocates of intelligent design deserve it.

      Spanks and kisses,
      The enlightened apes of Slashdot

    58. Re:Your skin is not melting by smooth+wombat · · Score: 4, Informative
      Do you care to cite your reference for orders of magnitude greater, or at least give a number?

      Sure, not a problem. I had this very discussion yesterday. I'll repost with I did then:

      According to this article the amount of greenhouse gases that man puts out in one year is ~30 billion tons. Unfortunately the article doesn't have a date but judging by the references it is somewhere around 2000.

      This article (which uses figures from 2000) indicates that the U.S. alone produced 1,583 million metric tons of carbon from burning fossil fuels.

      Now, consider that in 1815 Mount Tambora (Indonesia) produced an estimated 400 million tons of sulfurous gases and ash and that caused the year without a summer (i.e. global cooling), it is quite easy to suggest that mans dumping of multiple times that amount of gases into the atmosphere could cause an increase in world temperatures.

      As far as what NOAA has to say, you can read and make your own judgements. They seem to agree with my assertion that the global increase in temperatures seem to be the result of both natural and man-made factors. The page in question was last updated on Feb 3, 2006.

      Then of course there is the Wiki entry which indicates the volume of atmospheric carbon dioxide has increased from around 280 parts per million in 1800 to around 315 in 1958, 367 in 2000 (a 31% increase over 200 years), and about 380 in 2006. In other words, despite the huge quantity of atmosphere that exists around the planet, the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has been increasing. Not remaining the same, not decreasing. Increasing. That's just CO2. In trying to find numbers to justify my claims I saw the same increase in other gases during the same timeframe (which is what the Wiki entry says in the next sentence).

      After all that I found another source which says that on a yearly basis volcanoes contribute 100 million tons of CO2 whereas other sources of CO2 produce about 10 billion tons a year. It's under the section marked 'Influence on the Greenhouse Effect' halfway down the page.

      As far as my quote about the amount of gases and such from Mt. Tambora, I left out a zero in my posting and didn't catch it during preview. The correct number is 400 million tons (as shown in this posting) of sulfuours gases though various sources differ. One says 200 million tons while another indicates 400 million tons.

      Despite my mistake and even using the higher figure of 400 million tons, comparing that figure to the sources I listed in the beginning it still shows that what man produces is substantially more, every year, than what Mt. Tambora produced in a 3-month period. In the case of Tambora after the eruption stopped nature had a chance to recover. In the case of us burning fossil fuels, nature never gets a breather. We are always pumping out more and more gases.

      I must state that I am not an uber-treehugger. I do, however, try to minimize to an extent my footprint. That said, there is not reason NOT to try and reduce our CO2 and other emissions if for no other reason than our health. Think LA and how wonderful it must be sucking in that brown atmosphere. For a better example think Mexico City. I don't know about you but I prefer to look through a clear atmospher, not a brown one.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    59. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      just don't teach it in school.

      Of course not! We need to get back to separation of school and state, the way the nation's founders (all diests and thus abhorrent to the fundamentalist mindset) intended.

    60. Re:Your skin is not melting by rowdie · · Score: 1

      As a fellow middle-righter, I understand your delimma. Unfortunately, McCain appears to have sold his soul in recent weeks. His choice to kiss not just one but both of Bush's lower cheeks is well on it's way to destroying his credibility as a legitimate agent of change.

    61. Re:Your skin is not melting by Dhaos · · Score: 1

      Hmm, except that McCain is giving a speech at the opening for =Jerry Falwell's= new evangelical college...

      That doesn't bode well for taking the party back from the lunatic "Katrina/9-11/everything bad is punishment for our gays" fringe.

      --
      It's not what you know, or even who you know- It's how many people recognize your damn .sig
    62. Re:Your skin is not melting by jotok · · Score: 1

      Surely you mean that we have the power to kill ourselves and just about every other living thing on the planet. I'm pretty sure the globe itself will still be revolving around the Sun long after that happens. I mean, there isn't enough power in the whole star fleet to destroy a PLANET.

    63. Re:Your skin is not melting by computer_redneck · · Score: 1

      I am certainly not a friend of Dubyah.
      But
      Fossil records show both times of drought and times of high waters throughout the history of the world. There has been many Ice Ages and conversely many times that the temperature of the earth has risen.
      Why then with only about 100 years of scientific measurements and less than 50 with good equipment and knowledge do we think that what we have done in the past 50 years or so is the cause? 100 years out of millions that the planet has been around (10,000ish if you are a devout Catholic) is not an acceptable scientific average. If I roll a die 10 times and claim that the average is 4.5 because I rolled a bunch of 6's and not a lot of other numbers I have used a very small sampling. If I roll it 1000 times and find out it is more like 2.6 for the average I have a more reliable basis.

      Do not forget the issue of Global Warming, Ozone Hole and how it is created is still a theory, it is not hard fact. Give me 1 shred of factual evidence that the world has not warmed up in the past to higher temperatures than now. Give me 1 shred of fact that the Ozone layer is only recently showing a hole. I have been searching the net because I remember an article shortly after the annoucement of the hole. The article had two statements. 1: The hole was only found now because we had just figured out how to find that type of thing in the atmosphere and 2: It maybe a Natural Cycle of the worlds enviroment.

      All we have right now is Theory and Hypothesis from observations and a limited set of results.

      This does not mean we should not try to reduce our production of harmful gasses and chemicals it just means that we do not need to panic and act like it is the end of the world. After all think about it. If most of the polution in the air that may be causing this is from the last 50 years then things are going so fast we might actually see a "Day after tomorrow" speed of an Ice Age returning and we do not have the time to reverse everything anyways.

      BTW one other article/bit of information I am trying to find online is that there was smog in the LA valley area when settlers first found it.



      Impeach Bush - This is not flamebait - it wont fit in my sig with the quote of Benjamin Franklin

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - BF
    64. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Hmm, except that McCain is giving a speech at the opening for =Jerry Falwell's= new evangelical college...

      That is a little suprising, although I do believe that McCain needs to avoid offending the religious right to get past the primaries. I sincerely hope that he doesn't sell his soul to that devil in order to retain their support.

      Regards,
      Ross

    65. Re:Your skin is not melting by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "Conservatism is a provable error in logic. -- me"

      Proof by assertion! Are you sure you're not a Republican?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    66. Re:Your skin is not melting by version5 · · Score: 1

      Humans may not be able to destroy the earth, but what does that have to do with whether we can alter the environment to make the earth inhospitable to human life. Obviously, the earth has survived environmental catastrophes in the past. Good. It will be a very cold comfort when the last human has died, and we're all in heaven listening to you say, "What's the big deal? The earth is fine, just like I said! Look, the cockroaches made it! Hey, why is this mob I am now surrounded by so angry?"

      --

      "It's Dot Com!"

    67. Re:Your skin is not melting by revscat · · Score: 1

      Have fun. Beat me. Slap me. Mod me down. I know someone will get their jollies. I'd hate to deny it to you just because Martorana pointed out where this was going and tried to stop it.

      I think the underlying problem with your post is the assumption that those who believe in evolution want to persecute or suppress those who do not. I believe evolution is a fact similar in its obviousness to gravity. I do not, however, wish to prevent you in any way from believing what you wish in any way, nor do I hope others will do so.

      The problem for most people arises when creationists try and force their religious beliefs upon the population as a whole. I am not a Christian, I am a Unitarian, and I do not wish to raise my children as Christians. That is my fundamental right as a parent, and indeed a fundamental right of all humans. Science, civics, math, and literature should be taught in schools, religion at home or in church. And however much it may annoy fundamentalists to say so evolution is a scientific fact and as such deserves a prominent place in schools.

      Secular governments work best. Mixing religious beliefs within that framework leads to hardship and oppression that could otherwise be avoided.

      Now, having said all this that does not mean I do not think creationism isn't ridiculous, because it is. I also think Ba'hai and Scientology are ridiculous, and were they to attempt to inject their creation myths into the public education system I would be similarly opposed, as I assume you would be as well.

    68. Re:Your skin is not melting by PMuse · · Score: 1

      Do I have to turn in my fundamentalist membership card or something?

      It's an idea worth considering. You self-describe as a "fundamentalist", but you speak quite differently from other "fundamentalists". Every once in a while, it might be advisable to reevaluate whether you want those people for your allies . . . and whether they want you.

      --
      "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    69. Re:Your skin is not melting by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Proof by assertion! Are you sure you're not a Republican?

      A provable error means falsification. Given the theory, errors can be logically shown. Nice snark though.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    70. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      A number of them manifestly do not, but usually it is for disagreements over specifics of the Christian faith which would likely not interest people here.

      But honestly, most of the Christians I know are similar to me: believe in literal creation, don't see a need to force that belief on people. I think they would all self-describe as fundamentalists. Most of them are not as libertarian as me, but they are also nowhere near as authoritarian as the slashdot crowd thinks.

    71. Re:Your skin is not melting by leon.gandalf · · Score: 0

      So in other words the Bush view is like ID. Based on FUD. While Global Warming and Evolution are actualy based on Science.

    72. Re:Your skin is not melting by Fishstick · · Score: 1

      heh, reminds me of this Tom Toles gem the other day.

      Smoking does not cause cancer.
      Okay, it does, but I'm addicted. ...

      --

      There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
      Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

    73. Re:Your skin is not melting by jc42 · · Score: 1

      [I]f you're going to compare our pollution with Mt. Tamboras then shouldn't we have global cooling?

      No, because the pollution is different.

      Actually, we used to produce a lot more cooling pollution. It was mostly in the form of smoke from incomplete burning of wood and fossil fuels. Smoke and other particulates tend to intercept incoming sunlight and reflect it back out, decreasing the solar power flux at ground level and cooling things down.

      But our industry learned how to burn those things much more "cleanly", getting more energy out of them, and releasing mostly CO2. That's a "greenhouse" gas that tends to absorb sunlight and warm the surrounding air molecules.

      Actually, of course, both volcanoes and human industry have always produced both effects. With volcanoes, the cooling effects usually dominate. With our industry, we've slowly moved to mostly heating effects.

      There's lots of literature that talks about the details of all this. In recent decades, a lot of major volcanoes and other volcanic spots (such as Mount Saint Helens, Mount Etna, Yellowstone and Iceland) have been heavily instrumented, and the data is mostly available online. It was physicists who invented the Web, after all, so they could share their research data. We also have a lot of worldwide atmospheric data online, thanks to NOAA and similar research orgs in other countries.

      Digging through all that dry data can take time, and we can hardly expect the typical citizen to do it. This is part of why there's a fuss at NASA and NOAA. People there have been digging through the data, or more accurately, writing software to do it.

      The Bush administration doesn't like their conclusions, for mostly business reasons, and has tried to block the release of the scientific results. They're not the only politicians doing this of course; they're just the most powerful at the moment. And they're not subtle about it. Ordering a top NASA administrator not to talk to an NPR interviewer is about as in-your-face as you can get, and that's not an isolated incident.

      But the planet doesn't care. It will react as it reacts, and we'll have to live with the consequences. Or not, as the case may be.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    74. Re:Your skin is not melting by jc42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It doesn't sound like there's any denying going on, but rather a question regarding the impact?

      Actually, the Bush gang does seem to have wised up that the denial isn't really going over all that well. So they've switched to the traditional "Further research is needed" approach.

      "Yes, some scientists say there's warming, but they don't agree on exactly how much or exactly what the causes are. We should wait until the scientists can reduce their error estimates to zero and prove exactly what's happening. Until then, we should all just go about our business as usual."

      And since science hardly ever actually proves anything, this amounts to an indefinite delay to taking any action that might interfere with business and industry.

      One of the interesting codes is the recent use of the phrase "sound science" by the Republicans (and a few others). If you look for the definition, you'll find that it means science that can absolutely prove its results, with no error bars or conjectures remaining. This sounds good to most non-scientists. But hardly anything in science has ever been proved to this degree. Scientists are still testing the Laws of Thermodynamics, the Theory of Relativity, and even the Law of Gravity. (They're all hoping to become famous for finding a loophole. ;-) We'll all be dead for centuries before they even get close with something as complex and chaotic as weather and climate.

      So basically Bush & Co are insisting that we wait until scientists have done something that science doesn't do. It may be a long wait.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    75. Re:Your skin is not melting by Retric · · Score: 1

      I don't think the right left debate describes the current political landscape vary well. I want to reduce government spending in most areas, but I have no problem with the basic idea of entitlements within reason. For example the US government spends more money per person on medicine than Canada even though they have "totally subsidized" health care.
       
      IMO: You can get people off welfare though employment options or ending the program but one solves problems and the other creates problems. Like most people I don't fit into a single position in the political landscape. I would like to:

      Free trade: I believe in the basic concept of free trade, but it only really works when you're dealing with a truly level playing field. There is no way to compete with countries that are willing to forgo worker safety and don't mind dumping toxins wherever they wish. I think protectionism is a bad idea but we need to understand it's not a fundamentally level playing field out there. EX: China is fucking with their currency and we may need to do the same types of things if we want to maintain dominance.

      Military: Budget dropped by 50 - 75%. We need to get out of IRAQ in an orderly fashion not a mad dash, but we really don't need 3/4 of the bases in the US and a many of the weapon systems are a huge waste of cash ect.
      .
      NASA: Drop manned space flight. NASA should work on propulsion systems, robotics, data gathering, and biosphere type self-contained / stable environments. When we can setup a space station that can go without re-supply for 10 years then I think it's a good idea until then it's a stupid waste of resources.

      Social Security: Up retirement age to 70 shifting to 75 over the next 40 years. We need to start investing the "surplus" in stocks and bonds vs. using it to prop up the national debt.

      Prescription Drug benefit: Kill this off.

      TAXES:

      Integrate Social Security and Medicare into the normal tax system so we can have a progressive tax system. Aka stop taxing people making 90k more than people making 900k.

      Remove any tax brakes other than # of dependents. If you want to donate to the Red Cross fine you still owe taxes on all of your income. If you want to build a wind farm great! just pay for it out of your own pocket. If the government would like to setup grants to do thing then fine, but people are all to willing to spend money though tax breaks where thy would never pay for these things out of the general budget.

      Stop subsidizing farmers. If we want to secure the food supply then keep a few years of food on hand don't fuck up the world economy and subsidies the eating habits of the rest of the world. We make around 60% of the worlds food we need to start charging what this is really worth.

      Basic Research: Dumping lots of money into non-military R&D seems to give great return on investment. I say dump billions info Fusion, partial physics, basic medicine, solar cells ect. Because these things tend to create long-term growth.

      Political Messy Research: I think the Data on things like pollution, climate, and educational research need to be on the web free for all to see. People are always going to want to put their own spin on things but suppressing the basic data is a waste of public money. I think we should setup a .gov website for ALL non-classified research that includes the methods and data for every public study ever preformed. You are going to have people on both sides trying to screw with things but the basic data and methods needs to be open.

      Anyway, do you think this make me right left center and how much of this do you agree with you?

    76. Re:Your skin is not melting by smoker2 · · Score: 1
      Aaah, go(o)d, it's about time you showed up !

      There's been a lot of controversy generated by your absence, not to say *unrest*. So answer me these questions -

      1) Where were you last thursday ? You're supposed to be *all-seeing* but did you see that bastard smash my wing mirror ? If you did, why didn't you say something - eh ?

      2) The *virgin* Mary - yeah right ! 'nuff said.

      3) Who do you fancy for the World Cup ?

      4) Why, oh why, oh why, oh why ?

      5) If you *did* design the earth intelligently, where are the comments !

      6) How long did satan get then ? You took gabriel back after all.

      7) Is global warming caused by humans, or is it *your* fault ? (remember correlation is not causation).

      8) Do you get to speak to Steve Jobs regularly ? what do you think of OS-X ?

      9) Emacs or vi ?

      10) Do you get a cut from the google ad impressions on ID sites ?

      Enquiring minds want to know !

      Yours,

      A sinner.
    77. Re:Your skin is not melting by paiute · · Score: 1

      I'm hereby naming it "Martorana's Law" (that's my last name) - within any discussion of Science, there is an ~90% chance that someone will take the opportunity to take a swipe at ID.

      I hereby declare the existence of The Eponymous Law: people will continually try to invent and name new laws after themselves.

      The finding of corollaries is left to the reader as a problem set.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    78. Re:Your skin is not melting by arminw · · Score: 1

      ..... The sun is responsible for "global warming". ...

      That is in fact the truth! Solar output has been if fact observed to be rising for the last 150 or so years. It has been accurately measured by satellites for about 24 years now and they too show a steadily rising output. There re many places you can google this.

      http://www.fathersforlife.org/doc/Solar_Variabilit y_20031205.pdf

      The Bible has many prophecies concerning the times of the end. Some of them have come true in our time. Some of them have the possibility of coming true only now, because we have the means to keep track of people and their money, a capability no human authority ever had until the advent of our modern technology. Jesus talked of a time of such horrible trouble coming upon the Earth, that nothing alive would survive, save for God's intervention. Exploding a sufficient number of nuclear weapons could certainly threaten all life on this planet. Since this thread is (once again) about global warming, there is something written in the Bible concerning this as well. Nobody has ever proved the Bible wrong in its historical writings. Some of that history was written down long before it happened.

      Isaiah 30:26 The moon will shine like the sun, and the sunlight will be seven times brighter, like the light of seven full days, when the LORD binds up the bruises of his people and heals the wounds he inflicted.
      Revelation 16:8-9 The fourth angel poured out his bowl on the sun, and the sun was given power to scorch people with fire. They were seared by the intense heat and they cursed the name of God, who had control over these plagues, but they refused to repent and glorify him.

      When this comes true, someday, humanity will be in for some REAL global warming!

      --
      All theory is gray
    79. Re:Your skin is not melting by leomaster · · Score: 1

      I have no problem at all believing that mankind's action have influenced the climate of the planet in adverse ways and is escalating the influence over time. The current geologically short-term state of global warming is based on scientific evidence. I have no problem with saying that mankind, especially heavy industrial nations, should be working hard at reducing greenhouse emissions. The question that remains is whether mankind's behavior will have a greater influence than other natural forces such as the normal warming and cooling cycle, solar activity, etc. Does it matter if mankind is adding millions of tons of greenhouse gasses to the atmosphere if the planet is naturally heading for a warm shift of 10-30 degrees, or a cool shift of the same magnitude? Are mankind's actions the cause of the change, or are our actions simply going to help the change come faster or make it a larger shift?

    80. Re:Your skin is not melting by jmacleod9975 · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

    81. Re:Your skin is not melting by mikeh9741 · · Score: 0

      Why was the parent modded up? The grandparent said he (she?) believes Genesis should be interpreted literally although it may be figurative or symbolic. It's ok to believe something is true and yet not be absolutely 100% sure of it, isn't it? In fact, doesn't generally accepted theoretical physics demand it?

    82. Re:Your skin is not melting by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1
      Actually, the Bush gang does seem to have wised up that the denial isn't really going over all that well. So they've switched to the traditional "Further research is needed" approach.

      Bush could be wading across his ranch and still say "Further research is needed."

      --
      "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
    83. Re:Your skin is not melting by geoffspear · · Score: 2, Funny
      It's ok to believe something is true and yet not be absolutely 100% sure of it, isn't it?

      Not if you want to call yourself a fundamentalist, it's not.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    84. Re:Your skin is not melting by glorpy · · Score: 1

      Relax. The mods were more likely referring to his assertion of the silliness of the behavior when this topic comes up. I may not agree with the sentence you quoted, but I'll agree with most of the rest of the post.

    85. Re:Your skin is not melting by gowen · · Score: 1

      Especially when talking about religious faith, "believe" is not a synonym for "believe to be possible", it's a synonym for "convinced of" or "accept as revealed truth."

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    86. Re:Your skin is not melting by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      Setting off every nuclear weapon will not destroy "the earth"... if by "the earth" you mean the massive ball of (mostly) iron and rock that rotates and revolves.

      Much easier than destroying "the earth" is ending all life on earth.

      Even easier than that, is ending the ability for humans to live on the earth. One big enough bang, Yuucutan-style, and we go the way of the large dinosaurs. This much smaller goal is well within our capabilities as a species. Sadly, it may also be within our intelligence.

    87. Re:Your skin is not melting by FST777 · · Score: 1

      Last time I stated my opinions and beliefs regarding this issue my Karma was negative within a matter of hours, so since it is positive again, I'm not going to comment on this. Sorry for not taking your side here, the moderation system at /. won't let me.

      --
      Free beer is never free as in speech. Free speech is always free as in beer.
    88. Re:Your skin is not melting by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1
      Anyway, do you think this make me right left center and how much of this do you agree with you?
      You don't say how you feel about Republican hot-button issues like Privacy (do you like the legislature telling doctors what they can tell their patients? Do you like the legislature telling you is is appropriate for you to love?)
    89. Re:Your skin is not melting by 3nd32 · · Score: 1

      Well, guess there are at least two of us on here ^_^.

    90. Re:Your skin is not melting by RetroGeek · · Score: 1

      I believe in the basic concept of free trade, but it only really works when you're dealing with a truly level playing field.

      Yes. Look at softwood lumber and Canada.

      The thing that gets me, is how short-sighted the US Govt is. Who will want to sign a future agreement with the US after seeing what a lobby group is doing to a current agreement.

      --

      - - - - - - - - - - -
      I am a programmer. I am paid to produce syntax not grammar. Deal with it.
    91. Re:Your skin is not melting by BungoMan85 · · Score: 1

      I'll bet you also think it's OK to go through a red light if no one is around.

      Actually no, I'm not. You're jumping to a rather hasty conclusion there.

      My "flippant quip" as you put it is hardly burrying my head in the sand. Rather than assume mankind is responsible for global warming (which I don't think I said it wasn't) for whatever reason you seem to I thought I'd bring up something that I often see completely and blatantly overlooked by people who are so concerned about the causes of global warming. The point being, if you look at global warming objectively you'll find there is plenty of evidence (like volcanos spewing enormous amounts of Carbon Dioxide into the atmosphere) that, while man play a role in global warming, man is likely not the only cause, nor is man likely the major cause. Volcanos are a force of nature. I am not defending Bush, what I am defending is a reasoned approach to how we shape our environmental policy seeing as how it very well be a matter that was never in our control to begin with (cause as far as I know we haven't figured out how to control volcanos and the Sun).

      --
      Bungo!
    92. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two people are walking down the street, passing by a skyscraper. Person A looks up and sees this little dot above that seems to be growing larger as time passes. Having better eyesight, person B is able to tell that that little dot looks like a piano. B then suggests that it is falling, and someone might have pushed it. But A proposes that it just might be in the nature of pianos to fall down from skyscrapers at that particular date and place, because there is no evidence to suggest otherwise.

      - "No, someone did push it down", B insists.
      - "Oh but you're mistaken my good friend", A replies.
      - B:"No i'm quite sure i'm sure."
      - A:"Except that you're wrong."
      - B:"No, i'm right and some idiot pushed it down."
      - A:"Um.. no."
      - B:"Yes."

      No..Yes..No..yesnoyesnoyesno..... *****BOOM******

      Now why the fsck didn't these people move away from X spot first.

    93. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The recent posting [slashdot.org] about a new fossil link between water creatures moving onto land is the classic example (as is archaeopteryx). Such a creature was predicted both in the evolutionary path as well as the geologic path. And the prediction was confirmed by the discovery.

      the problem with this statement isn't that it can't be true. it might be.

      th eproblem is that you claim it is TRUTH, when this HAS NOT BEEN ESTABLISHED.

      EVEN AMONGST THE ATHEISTIC SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY. there is DISAGREEMENT.

      yet, you ignore the disagreement and PALM IT OFF AS ABSOLUTE, 2+2=4, TRUTH.

      it isn't.

      http://research.unc.edu/endeavors/spr97/bird.html

      now that you know... ignorance on your part isn't an acceptable excuse.

      if you palm of controversial subjects as facts (without admitting to reasonable controversy), you are misleading people on purpose.

    94. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why do you keep bringing up volcanoes when it was just clearly shown to you that they produce an insignificant amount of CO2 compared to humans? Are you unable to comprehend English?

      Stop it with the volcano BS already!

    95. Re:Your skin is not melting by f97tosc · · Score: 1

      Look, if you truly believe the literal understanding of Genesis, then you don't think its figurative or symbolic. That's what literal means. It means "not figurative or symbolic".

      Yeah, but even "fundamental" Christians don't take all of the bible literary. They simply chose to ignore big paths that are incompatible with modern life. If they didn't they would have to kill their friends if they worshipped false gods (ie, had a different religion), and do all kinds of crazy stuff.

      Unfortunately, there is no correpsonding tradition in Islam to ignore big parts of the Koran. That is why we have all these people that think killing a bunch of infidels is the best way to go to heaven.

      Tor

    96. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, when you suddenly decide that only CO2 emissions are "greenhouse gas" for volcanoes, but CO2 is part of a number of gasses when mankind is doing it, you can get some pretty small numbers coming out.

      Greenland is named so in part because when Leif Erickson found it the land was warm and productive...who was responsible for the global warming in 1000AD? Leif wasn't much of an SUV driver.

    97. Re:Your skin is not melting by mikeh9741 · · Score: 0

      I think if you ask around you'll find a lot of people who believe their religious convictions are correct, yet admit it is possible they are not.

    98. Re:Your skin is not melting by pipingguy · · Score: 1


      It sounds like the author of that book had an agenda. And wasn't very well informed.

      Are you claiming that the opposing views DON'T have an agenda?

    99. Re:Your skin is not melting by homerules · · Score: 1

      Just visit San francisco and you will change your opinion

    100. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think if you ask around you'll find a lot of people who believe their religious convictions are correct

      Okay.

      , yet admit it is possible they are not.

      Woh, woh, woh. If you believe something is correct, you believe something is correct. It's different than believe something is probably correct. Admittedly, most people tend to use "is" in the sense of "to the limits of my senses", but in religious matters one tends to make statements based on faith. That means, one is basically forced to believe something without evidence. To acknowledge that other religious beliefs may be true is to show a lack of faith in one's own beliefs. So fundamentally a deeply religious person is forced to be bigotted (I don't mean this to be pejorative; it's simply what being a bigot means). This is one reason why science isn't religion and people who treat it as such are doing a great disservice to others by acting like it is so.

    101. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      If they didn't they would have to kill their friends if they worshipped false gods (ie, had a different religion), and do all kinds of crazy stuff.

      For the record, Colossians 2 indicates that laws from the Old Testament, such as this, are cancelled during the age of the New Testament. (Although some are explicitly carried on by being repeated in the New.) And Jeremiah 31:31 said ahead of time that God was planning on this happening.

      I know you probably don't care, but if you've ever wondered if Christians have a reason for that, well, there it is.

    102. Re:Your skin is not melting by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      An obvious attempt to get the discussion going again so mods can have fun down-modding any IDer into total oblivion while patting themselves on the back for being so enlightened,

      Yea!

      so much more intelligent than the masses.

      Wait, why are you assuming the masses aren't enlightened? I'd say the masses, in majority, *are* enlightened. They're enlightened enough to pander to IDers or Creationists or "Scientists". They're open to allowing discuss to occur, since it's always good to have arguments and mentally work through and support one's beliefs instead of relying wholly on faith. I think it's funny that you assume that /. is some sort of elite organization and not simply a mirrored subset of the real world (admittedly with a heightened emphasis on technology, but it's not like Socrates or Voltaire were computer nerds).

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    103. Re:Your skin is not melting by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Of course it does. But that provable error is not provided...only the assertion that one exists.

      Therefore, I believe my point stands.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    104. Re:Your skin is not melting by PostItNote · · Score: 1

      >> To quote something I have read in a book - "to beleive that the human race has the power or even the
      >> potential to destroy the earth is absolute arogance".

      > It sounds like the author of that book had an agenda. And wasn't very well informed.

      No, it was Kurt Vonnegut in Player Piano. The full quote says that while it is impossible to destroy all life on earth, it is completely possible to make it impossible for humans to survive. Which is an opinion that is nuanced, well informed, and hard to refute. Pretty much no matter what, life on earth will continue. It may be set back a billion or two years, and it may not come back like us, but it'll survive. Destroying the earth is beyond our current level of technology. Destroying humanity is well within our grasp, however.

    105. Re:Your skin is not melting by mikeh9741 · · Score: 0

      There's a reason it's called belief and not knowledge.

    106. Re:Your skin is not melting by kiatoa · · Score: 1

      Fossil records show both times of drought and times of high waters throughout the history of the world.

      Who cares about geological history? Answer these three questions: 1) Are we in it for ourselves? 2) Do we care about the quality of life our childen and childrens, children get? 3) Will the choices we make today affect question 1 and 2?

      I think the answers are, yes, yes and yes. But I suppose reasonable people might disagree. In my opinion a single, two part, simple tax change would have a massive impact. Reduce income tax and make up the difference with a tax on oil. Restated: Tax the oil at the tanker and lower income taxes. Personally I'd like the reduction on income tax to be predominately in the middle and lower brackets but even if it was given to the already wealthy I'd still vote for this approach.

      Keep in mind, I'm suggesting a shift in the tax burden from income to oil. Apply some economics 101 logic. Oil based products, fuel, lubricants, plastics etc. become a little more expensive and at the same time some people have a little more $$ left in their pockets after tax time. Alternative products such as vegetable oils, wood, metal become more attractive than the oil based plastics, lubricants and fuels. A shift away from oil and towards alternatives happens. From the perspective of the nations economy this seems like at least a neutral or at best a possible good thing.

      With this change over time oil consumption will decrease. If there is any "free" left in the free market for oil then it seems likely that over time the oil producers will compete and cut the cost of oil in an attempt to gain share from each other. In the long term the nation pays overall less per barrel of oil and everyone (or at least some people) pays less income taxes, and best of all, less $$ flow overseas to oil rich countries.

      --
      90% of the wealth is in 2% of the pockets. Bummer to be in the majority.
    107. Re:Your skin is not melting by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Bush reminds me of King Arnulf from Eric the Viking: "So whatever's happening, you can rest assured, Hy-Brasil is NOT sinking. Repeat, NOT sinking."

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    108. Re:Your skin is not melting by BigCheese · · Score: 1

      You are thoughtful and use common sense and base your ideas on facts. This means you have no place in American politics.

      --
      The obscure we see eventually. The completely obvious, it seems, takes longer. - Edward R. Murrow
    109. Re:Your skin is not melting by Actual+Reality · · Score: 0, Troll

      Global warming is all about funding. It is simply a scare tactic by "scientists" to get money to study something that really isn't a problem. Every time they are asked about it, they "need more funding" to research it more. Keep in mind that every time they get a grant, the person getting the grant gets 10% right off the top. There were areas in the United States last summer that had record high temperatures. This of course was due to global warming. There were areas in the United States this past winter that had record low temperatures. According to "scientists", this too is caused by global warming. They have it both ways. No matter what the weather does, global warming is the culprit and they need more money to study it. Global warming is a racket and the liberal left has bought it hook line and sinker. Their hate for George Bush and the lifestyle that they themselves enjoy has clouded their view. Remember when Ted Dantzen predicted back in the 80's that some time in the 90's that the world would run out of fresh water and there would not be enough to sustain life. Surely we should be all dead from thirst by now. Thanks goodness all the liberals donated money to Green Peace and such. That is probably what saved us... Not! Cheers

    110. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Are you claiming that the opposing views DON'T have an agenda?

      Depends on who you mean by "opposing views". If you mean environmentalists, then no. If you mean scientists, then I would say that they do their best not to let their opinions drive their research and scientific statements.

      If you're going to make scientific statements and expect them to be treated as credible, you do need to at least try to set your agenda to one side. The book the ggp is quoting from was clearly a tract written to discount the impact of humans on the earth's climate. No matter what the facts actually are.

      Regards,
      Ross

    111. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So as you feel your skin cancer forming and watch the ice caps come washing over us..."

      Bush doesn't care about the future, because for him and his whole world, there is no future. George Bush is conducting his presidency based on the religious concept of "End Days", which proclaims that the world as it is will be destroyed, and somehow remade, with only "born-again christians" surviving. That should serve as a strong warning about what they might plan to do to the rest of us.

      PAY ATTENTION, PEOPLE:

      The USA, and therefore much of the world, is now controlled by doomsday cults. That they are not commonly recognized as doomsday cults is an error. They don't specify which day the world will end, but because they are promoting its end "In their lifetimes", and because their older, more influential leaders are nearing the natural end of their own lifetimes, it is probably assumed by many that the "Rapture" will occur within the next 10 years or so. Very similar to GWB's timetable for Iraq. And of course, global warming and other disasters can be allowed to continue, because it's all part of big jesus' mighty plan. Right?

      See:
      http://www.grist.org/news/maindish/2004/10/27/sche rer-christian/

      And:
      http://www.raptureready.com/

    112. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      As you mention, I don't think you cleanly fit on the US "conservative <-> liberal" axis. There are vanishingly few categories in this world that fit cleanly onto a single axis. Especially politics, though Ann Coulter doesn't quite grok that...

      You don't mention anything about what people are doing in the privacy of their own home, but that could just be because you don't care, in which case you're to the left on that topic.

      Based on your SS tax recommendation, you aren't that wealthy, so much of the Republican agenda probably doesn't impress you (your military funding point backs this up).

      Based on your quick mention of welfare, you aren't poor, and dealing with poverty doesn't seem to be a big concern of yours, so several parts of the Democrat agenda probably don't impress you.

      Actually, you sound fairly libertarian, though not a part of the anarchist sub-group. In a longer discussion, this is also how I describe myself. One thing that you may find interesting to consider is how social "safety nets" like welfare, SS, and medicare/medicade actually help the middle class and wealthy by promoting social stability. If the poor aren't really that poor, they are less likely to really disrupt the economy with revolutions. Look at Central/South America for several examples that may substantiate this assertion.

      Regards,
      Ross

    113. Re:Your skin is not melting by PMuse · · Score: 1

      I know that our denominational leadership doesn't use the term "fundamentalist" to describe our church. I don't think my congregation would describe themselves with that term, but I might be unpleasantly surprised about that.

      Anyways. Good initial post, BTW. And, good journeys!

      And remember: when we acknowledge the existence of an omnipotent being, we acknowledge that the means exist for faking everything -- the world could have been created yesterday, for all we can tell. ;-)

      --
      "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    114. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Of course, when you suddenly decide that only CO2 emissions are "greenhouse gas" for volcanoes, but CO2 is part of a number of gasses when mankind is doing it, you can get some pretty small numbers coming out.

      Actually, it's my understanding that volcanic sulphur oxides are much larger contributors to climate change than CO2, and even including them, humans still dramatically outproduced volcanoes in the last century.

      Greenland is named so in part because when Leif Erickson found it the land was warm and productive...who was responsible for the global warming in 1000AD? Leif wasn't much of an SUV driver.

      First, it wasn't that green. He was trying to sell it as an attractive new home to Icelanders and took some liberties in his description (you could see multiple glaciers from almost any place on land during a clear day). Point taken, however, that it was much more verdant in those days than any time until just recently.

      Further, you will notice that I limited my statement to the last 100 years, the time frame of events most likely to contribute to the current warming trend.

      Regards,
      Ross

    115. Re:Your skin is not melting by Malakusen · · Score: 1

      Well, twenty years ago we had a Republican in power, and Bush I and Cheney were involved in the administration.

      The actors in the play really haven't changed much. The oil companies lining the pockets of the politicians they've bought haven't changed while the presidents have.

      --
      Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to conviction
    116. Re:Your skin is not melting by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      Sounds pretty fickle for a God with infinite wisdom. Is that an example of religion evolving?

    117. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Global warming is all about funding. It is simply a scare tactic by "scientists" to get money to study something that really isn't a problem.

      If current arctic melting trends continue, you'll be able to visit the North pole in a boat by 2015. Not an icebreaker, mind you, just a normal boat with a 1000 mile range. A 32ft sailboat will do just fine.

      That means the temporary cessation of the Gulf Stream current, which is largely responsible for moderate temperatures in the US northeast, Newfoundland, the British Isles, and Norway which will become very cold in the winter within one or two years. That's "temporary" as in less than several thousand years, probably only a few hundred years.

      It's unknown if that also means the melting of part or all of the Greenland ice cap, which will result in increased sea levels, not only from the liberated water, but the reduced weight of the ice on Greenland will cause that very large island and it's surrounding shelf to rise a few feet, displacing water over the rest of the planet.

      But you're right. We shouldn't bother to study if any of these things are implied by what we've already observed in the arctic over the past twenty years. It's just scientists trying to keep their huge mansions and luxury cars.

      There were areas in the United States last summer that had record high temperatures. This of course was due to global warming. There were areas in the United States this past winter that had record low temperatures. According to "scientists", this too is caused by global warming. They have it both ways.

      The fact that you don't understand why both statements are true and important tells everyone reading this a lot more than I could possibly point out by explaining it to you. So I'll just quote your incredulity and close my argument here.

      Regards,
      Ross

    118. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 0

      The full quote says that while it is impossible to destroy all life on earth, it is completely possible to make it impossible for humans to survive.

      You're right that I made the mistake of equating "destroying the earth" with "making the earth uninhabitable by humans" or the even less suprising "significantly altering the earth".

      In my defense, so did the person I responded do, and I intended to respond to that person's rhetoric: (it's impossible that humans are significantly altering the earth [para]).

      Unfortunate choice of quotes, however.

      Regards,
      Ross

    119. Re:Your skin is not melting by irablum · · Score: 1

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAH

      sorry to burst your bubble.... Greenland was named so because Leif Erickson was trying to promote it as a nice place for people to move to. It was as icy then as it is now..... (or do you think that Iceland was only named 20 years ago?)

      Of course the issue of volcanoes and global warming is a strange one. I just read some studies which links volcanic activity to global cooling, and a lack of same to global warming. weird shit, really.

      Ira

    120. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually leaf erikson called it that as propaganda for others to follow him there to start a new civilization.........see he was a republican also.

    121. Re:Your skin is not melting by PostItNote · · Score: 1

      "to beleive[sic] that the human race has the power or even the potential to destroy the earth is absolute arogance[sic]"

      That quote continues to say that we certainly have the power to make the earth unlivable for people. Did you even read Player Piano, or did you just cull it for that one half sentence?

    122. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Sulphur compounds tend to result in global cooling. CO2, methane, a few others tend to result in global warming. Any volcanic eruption will release it's own balance of sulphur vs. other debris, which will change the effect of that eruption on the atmosphere.

      Here's one article that I read today on that exact same topic. It may be the same thing you've already read.

      Regards,
      Ross

    123. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should do the math. What is the diameter of the "total destruction" area from an average nuclear weapon? What is the total area which can be destroyed by nuclear bombs? What is the total land area of the Earth? Total surface area?

    124. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Greenland was sufficiently warmer that living conditions were much different than today. Including that different natives lived there; when the climate cooled a thousand years ago the ice-oriented "Eskimo" groups invaded and conquered Greenland. Yes, the natives of Greenland are newcomers.

    125. Re:Your skin is not melting by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      The provable errors are theory by theory, the entire set of Conservative principles contain logical errors. The basic error is the fallacy of justified knowledge. You'll find this as the root of most Conservative principles. This ultimately leads Conservatives into a nihilist position that objective knowledge is not obtainable. Since that does not satisfy their goals, they make a "retreat to commitment" and assume that everybody else does as well, again since objective knowledge is not obtainable, they accept Hume's criticism of induction. Knowledge does not grow through induction though, only through falsification.

      The belief that one must show evidence or otherwise prove their position is logically incorrect. One's position must survive falsification attempts. It is through falsification that objective knowledge grows. I do not need to prove my position, only attempt to falsify it, Conservative ideas do not withstand falsification.

      If you look at the leaders of the religious right, particularly Karl Barth and Francis Schaeffer, you'll see that they have made a retreat to commitment that requires dedication to absudity; a la Wittgenstein.

      Still believe your point stands?

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    126. Re:Your skin is not melting by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "You'll find this as the root of most Conservative principles"

      Oh, I will, will I? Wow. This is indeed edifying.

      More proof by assertion. You say that you've got these logical fallacies in your pocket, and I am supposed to just believe you.

      You certainly don't have to justify your assertions. You don't owe me anything. However, I think you are pretty foolish to think your .sig is good rhetoric.

      And so, yes. Until you have brought out these logical fallacies for discussion, my point stands.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    127. Re:Your skin is not melting by Samrobb · · Score: 1
      You self-describe as a "fundamentalist", but you speak quite differently from other "fundamentalists".

      This is an increasingly annoying problem of terminology. When a Christian describes themselves as a fundamentalist - as jdavidb has, and as I would describe myself - they typically have something in mind that is entirely different from what a non-Christian thinks of when they use the term "fundamentalist".

      If you want an analogy, consider the term "hacker". Folks here on /. have complained about the misuse of this term by the popular media. A term that was once used as jargon by a select group has been appropriated by the common culture. In doing that, the term has been given a popular meaning that is not only different, but in some ways even opposed to the original jargon meaning of the word.

      "Fundamentalist" and "fundamentalism" were adopted as identifying terms for a particular Christian theological movement. So in Christian circles, the term is essentially theological jargon. However, the popular meaning of the term has diverged so much that there are actually fundamental, evengelical Christians who refuse to use the term "fundamentalist" to identify themselves because of the negative connotations now attached to the term.

      Why? For someone unfamiliar with the theological jargon, a Christian using the term "fundamentalist" can be as confusing as a computer programmer using the term "hacker". Or, even worse, it should be confusing, but it isn't... because the Christian/programmer assigns one meaning to the term, while the non-Christian/non-programmer assigns a different meaning.

      Heh. I should start referring to myself as a "fundamentalist hacker" and really make some heads spin.

      --
      "Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
    128. Re:Your skin is not melting by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      I just gave you several examples of fallacies that Conservatives hold, most visible with those aligned with the Religious Right. If you haven't falsified those, why should I bother to continue? I don't intend on writing a book on the pages of /.. While categorically falsifying your critics' and rivals' assertions and refutations while showing how your own assertions survive is a standard Critical Rationalist form. It's usally reserved for books, like David Miller's Critical Rationalism: A Restatement and Defense. The shortest form I've seen this in is a published paper, as I stated, I don't intend to write either in a /. story.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    129. Re:Your skin is not melting by greengrocer · · Score: 1

      Actually, I believe the Bill O'Reilly-sanctioned term is "the loony left." You should always refer to the "far-left" as "godless commies."

      Are you one of the righteous right who has a "My SUV loves Iraqi oil" on your Chevy Tahoe? Or is it a Ford Explorer?

    130. Re:Your skin is not melting by love-blood-rhetoric · · Score: 1

      Are you sure it was a book? Are you sure it wasn't........nothing?

    131. Re:Your skin is not melting by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      That's exactly the problem I have with religous people. No matter how much evidence you give them, they refuse to rethink their position, they try to explain away the problem. 'Genesis is literal.' 'No, here is evidence it didn't happen that way.' 'Oh, well the its figurative.' How do you think that sounds? Not only does it seem to indicate a lack of faith on your part, it also makes your whole case weak when you keep having to back peddle to explain why you're beliefs are still valid.

    132. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      We're kind of in an uncertain state. In terms of what most slashdotters think of as a fundamentalist by belief, I am one. And most Protestants would probably regard me that way, until they look really closely at my church, which adheres to a couple of doctrines that are more Catholic than Protestant (hey, I can't help it; they're simply right on such things) and then they start viewing us as not fundamentalist at all, and probably not even saved. (And to a slashdotter I think I'm really surprising because I'm just not interested in coercion, nor do I regard it as a big deal to say, "Well, maybe the theistic evolution model could be true, but I just don't think so.")

      In terms of personal labels, I do consider myself a fundamentalist. And the online religious circles I run in are very decidedly fundamentalist.

    133. Re:Your skin is not melting by cabraverde · · Score: 1
      Your post is encouraging in several respects:

      • Firstly, it is informative and well-researched to a degree not normally seen around these parts.
      • Secondly, it is a sign that people with knowledge of climate science are no longer wearily avoiding climate-related subjects on Slashdot (as I usually do) because of the ignorant smug-fest of casual opinion that normally ensues, despite all the pretention of scientific thinking. Full credit to you for wading in with some good info.
      • Finally, that you got highly moderated is perhaps most encouraging of all. It shows that people are beginning to be receptive to the idea that planetary-scale alterations in atmospheric composition might just lead to changes in climate. It makes a change from sneering cynicism about research motives.
      Things are looking up.
    134. Re:Your skin is not melting by OSXcellent · · Score: 1

      Global warming and global cooling are phenomena that have cycled through the planet's history. Our ignorance of patterns that have preceeded our ability to detect them (or even eluded our ability, as much climate documentation, especially in the early 20th century, is absent or incomplete) have contributed to a state of attribution. If the technology that currently exists were around in the centuries before the last ice age, what would be its cause? Would earth's industrialization prevented it? I doubt it. Does it have a role the warming of parts of the globe (and the cooling of others, incidentially)? Possibly. The fact that scientists need to be authorized to speak to the media and are irked by an inability to do so freely should hardly come as a shock to anyone who has worked with 1. scientists 2. the media 3. anyone who is quoted in the media who isn't a former PR vice president. The media picks up on the most polarizing piece of research and is not shy about abusing it to pick up viewers and/or readers. And God forbid we dare to think that a research may "direct" her research towards an end that would support a prevailing climate theory. People with knowledge, especially when their voice is tied to current or future government policy. The image of scientists being "gagged" is ignorant. The image of an employer wanting to control the message communicated to a fickle media is a necessary evil.

    135. Re:Your skin is not melting by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. You made an allusion to a well-understood logical fallacy (which is fine). You then made a series of unconnected assertions, and wrote QED at the bottom of it, and thought you could snow me.

      Sorry, you're wrong.

      Let's go line by line.

      "The basic error is the fallacy of justified knowledge." Cool. Let's start there.

      "You'll find this as the root of most Conservative principles." Oh really? That's an interesting assertion. Which principles are you defining as "Conservative"? Just the ones that you think exhibit the fallacy of justified knowledge? No true Scotsman would put sugar on his porridge... (See? I can allude to logical fallacies too!)

      "This ultimately leads Conservatives into a nihilist position that objective knowledge is not obtainable." Well, I assert that this ultimately leads Conservatives to wanting a burger, fries, and a coke. My assertion is just as well supported as yours.

      I understand not wanting to write a philosophical paper on Slashdot. If you don't want to get in arguments, don't have an argumentative .sig. If you want to argue with me, bring your A game.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    136. Re:Your skin is not melting by aevans · · Score: 1

      I remember how the opposition's stance was that there was a new ice age coming in the 1970s and when they needed an excuse to lean on farmers in the 1980s they claimed that water was disappearing and it would never rain again and then in the 1990s they came up with global warming and nowadays the official stance is, well, maybe not global warming, but "regional" "climate change" and they're already hedging against the comedians speculations about the climate staying the same by putting out feelers that "climate not change" would be a disaster too.

    137. Re:Your skin is not melting by aevans · · Score: 1

      God damn respiration!

    138. Re:Your skin is not melting by PMuse · · Score: 1

      Have fun. Beat me. Slap me. Mod me down.
      At which point, the mods proceeded to boost 12 comments up to +5. That's gotta be some sort of record in a single story.

      --
      "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    139. Re:Your skin is not melting by PMuse · · Score: 1

      Scratch that. Never mind.

      --
      "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    140. Re:Your skin is not melting by feepness · · Score: 1

      ID NOT!!!!

    141. Re:Your skin is not melting by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Which principles are you defining as "Conservative"?

      Those espoused by Conservative authors. Take the ID controversy. A simple analysis of the arguments from elected Conservative politicians and their surrogates on talk radio, cable news and the Internets allows one to deduce a logical structure to their arguments.

      They believe that their metaphysical belief in an intelligent designer should be taken as seriously as the falsifiable assertions of evolution. Why would one hold this belief? If you research their writings and those they turn to in order to rationalize this position, it becomes obvious that they accept Hume's criticism of induction. They continuously attempt to initiate infinite logical regression in order to create doubt about the validity of falsifiable assertions, while offering their non-falsifiable assertions as an alternative. Knowingly doing this is called bait and switch.

      The only reason one cannot really accuse many of them (supporters of Plato's Noble Lie, notwithstanding) of this, is that they really do believe that their position is equally valid in the realm of science and refuse to accept that the goal of science deliberately excludes metaphysical conjectures. Even Behe gave testimony under oath that the definition of science must change in order for ID to be science and that the resulting change would also admit astrology as a scientific field.

      Since Conservatives also rail constantly about Relativism, then how do you rationalize this glaring relativist position, which denies objective knowledge to science? After all, wouldn't they support gay marriage if this was the position they held, wouldn't gay marriage be a logically equal position alongside heterosexual marriage?

      The writings of Karl Barth and Francis Schaeffer show us how they escape this trap in reasoning. Schaeffer especially, is referenced throughout Conservative literature. They brag about studying under this man and following his teachings. The teachings of these guys rely on Wittgenstein's assertion that there are no true statements in math. Tarski disproved this, but they maintain that it is true in the realm of philosophy, including political science and ethics. The reason they do so is a belief in justified knowledge. This is central to the falsification of Wittgenstein's philosophical assertions. Since accepting all ethical positions as equal undermines goals of the Conservative movement, the solution is to believe anyone who asserts truth cannot possibly posses objective knowledge. Since they cannot posses objective knowledge, they are simply picking a side and defending it to the point of absurdity, or else they don't really believe what they are saying and are open to accusations of hypocrisy and unwillingness to stand up for what they believe. This is the basis behind most mainstream GOP attacks that Liberals and Democrats are flip-floppers, don't stand for anything, etc.

      What Barth and Schaeffer do is take specific interpretations of Protestant faith and make this "retreat to commitment", which is really a retreat to absurdity. This is a major theme in Bartley's "Retreat to Commitment". If one removes the logical fallacy of justified knowledge, one may obtain objective knowledge, given a problem situation and a set of goals.
      Conservative and fundamentalist thought is rationalized. Meaning that Conservatives do claim to support some set of goals, how they rationalize the means for reaching these goals is based on the basic assumptions that I've identified: that the only way to avoid a nihilistic position that there is no objective truth is to completely commit oneself to a dogma and declare that dogma as objective truth. This spills over into the free market worship of the Milton Friedman / U of Chicago classical liberal and libertarian factions; although actual Libertarians suffer a logically similar, but differently rationalized error.

      Now, do you really think that I should continue to advance the evidence for this in a freaking /. story, witho

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    142. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      Thank you! That's so much more efficient! And a level above the discourse often employed by both sides of the discussion...

    143. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      Yeah, actually it was one message, moderated 10 times, according to my messages. Although that may not be over yet; you never know.

    144. Re:Your skin is not melting by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      Heh. I should start referring to myself as a "fundamentalist hacker" and really make some heads spin.

      If that fails to be entertaining enough, try "fundamentalist anarchist hacker" and see what happens. :)

    145. Re:Your skin is not melting by ultranova · · Score: 1

      -Do we have very much control over this process. Other than destroying > 95% of the worlds population, then NO! Burning "clean" fuels will not do crap when you have %gt; 6 Billion people consuming. It is not an issue of clean, but rather scale.

      So, basically, you are saying that it doesn't make sense to figure out how to decrease the emissions caused by meeting a single persons needs, since that saving gets multiplied by 6 billion ?

      I guess you aren't a programmer then ;).

      The world is changing. It has been allot warmer even a million years ago. Get used to it!! If I hear another person talk about "mother earth being sick", I think Im going to hurl. There is this perception with people that everything is perfect until we do something to mess it up. Well, this theory might work in sunday school, but is just a big fat lie!

      If the Earth gets warmer, then the weather patterns will shift, causing massive disruptions in food production and, during the change, very violent and unstable weather. Furthermore, the glaciers will likely melt, causing sea level to raise and forcing those living near the shores (the majority of humanity) to move inland, causing chaos and likely wars.

      "Mother Earth" may not be bothered by rising temperature, but we the human beings most certainly will be.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    146. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's spelled "etc.", not "ect.".

    147. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that very large island and it's surrounding shelf

      "its".

    148. Re:Your skin is not melting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It has been allot warmer even a million years ago."

      It's "a lot", you stupid fucking cunt.

    149. Re:Your skin is not melting by Actual+Reality · · Score: 0

      "If current arctic melting trends continue, you'll be able to visit the North pole in a boat by 2015. Not an icebreaker, mind you, just a normal boat with a 1000 mile range. A 32ft sailboat will do just fine." You are dreaming. Not gonna happen! "The fact that you don't understand why both statements are true and important tells everyone reading this a lot more than I could possibly point out by explaining it to you. So I'll just quote your incredulity and close my argument here." You close your argument because you have none. There is no way Global Warming can cause higher and lower tempertatures. Either the Earth is getting hotter or it is getting colder. Both of which happen during the normal course of teh existence of the Earth. To say that mankind is responsible is nonsense. 1 volcano eruption relases more greenhouse gasses than all of mankind for the last 50 years. But go ahead an apply for your grants to study it if you like, but don't tell me what kind of car I should drive, or what kind of lawn mower I should use, or if I can even have a barbecue in my back yard. You sound like Ted Dantzen in the middle 80's.

    150. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      There is no way Global Warming can cause higher and lower tempertatures. Either the Earth is getting hotter or it is getting colder.

      You're sounding stupider by the minute. The distribution of heat energy on the surface of the earth is not some sort of linear "hot at the equator, cold at the poles" situation. The ocean and air move around and carry heat all over the place, but how they move energy around depends a great deal on oceanic and surface geography.

      The Gulf Stream, in particular, pumps enormous amounts of heat from the tropics into the North Atlantic and is responsible for London, England feeling a lot like New York City, USA despite being at the same latitude as Calgary, Canada. There are other currents (google for "thermal conveyer") that do the same sorts of things in the Pacific and Indian oceans.

      When the planetary climate changes, unpredictable things happen to those heat transfer systems, and when one stops, or a different one begins, sudden dramatic warming or cooling of certain locations will happen (is happening). Now that you've been told, stop acting ignorant on the subject.

      1 volcano eruption relases more greenhouse gasses than all of mankind for the last 50 years.

      Too bad your assertion is completely and utterly incorrect. Which volcanic eruption were you thinking of? Are you referring to some primordial eruption hundreds of millions of years ago (because one of those might get close).

      Did you just trust the AM talk radio host you listened to (who didn't check his facts either)?

      Two facts are relevant here.

      First: volcanic eruptions almost always decrease global temperature because the sulphur aresols tend to reflect more heat than is trapped by the CO2. If it weren't for volcanoes, we'd be that much worse off on climate change.

      Second: average total volcanic activity for the last 20 years has been 110 million tons of CO2 and 80 million tons of sulphur-based gases per year (that's million with an 'm'). Human contributions of CO2 over the last 20 years were about 900 billion tons of CO2 per year (that's billion with a 'b'). Factor of 8181. Similar factors for sulphur and nitrogen compounds. As in humans released more than eight thousand times as much greenhouse gases as volcanoes did over the same time period.

      More than eight thousand times as much greenhouse gases over the last twenty years. Humans more than volcanoes.

      The largest volcano in the last 10,000 years was Tambora in 1815, which released about 2 billion tons of CO2 along with hundreds of billions of tons of sulphur aresols, causing the "year without a summer" in 1816. The largest volcano in the past ten thousand years released less than 0.5% of the CO2 humans released in 2005.

      You're so badly misinformed, you can't even tell when you're being fed nonsense or an actual fact. If you want to fix the fact that you look like an idiot in this discussion (or any other on climate change) that's what you need to work on first. Good luck to you.

      Regards,
      Ross

    151. Re:Your skin is not melting by Actual+Reality · · Score: 0

      Ross, Read this article which is a recent Slashdot Thread: http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110008220 The volcano of which I am thinking is Mt St. Helens. Where do you get your numbers on the amount of CO2 released by humans. There is a book by Dixie Lee Ray called "Trashing the Planet" that addresses all of the issues you mention and many others. You also mention that volcano eruptions cause the Earth's temperature to drop because the sulphur compounds reflect heat. You then say that mankind releases 8181 times more that that. Why is it that the Sulphuric compounds from volcanos protect us and the same compounds from humans are destroying us? And if you decide to answer this, please leave out the insults to my intellegence. Calling people names doesn't make your argument any more valid. Jim

    152. Re:Your skin is not melting by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Read this article which is a recent Slashdot Thread: [link snip]

      I did read the article and the discussion around it. Personally, I find his reasoning to be shaky and his references to climate models to be disingenuous. There are a lot of climate models, but very few are effective at predicting even historical data (give it data up to 2000, does it provide any predictions that match 2000-2005?). Though they are being continuously improved, there is a limitation to predictive accuracy based on the same limitations that meteorologists have: the earth's weather system is highly chaotic.

      Where do you get your numbers on the amount of CO2 released by humans.

      Well, you forced me to do some more research and what I thought was a slam-dunk fact (ten thousand to one proportion) turned out to be fairly shaky and almost certainly incorrect.

      One older source:
      http://www.sciam.com/askexpert_question.cfm?articl eID=000D4121-91C5-1CD1-B4A8809EC588EEDF&catID=3&to picID=22

      Newer source #1:
      http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/frequent_quest ions/grp6/question1375.html

      Newer source #2:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Global_Carbon_E mission_by_Type.png

      Newer source #3:
      http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=87

      My older source and the newer sources differ substantially. The older source states 10,000:1 human:natural and 110MT CO2/year from volcanoes (implied 1100GT/year from humans). Source #1 states a long-term average of 500MT CO2/year from volcanoes and a recent average of 17.6GT CO2/year from humans. Source #2 provides recent human emission totals of 5GT to 6.5GT C/year from humans (equivalent to 16.4GT to 21.3GT CO2/year).

      I think that the older source took the amount of human CO2 emissions over the past 200 years (though Source #3 states that total human CO2 emissions are 500GT CO2, so that's not enough to fully explain his error). Based on newer and better researched data, I've now updated my statements to reflect that humans release 32 times as much CO2 as volcanoes on average.

      You also mention that volcano eruptions cause the Earth's temperature to drop because the sulphur compounds reflect heat. You then say that mankind releases 8181 times more that that.

      Clearly an error. Humans release about 10MT SO2/year. Volcanos release on average 2.5MT SO2/year, though individual eruptions release much more than others (El Cichien 8.5MT, Pinatubo 17MT, Mt. St. Helens 212 KT). Also, the exact kind of sulphur "stuff" released and where it ends up makes a huge difference on whether it has any impact on global temperatures. Some volcanoes, like Tambora release lots of SO2 to the upper atmosphere, which causes an optically dense haze that blocks some of the sun's radiation. The SO2 in the upper atmosphere and the haze it creates can persist for more than two years. Other volcanoes, like Mt. St. Helens, release more ash, which does create more clouds in the months following the eruption, but is almost entirely washed out of the atmosphere within six months.

      Most human emissions of SO2 occur in the lower atmosphere, and contribute heavily to smog and haze close to the ground, but are more quickly removed from the air by rain than the SO2 delivered to the upper atmosphere by volcanoes. Also, because the haze is lower to the ground (often at ground level), the optical scattering from the haze doesn't reflect nearly as much back out (most of the radiation is captured in one way or another by the time it reaches ground level).

      To me, the biggest remaining issue is to show a caus

    153. Re:Your skin is not melting by Actual+Reality · · Score: 0

      Well it looks like it is worse than I thought and not nearly as bad as you thought. Lets lay this one to rest.

      Peace

  2. Maybe they should arrest all those nasty storms by MECC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Although Bush and his top advisers have said that Earth is warming and human activity has contributed to this, they have questioned some predictions and caution that mandatory limits on carbon dioxide could damage the nation's economy."

    Of course, the cost of doing nothing is much lower in the long run.

    --
    "We are all geniuses when we dream"
    - E.M. Cioran
    1. Re:Maybe they should arrest all those nasty storms by Wornstrom · · Score: 1

      I wonder what the statute of limitations is on ruining the environment.

    2. Re:Maybe they should arrest all those nasty storms by rewinn · · Score: 1

      >I wonder what the statute of limitations is on ruining the environment.

      The laws of nature have no limitations.

      Sometimes they are a bit slow, but they are relentless.

    3. Re:Maybe they should arrest all those nasty storms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Although Bush and his top advisers have said that Earth is warming and human activity has contributed to this, they have questioned some predictions and caution that mandatory limits on carbon dioxide could damage the nation's economy."

      Taking from the poor and giving to the rich has done a lot more to damage the economy in the long term than the short term damage any such limits might cause.

      The problem is the rich are getting richer and they're not spending their money. If we want to encourage spending, we should be increasing estate taxes instead of decreasing them. For what it's worth, one of the strongest supporters of high estate taxes was Carnegie. One of the richest people ever in this country. His reasoning was that we don't want to end up with kids that do nothing for a living and just live off of their inheritance, because they're more a drain on society than if they actually worked.

    4. Re:Maybe they should arrest all those nasty storms by Eggz+Factor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Of course, the cost of doing nothing is much lower in the long run."

      I understand your sarcasm, and support it.
      I am continually amazed at the mindset of those who would take no action to scale back our species contribution to the greenhouse gas issue, and our effect on the closed ecosystem we inhabit. The argument regarding the cost of retooling for lower emissions seems to come from those who have the most to gain financially from not altering their business model and those unwilling to alter their lifestyle to one with a smaller environmental footprint. Yeah, it's getting warmer, and it's not all our fault, but we have contributed to the problem. Instead of inhabiting the island of denial, think about the financial/social impact of things like changes in ocean level, the ozone layer, plankton levels, alteration of weather patterns, and attendant disruptions in conditions for agriculture, the impact of natural disasters.

      Explain to me, then how it is a bad thing to cut our green house gas emissions, which seem to be accelerating the melting of global ice cover, and thawing of permafrost (think methane and CO2 released). Also explain why it is "too costly" to reduce our reliance on combustible fossil fuels, which contribute to the particulate matter ejected into out atmosphere. What is wrong with eliminating smog in out large cities? Why is it so difficult for some people to see that this is not a partisan issue, it is one of greed and power.

      Some of us can look beyond how "cheap is my gas" and "does the electricity flow when I flick the switch?".

      --
      blah, blah, blah...
    5. Re:Maybe they should arrest all those nasty storms by SETIGuy · · Score: 1
      Of course, the cost of doing nothing is much lower in the long run.

      Of course it's lower. For the same reason that suicide is cheaper than medical care. We might have to combat global warming for thousands of years. Or we could do nothing for a couple hundred.

  3. do they care? by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It doesn't appear that US citizens even care about global warming. Maybe work on this first, or is the Federal goverment responsible for public morals?

    --
    Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

    http://financialpetition.org/
    1. Re:do they care? by RingDev · · Score: 4, Interesting

      US Citizens follow the media. If the media doesn't report on it, the average US citizen doesn't have a clue. Getting global warming topic into class rooms and into the media is the key to getting Americans active.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    2. Re:do they care? by CRCulver · · Score: 0

      The only people really communicating with the public now are those who deny global warming. Take Michael Crichton as an example, his novel State of Fear was a best-seller and even has a fancy bibliography at the end to make it look convincing. The side that would seek to inform the public is, regrettably, a bunch of eggheads doing good research without the talent to communicate it.

    3. Re:do they care? by artlogic · · Score: 4, Informative

      It doesn't appear that US citizens even care about global warming. Maybe work on this first, or is the Federal goverment responsible for public morals?

      Actually, according to http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/0 4/1154214:

      "A recent poll published in the Chicago Sun-Times now shows that 'An overwhelming majority of Americans think they can help reduce global warming and are willing to make the sacrifices that are needed, a new poll shows. After years of controversy, 71 percent of Americans now say they think global warming is real."

      I'd say the public's morals are just about right, and it's time for the government to take notice and change its backward policies.

      --
      "A Mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems." ~ Paul Erdos
    4. Re:do they care? by Tweekster · · Score: 1

      Except that is happening,. global warming is a pretty big topic, the public simply doesnt care. to quote lord of war. "why worry about something that can kill you in 10 years, when there are so many things that can kill you now" That is the public attitude, and lack of information has nothing to do with it.

      --
      The phrase "more better" is acceptable English. suck it grammar Nazis
    5. Re:do they care? by WankersRevenge · · Score: 3, Informative

      do you and the idiot moderator even read this site?

    6. Re:do they care? by plopez · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Hard to say. The Supreme Court appointed him President the first time around and he almost lost the second election despite trotting out the terrorists and the gays. Not exactly a mandate.

      I would say, based on my experience, most people are concerned. Those who do not seem to be are the corporate types who pay the electioneering expenses and the knee jerk reactionary whackos, along with a few apocalyptic Christians who believe they are helping the Second Coming by destroying the planet faster.

      Just my $.02

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    7. Re:do they care? by Scarblac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They don't care because they think it's not serious, or not happening at all. I'd say that informing citizens about upcoming disaster is a government responsibility.

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    8. Re:do they care? by joschm0 · · Score: 0
      It doesn't appear that US citizens even care about global warming. Maybe work on this first, or is the Federal goverment responsible for public morals?

      Actually it's Republicans who don't care. Democrats do care.

      --
      01/20/09
    9. Re:do they care? by j-cloth · · Score: 1

      No they aren't responsible for giving the public morals, but they are responsible for helping focus research and (for this government especially) controlling the information that flows to the public. The citizens make their moral decisions based on the information given to them and if the research money isn't there and if the pressure is there to adjust the way that the results of the research that is done are presented, then the government can affect what people consider to be important. And it's laughable, especially with this administration to even suggest that the govenment has no say in public morals. The ran on a platform of "christian family values." How much more involved in public morals can they get? (see: rights, reproductive)

    10. Re:do they care? by Thud457 · · Score: 1

      Actually, this is part of a covert war on Holland, Venice and Tuvalu. Dirty bastards!

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    11. Re:do they care? by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 0

      you asshole this proves my point.
      They know about the problem (and the little rant about bush is bullshit) and wont dont jack shit to change it. You don't need the goverment to tell you that a SUV is a waste of money and a waste of resources.

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
    12. Re:do they care? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I think we do not believe it exists. Every argument that it is a real phenomenon that is out of control, comes packaged with some pseudo-religious viewpoint about how we should live life.

      It could be real, but the message isn't getting heard through the bullshit.

    13. Re:do they care? by eln · · Score: 1

      Yes, politicians could do something about this and they could really get something done. However, this is not how modern politics works. These days, the idea is to pick a wedge issue that is unlikely to ever be solved, and campaign on that.

      On the surface, global warming would seem to be an ideal issue for this, since it's not likely to be solved for a while, but it's also not divisive enough. You can't really play on peoples' religious fervor on any side of the issue: the Bible doesn't say a whole lot about it. Plus, since the effects of global warming aren't likely to be felt for decades at least, it's hard to drum up enough urgency to fill up an election cycle.

      The best wedge issues are the ones that play on religion or immediate personal safety. You can get a lot of traction out of issues like terrorism, gay marriage, or immigration, but it's a lot harder to campaign on global warming.

    14. Re:do they care? by gowen · · Score: 1
      I'd say the public's morals are just about right, and it's time for the government to take notice and change its backward policies.
      Until the public start bank-rolling politicians to the same extent that oil companies do, I don't really think that's going to happen.

      Votes are nice and everything, but unmarked non-sequential banknotes are forever.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    15. Re:do they care? by Bombula · · Score: 1

      One could argue that a core responsibility of leaders i to inspire people to care about the right things...

      --
      A-Bomb
    16. Re:do they care? by Zigg · · Score: 1

      Getting global warming topic into class rooms

      Ah, so we should be telling government employees what they should talk about.

      Wait...

    17. Re:do they care? by Analogy+Man · · Score: 1
      The 71% number is interesting.

      The most amusing (and truthful) analysis of Bush's recent poll numbers state 1/3rd of the country thinks he's boiled evil, another 1/3rd has a maliable opinion, and the remaining 1/3rd would eat glass before saying ANYTHING against a Republican administration.

      So, it leaves only 29% sticking by Bush/Cheney and their "conservation is a personal virtue but bad public policy" viewpoint. On the surface Bush tried to communicate some conservation goals, but they are the equivalent to going on a diet where you reduce the amount of ketchup on your super-size order of fries by 25% over the next 5 years.

      --
      When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
    18. Re:do they care? by GigG · · Score: 1

      The only people really communicating with the public now are those who deny global warming.

      There really ought to be a MOD for "Are you crazy?"

      --
      Is buying a Harley Davidson as your first motorcycle since you were 16 at age 49 a midlife crisis issue?
    19. Re:do they care? by Cornflake917 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "A recent poll published in the Chicago Sun-Times now shows that 'An overwhelming majority of Americans think they can help reduce global warming and are willing to make the sacrifices that are needed, a new poll shows. After years of controversy, 71 percent of Americans now say they think global warming is real."

      I really wish that this meant that Americans actually care about global warming, but think about this for a second. What is our voter turnout rate? Less than 50% right? However, just about everyone has an opinion about the gov't. They want something done and they bitch about it, but they never actually DO anything about it. Sure, maybe we can get most Americans to turn down their thermostat 2 degrees. But what if they had to give up their precious SUV's? Just because people say they are willing to make sacrifices doesn't mean they will.

      But because of this, I couldn't agree more that the government needs to change it's policies.

    20. Re:do they care? by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      A wonderfully insightful (not) post from a guy with the name of P3NIS CLEAVER (not that I should just this book by its cover...)....

      Look, as an American who is concerned about the environment and does his part (recycling, public transportation when possible, etc), you should really be more careful about lumping us all together.

      A more accurate statement would have been, "it doesn't appear that a MAJORITY of US citizens or the government and media organizations who should be responsible for spearheading this even care about global warming".

      And that would be more accurate, because the reality is, they only care about lining their pockets in the short term and humanity's future be damned.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    21. Re:do they care? by Peyna · · Score: 1

      The US consumes 19 million barrels of oil each day. Sadly, the fuel economy difference saved by trading in an SUV for a small car would give save us a whopping 55 million barrels of oil.

      It doesn't help that each year we're spending more time on the road than the year before. Any benefit to overall fuel consumption by making more efficient cars is eaten away by our appetite for the road. If you really want to see benefits, drive less and take public transportation. If you don't have public transportation, elect people that will see to it that it is built.

      --
      What?
    22. Re:do they care? by rundgren · · Score: 1

      "I'd say the public's morals are just about right, and it's time for the government to take notice and change its backward policies." ..and the first thing that should be done, is to impose a global-warming tax on all fossil fuels. This is maybe the single most effective thing that can be done in the short term, but it remains to be seen if the American people _really_ are willing to make the sacrifices of a doubled (at least) gas price... Personally, I think not. Maybe after some more Katrinas hit the big cities people will realise that nature means business and will adapt their lifestyle, but until then....

    23. Re:do they care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have penis envy don't you?

      You know, fuck you. I can afford to drive a full size truck, and I will, until I can't afford it anymore. Just because your a pissy little shit head that can't afford to drive a big SUV and is jealous of everyone else, doesn't mean you should come onto slashdot and start crying about it. Fucking euro trash. Wow, now that was troll/flaimbait :o)

    24. Re:do they care? by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I would not trouble with governments. The task of resolving global warming can be managed by private initiative. I estimate the total cost at $US 1 billion annually, at this link.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    25. Re:do they care? by frankengeek · · Score: 0

      I don't. I can dig up an Times magazine article talking about global cooling. Just sounds like more high minded liberal scientist that needs somthing to complain about.

    26. Re:do they care? by aminorex · · Score: 1

      You don't need to change your lifestyle in order to solve the problem of global warming. You just need to find a way to spend about 17 cents per living human per day. Check my numbers if you don't believe me.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    27. Re:do they care? by kabocox · · Score: 1

      I'd say the public's morals are just about right, and it's time for the government to take notice and change its backward policies.

      Hey, my morals are o.k. When we bought our home, the first thing that I did when we could afford it was replace all the lights with those compact 13 watt light bulbs. I can't really afford to do anything else. They might as well just throw down some laws that force companies to R&D into those more efficient products. The goal should be to make everything that I can buy from Wal-mart be energy efficient. If the cheapest goods out there are energy efficient, then you whouldn't have to worry about the expensive stuff.

    28. Re:do they care? by B_Realll · · Score: 1

      We're not all that bad. All of the insightful posts like yours on /. have finally convinced me to change my ways. I recently ordered one of these for my Mustang. I will get better gas mileage now! I recommend any SUV driver do the same. I am also going to remove the air conditioner from my car since it lowers my gas mileage as well.

      Then I am going to lobby my polititian to pass a law that all cars have to have the air conditioner removed. After all, if I am being environmentally concious, all of you hybrid drivers should have to be too. I hope I am getting this forced ecofriendly legislation thing right. I am pretty new to the cause.

      --
      now you see that evil will always triumph because good is dumb.
    29. Re:do they care? by fm6 · · Score: 1
      Those figures assume that iron will never go up in price. In fact, it's already on the rise -- and if somebody starts buying 17 million tons of ore a year and dumping it in the ocean, it'll go up even faster.

      And have you even stopped to consider the ecological effects?

    30. Re:do they care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole point of it is, burning gas in your truck does not just cost you, it costs everyone. You get the enjoyment and cost, everyone else only gets the costs - you're not being very considerate by ridiculing someone who asks you to stop over-using your fair share of earths resources, are you?

    31. Re:do they care? by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Um, the whole goal and purpose is to create specific ecological effects. Like saving the world. And yes, just buying the iron on the market would put (miniscule) pressure on the price. Increasing supply by operating a mine for the project would be quite feasible, at that budgetary scale. Iron mining is not rocket science, after all.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    32. Re:do they care? by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      > a bunch of eggheads doing good research without the talent to communicate it.

      It was communicated 12 years ago and tracking the progression of the warming has been in all the scientific journals on a monthly basis ever since. Every month there is new data to support it and new computer models to predict it based on the new data. In the scientific community the hoopla was over a long time ago, and now it is time to watch it happen and practice some modeling. What more can be said?

      Now it is just a political football.

    33. Re:do they care? by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      > No they aren't responsible for giving the public morals, but they
      > are responsible for helping focus research and (for this government
      > especially) controlling the information that flows to the public.

      The government should tell people to RTFJ (Read The Freaking Journals).

      Americans, especially, avoid reading and trying to understand scientific topics because they believe it is too nerdy and they might loose their sex appeal. Having the government force people to read Science and Nature will educate the people as to what is going on around them and also, as a side benefit, decrease the population growth rate.

    34. Re:do they care? by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      > It doesn't appear that US citizens even care about global warming

      Why is everybody always bashing USA? The whole world is making this mess and all the efforts to do something about it have been superficial. The Kyoto Treaty doesn't go far enough to actually make a dent in the problem. Bush just adds to the comedy of errors by saying "What problem?".

    35. Re:do they care? by maxume · · Score: 1

      The fact that the current gradual warming trend being observed is labeled 'global warming' is a good indicator that the media is already heavily involved. There simply isn't enough understanding of the climate to say anything certain about the situation. Weather forecasting works for ~24 hours in advance and starts to break down, and that's regional. No one has a global model that works for a year in advance, nor ten or twenty.

      The presence of an atmosphere and the oceans not boiling imply that, at the very most, increased CO2 levels are pushing the climate away from a stable point of equilibrium. If that is indeed the case, we have plenty of time to cut down emissions, and once emissions start to decline, things should be fine(if CO2 levels are a contributor). If the climate was in some sort of unstable equilibrium, things would be a whole lot crazier.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    36. Re:do they care? by AdmiralWeirdbeard · · Score: 1

      "After years of controversy, 71 percent of Americans now say they think global warming is real."

      Maybe I'm just too much of a lefty-whacko, but to be perfectly honest, only 71% of the population having a decent enough grip on the fucking obvious to THINK that global warming is real is a source of significant irritation to me.

      I'm 24 years old. I claim to have little or no enduring, deep wisdom about the world or life. I do, however, remember the early '80's when Seattle had, each winter, at least a week of snow on the ground, sometimes 2 weeks in a row. I remember missing a week and a half of 1st grade because not enough of the streets could get plowed for the busses to run (I know thats lame but seattle is ill prepared for weather). What I cannot remember is anything of the same sort of cold-weather happening anytime in the last 10 years.

      The ability of human society to ignore its own best interests is truly one of our most fundamental characterists.

      --
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    37. Re:do they care? by doug141 · · Score: 1

      Are you for a flat fossil fuel tax or a progressive one?

    38. Re:do they care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like a true socialist.

      If the resource is for sale, I have the money, and I have the need/want, then I see no problem with buying/using it. If the resource becomes depleted, cost will go up, and I will buy a more efficient vehicle and use less gas. If the envirmental cost becomes to great, the government will restrict the resources usage and I will buy a more efficient vehicle or switch to a better alternative.

      Generally capatilism will deal with these issues. It may not be fair, but "life ain't fair", so deal with it.

    39. Re:do they care? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      That question is flawed.

      The question isn't "is global warming real?" I think we ('we' being rational human beings) can all agree that it is. Even the Bush administration believes that. Basically, all this study is saying is that 71% of Americans aren't completely stupid.

      If they asked, "is global warming caused by human activity?" then you might get a useful statistic.

    40. Re:do they care? by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      the gas prices from last summer already put a stake in GM's heart. That's what they get for banking their entire revenue stream on SUVs. H2 my ass.

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    41. Re:do they care? by 80+85+83+83+89+33 · · Score: 1

      all the media does is report on global warming. the biggest newspapers regularly have stories trying to scare their readers, and slam bush at every oppertunity. as does the mags like Time. on broadcast media, even PBS can't keep up with 60 Minutes or 20/20 for the number of prime time stories on global warming.

      just within the last 24 hours, i watched two hours of shows demonstrating the effects of global climate change, and that's using an antennae (i don't even have cable or sat.)

      --
      i disable sigs
    42. Re:do they care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, see here, capitalism at work, doing what you want to happen. But do NOT call me an asshole for driving a large vehicle. I can afford it for the time being and I damn well will, until the costs outway the benifits.

    43. Re:do they care? by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      Asshole.

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    44. Re:do they care? by fm6 · · Score: 1
      Um, the whole goal and purpose is to create specific ecological effects.
      It's the specific ecological effect (soaking up CO2) I'm worried about. It's the unintended ecological effects. Which for a project of this size would be massive and extremely unpredictable. For all you know, it could lead to some complicated chain reaction that could make CO2 levels rise. Never mind destroying fisheries, poluting the water, etc.

      You seem to be infatuated with simple-minded solutions to complicated problems: cold fusion will fix the energy crisis, dumping iron ore in the ocean will fix the greenhouse effect. I hate to imagine how you'd solve the health care crisis...

    45. Re:do they care? by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I try to refute erroneous statements about me where they occur, as long as it isn't too burdensome, so I'll merely observe that I do not in any way think that cold fusion will provide an economically useful source of energy in the foreseeable future, although I do think it would be wise, as a matter of public policy, to devote perhaps 10% of the funding currently expended on tokamak fusion to further expand our understanding of the now several methods of inducing fusion at low ambient temperatures, because it is fundamental research which is certain to bear practical fruit, although perhaps not the specific fruit of economically useful room-temperature fusion.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    46. Re:do they care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > Unlike in the Utopia that is Europe, where people don't follow what the media says...?

      I live in Europe, not sure if it is part of the New Europe or the Old Europe though. What I can tell you is that we sure don't believe what the media tells us. We are not that stupid.

    47. Re:do they care? by fm6 · · Score: 1

      I'll give you $20 if you can draw a syntax diagram of that sentence!

    48. Re:do they care? by rundgren · · Score: 1

      big and flat lake the Salt Lakes, baby

    49. Re:do they care? by doug141 · · Score: 1

      But if a fossil fuel tax is flat, yet the poor's commuting needs are similar to those of the rich, doesn't the tax burden most those who can least afford it?

  4. Not just Americans. by tpgp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The result, the researchers say, is a danger that Americans are not getting the full story on how the climate is changing.'"

    You only have to read a slashdot story on Climate Change (and the amount of time posters call it "global warming" to know that the vast majority of people all over the world are not getting the full story on climate change.

    I'm more worried about the current administration's failure to legislate forced change to energy (particularly oil & gas) consumption, then I am about the American public's lack of awareness of the facts.

    --
    My pics.
    1. Re:Not just Americans. by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      I'm more worried about the current administration's failure to legislate forced change to energy (particularly oil & gas) consumption, then I am about the American public's lack of awareness of the facts.

      And what would be the result? Cheaper oil for China. Sounds like economic poison to me.

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    2. Re:Not just Americans. by tpgp · · Score: 1

      And what would be the result? Cheaper oil for China. Sounds like economic poison to me.

      I started to formulate a response, about how China is diversifying its energy sources, and the US needing to do the same to compete, rather then be stuck, dependant on a rapidly diminishing coal & oil supply.

      Then I noticed your handle (and a quick perusal of your comment history confirmed you're a troll) and decided not to bother.

      --
      My pics.
    3. Re:Not just Americans. by Ravenscall · · Score: 1

      I would rather be poor and alive than rich and dead.

      --
      You say you want a revolution....
    4. Re:Not just Americans. by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 0

      Yeah and the Saudis are going to put that barrel of oil that didn't get burned in America back in the ground. You will be both poor and dead.

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    5. Re:Not just Americans. by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      You only have to read a slashdot story on Climate Change (and the amount of time posters call it "global warming"

      What significance do you attach to that difference in terminology?

      I've been led to belive that the "climate change" tag was something crafted by Tony Blair's spin doctors as being laden with negative associations. Typical Blair if so - trying to change public perception when he could be addressing the problem itself.

      Is there some fine distinction between the two that I'm missing? Other than that of being "on message" of course :)

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    6. Re:Not just Americans. by dajak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You only have to read a slashdot story on Climate Change (and the amount of time posters call it "global warming" to know that the vast majority of people all over the world are not getting the full story on climate change.

      I'm more worried about the current administration's failure to legislate forced change to energy (particularly oil & gas) consumption, then I am about the American public's lack of awareness of the facts.


      It's a classic free rider problem and therefore a responsibility of government. It's also a worldwide free rider problem, where individual countries can choose to be a free rider.

      The vast majority of people is not competent to judge what is happening. As always, people will believe the story if they believe in the authority of the messenger. In many countries in Europe, the climate change story has been adopted as fact for some time by governments, media, and meteorological services. In the US it hasn't.

      The willingness to act on climate change obviously also depends on the consequences. In the Netherlands the government is already investing billions to deal with higher sea levels and more river water than was projected in the past. The last two decades have been so extremely wet that it cannot be a coincidence anymore according to the national meteorological service.

    7. Re:Not just Americans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'm more worried about the current administration's failure to legislate forced change to energy (particularly oil & gas) consumption, then I am about the American public's lack of awareness of the facts.

      Will this change fix Mars too, as it is also suffering from global warming?

      All the "Global Warming" propaganda always ignores any actual facts, and appears to me to be more of a political issue then a scientific study. The "proof" always seems to be "but what if it is true. We cant wait for any kind of facts because then it would be too late. Look at this undated picture of a snow covered lake. I was there last july, and there wasn't any snow."

      Using the same logic from the global warming crowd (but what if...), we should be eating our own shit (but what if it improves your immune system), smoking crack (but what if it was somehow good for you), and having copious oral sex (it worked for Clinton). We don't need any proof, we need to do it now or it will surely be too late!

      The official "how to reaserch global warming" task list:

      1. Ignore the sun. It obviously has no relevence to the tempature.
      2. Find one spot on earth that is slightly warmer than last year. This completely proves that global warming exists, and is causes by SUV's.
      3. Find one spot on earth that is slightly cooler than last year. This completely proves that global warming exists, and is caused by SUV's.
      4. Find some old-timers who will state that the winder was much worse when they were young, walking uphill (both ways) through 12 feet of snow while going to school, where the teacher would beat them with a baseball bat every day, and force them to eat broken glass for lunch. This completely proves that global warming exists, and is caused by SUV's.
      5. Never, ever, question weither global warming really exists, or that it is caused by SUV's.
      6. G.W. Bush wants to kill everybody.
      7. John Kerry doesn't own any SUV's (but his wife has several), which proves that he is better than G.W. Bush, and he has a plan to immediately fix global warming (but can't tell anyone or G.W. Bush will kill him).
      8. John Kerry is a war hero. Nobody knows what he did to make him a war hero, but there you go, you insensitive clod.

    8. Re:Not just Americans. by m50d · · Score: 1

      AFAICS "Climate Change" is just a PC label to help the US Govt deny global warming. Am I wrong?

      --
      I am trolling
    9. Re:Not just Americans. by aminorex · · Score: 1

      However, the rich are much more likely to survive climatic upheaval than are the poor. Still, I wouldn't go waging a pre-emptive strike on the Riviera just yet. All it would take is one wealthy donor to resolve the problem of global warming due to anthropogenic carbon surplus.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    10. Re:Not just Americans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I started to formulate a response, about how China is diversifying its energy sources, and the US needing to do the same to compete, rather then be stuck, dependant on a rapidly diminishing coal & oil supply.

      Sorry the facts may not be important to your arguments however; the US have vast coal supplies.

  5. Another government conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right...Bush is strong-arming the scientists to not say what they've been saying for 20+ years.

  6. Gov Money by TheKAVH · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I guess this is the price you pay for taking money from the government for your research. Perhaps the government shouldn't be doling out the money. Maybe the government shouldn't be given that power. The power of the US Government comes mostly not from the armed forces but the money it takes in and gives out.

    1. Re:Gov Money by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sure, the situation would be much better if climate research would be financed by private companies like, say, oil companies?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:Gov Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sure, the situation would be much better if climate research would be financed by private companies like, say, oil companies?

      Score:5, Fucking Scary
    3. Re:Gov Money by Krow10 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I guess this is the price you pay for taking money from the government for your research.
      It shouldn't be. Doing a job for the government should mean that you are ultimately responsible to the people of the US and not to the party in power. The party is administration, not the client. To put this in corporate terms, the client of an employee of a corporation is the shareholder (not to be confused with the speculator, but that's another rant) and not the management. The government should never be an arm of the party. A government scientists should be able to report on research even when the resaerch says something that the party in power doesn't like.

      Cheers,
      Craig

      --
      Corollary to Clarke's Third Law: Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
  7. Its nice to know someone has balls by farker+haiku · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "There has been a change in how we're expected to interact with the press," said Pieter Tans, who measures greenhouse gases linked to global warming and has worked at NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder for two decades. He added that although he often "ignores the rules" the administration has instituted, when it comes to his colleagues, "some people feel intimidated -- I see that."

    I think I like this Pieter Tans guy. I think there needs to be more scientists^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H people like him, who don't allow their convictions to be challenged by the administration.

    --
    Your sig(k) has been stolen. There is a puff of smoke!
    1. Re:Its nice to know someone has balls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ctrl-h's are lame. Use a strikethrough.

    2. Re:Its nice to know someone has balls by PIPBoy3000 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      If you Google about for him, you get some interesting stuff:
      DR. WATSON: A question for Pieter Tans. What if we don't want carbon dioxide to increase to more than one thousand parts per million? For example, what if we want to keep CO2 from exceeding 450, what is the implication for burning all the fossil fuels?

      DR. TANS: It would be Draconian. I showed the real long term effect of it. If we want to keep CO2 below 450 ppm permanently, I guess we would have to stop just about today, almost.
      And another interesting thing here:
      What do we see? At least during '92 and '93, there is tremendous uptake of CO2 at mid-latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere by plants. The uptake is about half as large as the total combustion of fossil fuels. So this is fortunate, this is good news. People in the oil and coal industry might love it. But like I said, we don't know if this is going to last. Biologists are generally very skeptical that this will keep happening for decades. In fact, we know that in 1994, terrestrial uptake at the mid-latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere was much smaller than during '92 and '93. So we know that it varies a lot from year to year. It just so happened that when we got our isotopic analysis on line, there were two big years of terrestrial uptake.
      Just reading through what he's said, he seems like a straight-shooter. Sometimes he says things that the oil industry might hate, some things they might love. Ah, science!
  8. Of course ... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... the RIAA and MPAA got the White House to hide the fact that global warming is caused by a lack of pirates ...

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    1. Re:Of course ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Praise Pasta my brother!

    2. Re:Of course ... by theCat · · Score: 1

      Obey your Noodly Master!

      --
      =^..^= all your rodent are belong to us
  9. I am shocked! by mwvdlee · · Score: 1, Funny

    Bush administration not caring about reality and the people living in it... who'da thunk it?

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  10. Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Lanhdanan · · Score: 1

    Americans will only start caring when they lose some coastal cities. The sad thing is, that global warming is a relatively slow effect, it doesnt give the big bang that a hurricane or earthquake does ... so it slowly creeps in and over time will do much more damage that what most quick natural disasters could do, and the effects will be permanent. The entire time ignorance will be the key to keeping the population in the dark about the threats to their lovely house with a coastal view. But as usual, the loss of life have been given a price, cause afterall, it would be more expensive to do something about it than to sit there and wait for it to happen.

    1. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by codegen · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Americans will only start caring when they lose some coastal cities.

      You mean like new Orleans?

      --
      Atlas stands on the earth and carries the celestial sphere on his shoulders.
    2. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America already lost New Orleans, hit by a category 4 storm. The prevalence of category 4 and 5 storms has doubled over the last 30 years, most likely empowered by warmer oceans (a big part of the *globe*). I'm not going to believe in global warming though until we lose Galveston and Houston.

    3. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by ToxikFetus · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, I think you're correct. As the sea level rises inch by inch, people will cry for levees and sea walls to protect their cities. These will get bigger($) and bigger($$$) and eventually even the biggest won't work any more. What's even more unfortunate is that even then, people STILL won't get the point and move to higher ground (see: New Orleans).

      Bush says that we can't support Kyoto for fear of damaging our economy, but when the sea levels rise via global warming, the resultant economic damage will be orders of magnitude higher.

    4. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Ravenscall · · Score: 1

      We already have, and it did not seem to do much to raise awareness for more than two months.

      --
      You say you want a revolution....
    5. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by ogma · · Score: 1

      Important coastal cities.

    6. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      NO was mostly poor people who don't donate money to the people in power. When Manhattan goes under the waves, expect to see changes.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    7. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by OakDragon · · Score: 1

      Yes, then Manhattan will finally start voting Democrat.

    8. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by OakDragon · · Score: 1
      Americans will only start caring when they lose some coastal cities.
      You mean like new Orleans?

      I think that New Orleans has been under sea level for some time, even during the global cooling of the 1950s to 1980s. It was local corruption in large part that destroyed the city.

    9. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by stupidfoo · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but you're wrong.

      NOAA ATTRIBUTES RECENT INCREASE IN HURRICANE ACTIVITY
      TO NATURALLY OCCURRING MULTI-DECADAL CLIMATE VARIABILITY
      http://www.magazine.noaa.gov/stories/mag184.htm

      "The nation is now wrapping up the 11th year of a new era of heightened Atlantic hurricane activity. This era has been unfolding in the Atlantic since 1995, and is expected to continue for the next decade or perhaps longer. NOAA attributes this increased activity to natural occurring cycles in tropical climate patterns near the equator. These cycles, called "the tropical multi-decadal signal," typically last several decades (20 to 30 years or even longer). As a result, the North Atlantic experiences alternating decades long (20 to 30 year periods or even longer) of above normal or below normal hurricane seasons. NOAA research shows that the tropical multi-decadal signal is causing the increased Atlantic hurricane activity since 1995, and is not related to greenhouse warming ."

    10. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually Global Warming does provide a "big bang" by causeing extended hurricane seasons across the globe and providing warmer water for the storms to feed on. I predict that the next hurricane season here in the U.S. will be even worse and last longer but thats not a hard prediction if you look at the trends. Whether not their is actually anything we as a global community can do about the climate warming is very doubtful I tend to side with the scientist that believe this is part of the natural earth weather cycle and that pollutants are just intensifiying its effects.

      on a sarcastic note: Why do you think Bush has been pumping more money into space exploration?.....So he can get the hell outta here.

    11. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Jon+Luckey · · Score: 1
      Sorry, but you're wrong.

      NOAA ATTRIBUTES RECENT INCREASE IN HURRICANE ACTIVITY
      TO NATURALLY OCCURRING MULTI-DECADAL CLIMATE VARIABILITY
      http://www.magazine.noaa.gov/stories/mag184.htm

      Wrong?

      Funny how the editors for that magazine warned you not to jump to that conclusion.

      See the note at the end:

      *EDITOR'S NOTE: This consensus in this on-line magazine story represents the views of some NOAA hurricane researchers and forecasters, but does not necessarily represent the views of all NOAA scientists. It was not the intention of this article to discount the presence of a human-induced global warming element or to attempt to claim that such an element is not present. There is a robust, on-going discussion on hurricanes and climate change within NOAA and the scientific community.
      --
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    12. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Americans will only start caring when they lose some coastal cities.

      You mean like new Orleans?


      Um, you guys, New Orleans was warned by local scientists that odds were if big hurricane hit them it would be some flooding. Trust me; I could care less about New Orleans except now that city will end up being rebuilt on the same spot with Federal money rather than just giving the locals some money to relocate to other places. I'm more ticked that my taxes will go up because those New Orleans idiots didn't want to tax themselves to pay for larger dams / walls. Why not just relocate them all to one of those two countries that we've got troops at? Peace in the middle east through repopulation!

    13. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by synergy3000 · · Score: 1

      Americans do care. Or haven't you been reading? When will the Chinese and Indians care? Monsoon anyone?

    14. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      New Orleans is an incredibly important city, not just for the US, but for alot of the world. Huge volumes of foodstuffs produced in the US get exported there, lots of oil gets imported there. It's the gateway to the midwest and upper-midwest, which are some of the most productive farmlands in the world. We fought a war over New Orleans early in our history with the British, specifically for this reason.

    15. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      A lot of Manhattan probably already does. Usually urban centers and places where social services are in high demand are strongly Democratic -- since they stand to gain from those social services (like police availability and homeless shelters.) Those people who have the money to live in gated communities and commute into work, however, tend to vote strongly Republican since they've essentially paid for their own services already and resent paying for someone else's. It's very much like the American health care system... The problem is that somehow, politics has become dependent on stupid issues that don't actually have any effect whatsoever on most people's lives -- evolution/creation, gay marriage, being the two big ones, and to a lesser extent, abortion and gun control. (And, behind all those, civil liberties, freedom-of-speech, and the like, but both major parties pay lip service to those while curtailing them whenever they can.) Many people are voting for people based on intangible, perceived moral and ethical issues, and getting politicians who are making decisions that have direct, tangible effects on their lives, without ever making that cause/effect connection. Or maybe they do, and they'd just rather vote for someone who makes their lives tangibly worse but espouses family values. That tactic certainly worked out for the leaders of the evangelical mega-churches in the '80's.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    16. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by OakDragon · · Score: 1
      A lot of Manhattan probably already does [vote Democrat].

      You need to get your sarcasm detector repaired.

      ...politicians who are making decisions that have direct, tangible effects on their lives...

      I voted for George W. Bush in 2000, and shortly thereafter received a tax break in the form of a check in my mailbox. So I guess that was in my interest. I made very little money at the time. Now I make a lot more (relatively speaking - I'm still strictly middle class) thanks to his disastrous economic policies, and have never gotten another check. However, things are still working out for me. Unfortunately, I can't vote for him again.

    17. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      I'm not good at sarcasm... and yeah, I'm in an income bracket in which his cuts have been good for me, personally, but I know a lot of people for whom they have been not quite so good, and I suspect the long-term effects are going to be just appalling, for all of us.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    18. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why not just relocate them all to one of those two countries that we've got troops at? Peace in the middle east through repopulation!


      wow, sand-niggers and welfare-niggers living together in harmony! i wonder how long the "give me a house, give me money, feed me, and support my 15 crack babies" would last in iraq....

      or maybe the crypts and the bloods can do drivebys on the shites and sunnies. wait, would each race cooperate and stop killing "their own kind" so they could kill the other kind? wow, that would along way toward stopping black on black violence.
    19. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      New Orleans wasn't only warned by local scientists. Twenty years ago "60 Minutes" was in the French Quarter with a telescoping pole showing how far underwater the area could be if a big storm surge hit the area. Note that it hasn't yet happened, so we still haven't seen the worst case.

    20. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by OakDragon · · Score: 1

      Sarcasm is a tricky thing when dealing with text on the internets.

      What long term effects (that are appalling) do you thing will arise from tax cuts?

    21. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Americans will only start caring when they lose some coastal cities.

      Dont you mean lose another coastal city?

      It takes a huge amount of collective stupidity to be still locked into reality-denial mode when nature itself is kicking you in the ass, owning your base, and pissing on your hedge.

    22. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      On the surface, I think tax cuts tend to exaggerate societal stratification insofar as they shift the responsibility of funding the government onto the poor.

      However, I think there is something else going on here: I think that tax cuts do serve a political purpose, coz almost everyone appreciates (and votes for) more money in their pocket, and I think that overseas wars serve a political purpose, but as an overall strategy I think both those are being pushed to financially destabilize the US government enough to justify ending Social Security on the grounds that we're in a financial state that demands emergency action. There isn't any way to get rid of SS through normal channels without committing political suicide, so manufacturing an economic catastrophe is the best way to do it, and that's exactly where I see the country heading. That would, in the 20-years-down-the-line point of view, be appalling. It'll be no skin off my nose, since I already have enough for retirement right now and am just making it more comfortable and assured, but for many many people it's going to be an enormous problem.

      Maybe I'm wrong, maybe this isn't going to happen, but I'm betting it will.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    23. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I voted for George W. Bush in 2000, and shortly thereafter received a tax break in the form of a check in my mailbox.

      I never realized that worked. That check was a PR move unrelated to any supposed change in taxes. He could have increased tax and still sent the check. Perhaps you should learn what the check was before praising it.

      As an aside, I do believe that tax-and-spend is a horrible policy. The only thing worse is borrow-and-spend. It amazes me how successful businessmen go into congress and run the country in a way they would never run their businesses. Aside from the Clinton years, we've been in negative cash flow for longer than most Americans have been alive. That's not reasonable fiscal policy. The $300 they sent you will cost you more than $1500. They should have sent and IOU for $1500 with each $300 check.

    24. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by OakDragon · · Score: 1
      The $300 they sent you will cost you more than $1500.

      How?

    25. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Because the $300 was borrowed out of the general fund and never paid back. You are paying somewhere around $20 - $25 a year on that $300. And what's worse, that interest is getting paid with borrowed money too. So, by the time you die, about $1500 will be earmarked for that one $300 check, and it still will not have been paid off.

      But you might never get the bill. That's what is so great about borrow-and-spend. You get to buy everything you want now, and never have to pay it back. Someone will have to get around to it after you are dead, unless the economy crashes first.

    26. Re:Ignorance will not be bliss ... by OakDragon · · Score: 1

      What is the "general fund?"

  11. There is no Global Warming! by digitaldc · · Score: 2, Funny

    Come on guys, your scientific research is all flawed. There is no such thing as global warming! You need to go back, and do some more studies.

    Why do you keep saying that the clima....*GLUB* *GLUB* *WHOOSH* *FLUSH* *GURGLE* *BUBBLE* *pop*

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:There is no Global Warming! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do we need to put safety labels on toilet bowls now?!

    2. Re:There is no Global Warming! by master_p · · Score: 1

      It seems like the Noah story was right after all...

      [/sarcasm]

    3. Re:There is no Global Warming! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any thinking person should be skeptical of forward looking forecast for the climate. There are two reasons for this:

      (1) The climate is an extremely complicate multivariate system. It is simply beyond the ability of today's science to model these kinds of systems with any kind of accuracy. Anyone who says it is possible is a charlatan or is uninformed. I've heard a lot of top climate scientists claiming that their computer models can now predict the future climate with precision. This is a red flag for me. Its like when someone calls me out of the blue and tries to sell me on some stock scheme by saying that he can guarantee future returns -- beep, beep, beep, Warning Will Robinson!
      (2) There are huge financial and stature incentives for scientists to come up with a sky-is-falling type prediction for the climate. 30 Years ago, climate scientists were amongst the lowest paid and least respected scientists. Today, thanks to global warming, they are the high paid rock stars of the scientific world. When ever these sorts of incentives exists, one should be cautious and not simply accept what people say.

      I have two simple questions that I'd like to have answered: First, how long will the warming trend continue before we begin the inevitable cooling cycle leading to the next ice age? Second: what will be the peek increase in temperature and when will it occur?

  12. Seems familiar by ucaledek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not to draw TOO many parallels, but remember when Galileo et al gave scientific findings that the governing powers didn't like? One of the causes, I feel from experiences with research, for the acceleration of scientific discovery is the change from a few centuries ago when science was done at the behest of the wealthy/powerful for status. As science was removed from the political, innovation and creativity flourished. This seems a bad sign of a growing politicization of scientific research, which is what kept things so slow for so long.

    1. Re:Seems familiar by Znrch · · Score: 1

      Yup. Nowadays, politicians will bend science at their leisure to tell their constituents what they want to hear, or to sound "all-knowing" in some respect. The more political it becomes, the more likely we are to see scientific research subsumed to some political goal.

    2. Re:Seems familiar by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 1

      Don't be unfair. Sure, the Church exiled Galileo, demanded he publicly recant his heretical theories, banned all his works, and made him live out his final years in house arrest, but at least they apologized for it. Sure, it was a slow apology taking about three centuries, but still.

      I'm sure the government of Waterworld in 2350 or so will look back on us vaguely apologetically while recycling their own urine into drinking water.

    3. Re:Seems familiar by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      Sorry, Galileo didn't have problems with the government; he had problems with the Church. The two may have been closely related, but it was the Church, not that State, that he had problems with.

      Heliocentrism is a scientific belief that didn't jive with the religious beliefs of the time.

      Global warming is a political belief that doesn't jive with the scientific beliefs of the time.

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    4. Re:Seems familiar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "One of the causes, I feel from experiences with research, for the acceleration of scientific discovery is the change from a few centuries ago when science was done at the behest of the wealthy/powerful for status."

        Now done at the behest of the wealthy/powerful corporations for profit.
        Galileo just challenged the major power of the time (the church) with his statements.
        This is a bad sign of a growing corporatization of scientific research and politics.
        Witness the current state of patents, etc.
      The more things change the more they stay the same.

    5. Re:Seems familiar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The church WAS the state.

  13. World. Ending. by Dr+Reducto · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It seems like what they are complaining about is that the Bush administration doesn't want people who work for them to talk to the media and espescially don't want them to field questions on public policy.

    In effect, a non-issue. Most of you already know you shouldn't go to the media and make comments about the job your boss is doing, or make comments about what they should do instead. I really don't think it's out of the ordinary for Bush to put a collar on his subordinates.

    1. Re:World. Ending. by Tweekster · · Score: 0

      But then the anti bush slashdot sheeps wouldnt have anything to bitch about. Like when that Sony guy got fired, for talking to the media, same thing. But if Bush was CEO of Sony there would have been calls for a formal investigation.

      --
      The phrase "more better" is acceptable English. suck it grammar Nazis
    2. Re:World. Ending. by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      They're not working for the Bush administration, they're working for the US citizens.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    3. Re:World. Ending. by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 1

      Invalid analogy. This is not a private-sector job. Government workers are supposed to answer to the people, not themselves.

    4. Re:World. Ending. by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Most of you already know you shouldn't go to the media and make comments about the job your boss is doing, or make comments about what they should do instead. I really don't think it's out of the ordinary for Bush to put a collar on his subordinates.

      Well... There is that feedom of speach and press thing.

      And although that may not apply to private businesses, you could hardly call the Whitehouse a private business (at least I would hope not).

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    5. Re:World. Ending. by Dr+Reducto · · Score: 1

      Of course that's the way it works in theory.

      However, youll find that going above your boss' head is not the best way to get ahead, in public sector or private sector. Public sector has always been about politics, rather than who is "right"

    6. Re:World. Ending. by rewinn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > don't want them to field questions on public policy

      When public policy is related to science, talking about science is talking about public policy.

      The current White House policy is to deny castrophic global climate change; therefore scientists are forbidden to tell the truth about the science of global climate change.

      It is simply wrong to tell scientists to lie about their findings.

    7. Re:World. Ending. by xeno-cat · · Score: 1

      The point is that "We the people" are supposed to be the boss since we are the ones paying the bills for this "service" called "government". Bush is not the boss of America, he is an, erm, elected official, not a CEO.

      The administration can disagree with the findings but they should not be gagging them. They need to make a case in a public court as to why they believe global warming is not the problem these scientists say it is. But that would start to look like democracy.

      Kind Regards

      --
      "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
    8. Re:World. Ending. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Their boss, in this case, is US, remember? We pay their salaries, they damn well better be telling us the truth about this research that we're paying for.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    9. Re:World. Ending. by Paraplex · · Score: 1

      And you're missing the same point as everyone else in your country.

      Bush isn't his boss... You are his boss.

      Infact, you are Bush's boss. Thats the way it works

    10. Re:World. Ending. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. Nowadays in the USA when a president is elected, he is made a de-facto King (currently for a maximum of 8 years, but that may be changing soon). The King of the United States has the supreme power to make laws, place citizens in jail indefinitely, and start wars on a whim.

    11. Re:World. Ending. by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1
      I really don't think it's out of the ordinary for Bush to put a collar on his subordinates.
      It is out of the ordinary:
      These scientists -- working nationwide in research centers in such places as Princeton, N.J., and Boulder, Colo. -- say they are required to clear all media requests with administration officials, something they did not have to do until the summer of 2004. Before then, point climate researchers -- unlike staff members in the Justice or State departments, which have long-standing policies restricting access to reporters -- were relatively free to discuss their findings without strict agency oversight.
      (Emphasis added) Nor is it all about talking to the media, or making policy statements:
      When Tans was helping to organize the Seventh International Carbon Dioxide Conference near Boulder last fall, his lab director told him participants could not use the term "climate change" in conference paper's titles and abstracts.
  14. Don't blame Bush! by Josh+teh+Jenius · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bush is evil, yes, yes, but stop blaming him for Global Warming.

    You want the truth? This is *my* fault. In fact, just yesterday I noticed the bathroom light was on, and I figured "oh well, not worth getting up" and left it on.

    Anyone under the age of 30, intelligent enough to use a computer, who intentionally reproduced despite the COMMONLY UNDERSTOOD STATE OF AFFAIRS, should be very, very ashamed of themselves. Anyone attempting to "play dumb" or "blame politics", doubly so.

    --
    Math is math. Regular expression is regular expression. The tools are there. The future is now.
    1. Re:Don't blame Bush! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Bush apparently in his 6 years in office has caused the end of an Ice Age 10,000 years ago and the increased activity from the SUN. And the warming of Mars. And people laughed at the right when they claimed God chose Bush for this time in human history. The claims being made would almost prove that Bush was more than a mere mortal. Climate research is full of politically charged people on BOTH sides of the spectrum and most "science" coming out of this is used to make political statements. This is to the detriment of REAL science. Perhaps these politically motivated researchers are UPSET that we the people (represented by DC) want the whole story not just part of the story or certain data sets that try to pin blame on humans for Global Warming.

    2. Re:Don't blame Bush! by CRCulver · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Anyone under the age of 30, intelligent enough to use a computer, who intentionally reproduced despite the COMMONLY UNDERSTOOD STATE OF AFFAIRS, should be very, very ashamed of themselves.

      The thing about us nerds, though, is that we usually have a strong belief in the power of Man to improve his lot through technological innovation. There's no reason that you can't fit more people on Earth, we just have to take the initiative towards a more environmentally friendly use of technology. If you like science-fiction, as most of us here do, the story collection Future Primitive: The New Ecotopias , edited by Kim Stanely Robinson, has various glimpses of such a future.

      Besides, the birthrate in the West has fallen quite low and in many countries (Italy, Spain) is below the replacement rate. Most population growth is being fueled in the Third World, and people there lack the education to understand the consequences of their actions. There's the oft prediction that once their income level rises to Western standards, they will cease to have so many children.

    3. Re:Don't blame Bush! by Chicken04GTO · · Score: 1

      "There's the oft prediction that once their income level rises to Western standards, they will cease to have so many children." And how exactly does their income rise to western standards? Ill tell you. The over consumption of the earths resources, and the over utlilization of otherwise unspoiled lands. Sweet, I can't wait untill all 10 billion of us consume more than we need!!!

    4. Re:Don't blame Bush! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to tell you, but those of us that are ... uh ... well-over 30 have been well aware of climate change/global warming too ... only longer. You know what I find interesting? Most of the older individuals I know have an SUV. Most of the younger people I know, want an SUV. Without coercion (i.e. laws) most people fall back to acting in their own narrow, short-term, self interest -- even if you are only talking a minor convenience (SUV vs efficient transport). The human race has only survived this long because we've had so few opportunities to kill ourselves off. Young and old are equally stupid.

    5. Re:Don't blame Bush! by Josh+teh+Jenius · · Score: 1

      I agree with every syllable, I've just avoided talking about "the boomers" because, as a collective, they so disgust me that I am likely start vomiting blood.

      Like I said, anyone *playing* dumb is doing just that- playing. If I get angry, it is only because I fear these morons are literally playing with my life at this point. If that doesn't piss you off, consider: your life hangs in the balance too.

      These are *facts*, and any sensible person has been aware of them for some time. Sure, details vary. Sure, we might not *really* be doomed until 2106. But am I only the one who likens us (myself included) to a herd of lemmings marching off a cliff?

      For arguments sake, say we abolished all of the countless ways we are currently pumping carbon into our atmosphere *right this second*. Would it make any difference? How long would it take for the Earth's natural ecology to undo the damage?

      Perhaps it's a case of being "too smart for my own good", but IMO, once you've fucked up something as big as the Earth, it's time to just lay back and accept that, maybe, just maybe, our inevitable extinction is for the best.

      --
      Math is math. Regular expression is regular expression. The tools are there. The future is now.
    6. Re:Don't blame Bush! by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      Anyone under the age of 30, intelligent enough to use a computer, who intentionally reproduced despite the COMMONLY UNDERSTOOD STATE OF AFFAIRS, should be very, very ashamed of themselves.

      I don't think the people who pay attention to the state of the world are the ones that are the problem. We already don't have enough smart, thoughtful people. If they stop reproducing, our species is well and truly fucked.

    7. Re:Don't blame Bush! by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      "There's the oft prediction that once their income level rises to Western standards, they will cease to have so many children." And how exactly does their income rise to western standards? Ill tell you. The over consumption of the earths resources, and the over utlilization of otherwise unspoiled lands. Sweet, I can't wait untill all 10 billion of us consume more than we need!!!

      There are other ways. Note that despite the moderate cost of energy, US usage of energy per dollar of GDP has been declining. With a proper carbon tax, you'd see that get even better. Also note that first-world economic growth has much more to do with services and information.

      There's no reason that growth has to result in American-style resource use. In the same way that third-world countries are skipping over wired telecoms for wireless, they can skip over our obsession with physical stuff and go right for virtual stuff and goods whose status is enhanced by resource efficiency (e.g., the iPod).

    8. Re:Don't blame Bush! by incabulos · · Score: 1

      So you advocate that the intelligent people should all abstain from having offspring, presumably leaving only the stupid ones to reproduce and litter the world with increasingly large numbers of stupid offspring?

      Thats not a solution, thats the crux of the problem!

    9. Re:Don't blame Bush! by Josh+teh+Jenius · · Score: 1

      My crazy theory: we are all doomed. Dumb or brilliant, at this point, having kids is cruel.

      "Their" crazy theory: on some fatefull day (probably in the lifetimes of our "childrens children"), these psychotic shaved apes will suddenly overthrow eons of conditioning and instinct, and begin placing social objectives before personal greed. Specifically: using technology, we will somehow repair the mess made by our prior technology.

      The difference: I accept that mine is a crazy theory.

      --
      Math is math. Regular expression is regular expression. The tools are there. The future is now.
  15. DUP...oh wait, nevermind. by NoData · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I thought that this was a dupe, but then I realized it's the same tactics, different agency. Just our lovely administration "staying the course" on being "good stewards" of the environment.

    1. Re:DUP...oh wait, nevermind. by deanj · · Score: 0

      You're right...staying the same course Clinton had for the previous 8 years.

      I love how for those 8 years it wasn't a problem, and then in true "Day After Tomorrow" speed global warming has sped up so fast! Give me a damn break, if that's really happening, there's nothing that could have been down in the last 20 years that would have stopped it. It's not like something like this can turn on a dime.

      Wake hell up people. During the last ice age, when things started warming up again, was it because of humans and global warming? No. It's the natural cycle of the planet.

      Quit trying to let people turn this to some sort of political advantage and use your freakin' brains.

    2. Re:DUP...oh wait, nevermind. by ltbarcly · · Score: 1

      Why is it that every time Bush does something stupid and wrong the chant of 'Clinton Clinton!' starts?

      Do republicans really believe that it is a defense of dishonesty to point out dishonesty in others? Or a defense of bad policy to say 'they did it first!'?

      I would point out that 2 wrongs don't make a right, but 300 republicans would reply to my post saying 'Clinton did 2 wrongs and they weren't right!!!!!!!!1'.

      This is how low the republicans have sunk. They are a national laughingstock and disgrace, and the only thing they are willing to do to repair their image is to talk about crap that happened between 6 and 14 years ago.

      However, I can also remember things which happened years ago.

      For example, lets look at the Republicans 'Contract with America' and see if they have kept any of the promises which helped catapult them into control in the first place.

      http://www.house.gov/house/Contract/CONTRACT.html

      Nope, they didn't keep a single promise, and in fact have done much the opposite of what they said.

      Meanwhile the republican congress passes more spending, and more pork spending, than ever before in our history, and the republican president has not yet vetoed a single bill, and even invents huge new government programs, larger than any we've started since Johnson's 'great society' debacle. And then they make sure that most of the money in the expensive new program goes to large corporations, who coincidently are the same corporations which donate heavily to republican re-elections, and who employ a disturbing percentage of republican ex-congressman and officials (can someone say quid --several year delay-- pro quo?). Is it a coincidence that during the Clinton years Cheney was CEO Haliburton (who has recieved billions of dollars in no bid contracts, and who still owns about 400,000 options) and Rumsfeld was chairman of Gilead Sciences (makers of tamiflu, the drug known not to be effective against bird flu, which the government just bought 1 billion dollars worth, and who made 1 million dollars due to the increase in stock value due to the governments purchase.)

      They have lied to the point where anyone who believes a word they say is an imbecile. There is a hotshot republican being arrested every week, and one pleading out in court every other week. They started a war we are now stuck with, knowing all along their rationale was not sound, and then botched the execution and let the country be taken over by thugs. They steered big contracts to 3rd rate companies (MZM) for cash. Has anyone even counted the number of soldiers who have been wounded, killed or scarred because of the low quality of contracting done by the crony friends of those who are now in power (MZM, Haliburton)?

      There is nothing good you can say about republicans. That is why you always want to change the subject to democrats.

  16. The other climate change Bush doesn't see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait 'til the elections. Voters are waking up to the idea that a president should have a certain amount of forsight to deal with the deficit, health care, foreign relations, the environment... Maybe vacations, spin, and cronyism don't work once the electorate begins to be informed.

    1. Re:The other climate change Bush doesn't see by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      Maybe vacations, spin, and cronyism don't work once the electorate begins to be informed.

      Oh, so that's why Clinton lost the presidency for the DemocRats.

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    2. Re:The other climate change Bush doesn't see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, so that's why Clinton lost the presidency for the DemocRats.
      I thought it was because he had served the maxium of two terms. Same reason that 'GW will lose the presidency' in 2008, regardless of what he wants.

  17. Impeach! by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I mean, if the White House, and by extension, Bush, are concealing research that the US public paid for, why can't you just fucking fire him.... he is in effect, lying to you.

    Ok, this is not a realistic viewpoint. It's rather naeive. But it's how I would feel if he was running my country.

    1. Re:Impeach! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also sounds like the talk of a terrorist faction wanting to overthrow the elected government.

      See that van outside ?

    2. Re:Impeach! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The People can't fire Bush, even though 63% don't think he's doing a competent job. We didn't elect him, the Electoral College did. The Senate could impeach him though. Unfortunately his party controls the Senate and they're all scared shitless of him and his party machine and always vote the party line. The other party, despite being nearly on par numerically are also chickenshits who vote along with him as he betrays our country and loots our future.

      The fundamental problem is that politicians are craven.

  18. In the thirties, by Mgns · · Score: 1

    scientists from all over the world fled to the US from totalitarien oppressive regimes, in which true and unbiased research was made difficult and or illegal. Maybe it's time your best and bravest come to us?

    1. Re:In the thirties, by BigCheese · · Score: 1

      Very soon.

      --
      The obscure we see eventually. The completely obvious, it seems, takes longer. - Edward R. Murrow
  19. Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by argoff · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In all fairness, nobody talks about how government orgs like the EPA allocate funds for climate reasearch with heavy biases in favor of research that tends to promote the necissity of a larger EPA. But then when it goes the other way around, people scream bloody murder.

    Get the government money out of the freakin cliamte research studies to begin with, and they might actually become credible.

    1. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by mwvdlee · · Score: 1
      Get the government money out of the freakin cliamte research studies to begin with, and they might actually become credible.


      Yeah, let coorporations pay for climate research studies, that'll make them a lot more credible!
      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    2. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by gwait · · Score: 1

      Get government money out of climate research and you won't have any climate research.

      This is not my quote, but it's very relevant:
      Scientists are like advance scouts sent out in advance of a wagon train - you pay them to check things out, and look ahead to predict what's coming. You don't pay for scouts, you don't learn what's ahead.

      Perhaps it's a difference in personal perspective - most of my peers and I up here in Canada think there is no question that global warming is real, and that it's our fault. We hear a lot more media coverage on the issue, where it seems the US is mostly blanketed by negative propaganda. As well, perhaps the warming trend is more visible to us, up in northern Canada it is quite obvious that the world is warmer year by year (permafrost that isn't, ocean ice melting sooner every season,
      glaciers in the Rocky Mountains melting back further every year, here in Vancouver people were able to skate on the Fraser River in the winter 100 years ago, good ski seasons are further and fewer, and in Ottawa, skating on the Ridea Canal in the city is soon to be a thing of the past. Over in Europe, there have been a number of washout ski seasons in the Alps.

      So, consider that there is no big money in reporting on the fact of global warming, and there's lots of oil money in denying and ridiculing global warming.

      Perhaps we need a new acronym: Warmers of Mass Denial...(tm)

      --
      Bavarian Purity Law of Rice Krispie Squares: Rice Krispies, Marshmallows, Butter, Vanilla.
    3. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In all fairness, nobody talks about how government orgs like the EPA allocate funds for climate reasearch with heavy biases in favor of research that tends to promote the necissity of a larger EPA.

      How is that fair when it ignores the peer review process that is designed to eliminate these biases?

      Get the government money out of the freakin cliamte research studies to begin with, and they might actually become credible.

      Straw man. You give no explanation as to how they are not credible, nor do you state how a non-government entity would be able to avoid this charge of budget increase bias. If one was to look at the credibility of the Bush Administration vs. the credibility of NOAA and EPA scientists, I don't see a scenario where the Bush Administration has higher credibility.

      The GOP has been cynically playing the role of the skeptic, but they are not offering rational criticisms, just hyperbole and rhetoric. This is an old tactic of theirs, they prey on the idea that to be intellectually honest, one must consider all evidence and the misunderstanding that induction increases scientific knowledge. They do not offer counter evidence, or attempt to falsify the claims of climatologists, they attack the integrity of the climatologists using the old trick of infinite logical regression. Using infinite logical regression exposes the logical fallacy of justified knowledge, the root cause of the problem of induction. The Bush Administration and it's allies have simply not offered scientifically valid criticisms, yet they claim that they are correct in a matter of science.

      The only way to defeat this utter absurdity is to realize that science does not rely on induction. They have not falsified theories on global warming, they have only attacked the inductionist view of the evidence pertaining to climate change. Unless you believe that scientific knowledge is increased by induction (a logical fallacy), their criticisms are useless to furthering the search for truth on climate change.

      This is either more incompetence or dishonesty on the part of the Bush Administration. As before, neither is acceptable.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    4. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by argoff · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's a difference in personal perspective - most of my peers and I up here in Canada think there is no question that global warming is real, and that it's our fault. We hear a lot more media coverage on the issue, where it seems the US is mostly blanketed by negative propaganda

      That's the problem though. People think this is an environmental debate, it's not, it's a political debate. It's a debate about wether the government should microregulate and controll millions of people and millions of industries. And all those studies, people think they are environemtal studies, they are not, they are political battles. I wish it wasn't so, but that's the way they have made it. If they were willing to get rid of the premise that the only solution to promote the environemnt is the microregulation of millions and drop the billions in government funding and subsidies, then we could have an honest debate about the environment tommorow, but they won't and so a real debate about the environment won't happen.

      In all fairness, when govt regulations are imposed that cost millions to comply with - that expense is passed on by big mega smokestack industries, but small, efficient, and innovative competitors are put out of business. I don't think people understand that the big polluters are the ones who want these regulations the most because they lock out small, efficient, and cheap competitors.

    5. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by Baby+Duck · · Score: 1

      If the EPA was wrong, the consequences would be way less severe -- OK, so we spent billions on better protecting the planet when the shielding was unnecessary.

      If Bush is wrong, millions of people would be forced by rising sea levels to relocate over a few decades -- and the government would have taken zero steps to prepare for it.

      More taxation vs. millions upheaved. Think about it.

      --

      "Love heals scars love left." -- Henry Rollins

    6. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by aminorex · · Score: 1

      better yet, have some corporation lay down the cash and fix the problem of global warming. i think that exxon-mobil alone could do it, if they had the will. check the numbers if you don't believe me.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    7. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by argoff · · Score: 0

      If the EPA was wrong, the consequences would be way less severe -- OK, so we spent billions on better protecting the planet when the shielding was unnecessary.

      If Bush is wrong, millions of people would be forced by rising sea levels to relocate over a few decades -- and the government would have taken zero steps to prepare for it.

      More taxation vs. millions upheaved. Think about it.

      Speack for yourself. If this was such an overwhelming and compelling issue, then I'm sure that they will have no problem getting people to give by the billions (assuming that the government hasn't taken it already). In fact, the meer observation that they need such coercive measures in place to ensure the research and fund the "solutions" is a very compelling argument that it is indeed not founded at all. History is lettered with hundreds of millions of dead people in the name of governments that have exercised powers for the sake of urgent issues, but it almost has no examples of societies that have been ripped apart because government didn't do enough. How many laws did the government need to impose to get people to prepare for the y2k bug? How many did they need to pass to get 3 exact replicas of the US stock markets at discrete locations? Even more important, how many disasters have government laws stopped? New Orleans? San Fran earthquakes? Mississipi flood basin?

    8. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Speack for yourself. If this was such an overwhelming and compelling issue, then I'm sure that they will have no problem getting people to give by the billions (assuming that the government hasn't taken it already). In fact, the meer observation that they need such coercive measures in place to ensure the research and fund the "solutions" is a very compelling argument that it is indeed not founded at all.

      Ah, so then the levies in New Orleans didn't fail. If they could have failed as badly as they were reported to have, then the companies that were flooded and the families that lost homes would have ponnied up the money to upgrade them when the government was cutting funds. It's good to know that those people didn't die and it was all a liberal media scam to show that the Department of Homeland Security can't handle an emergency.

    9. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by geoffspear · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Even more important, how many disasters have government laws stopped? New Orleans? San Fran earthquakes? Mississipi flood basin?

      This is possibly the most flawed argument I've ever read on Slashdot. Of course the disasters that happened weren't stopped. The disasters that didn't happen were the ones that were stopped. Obviously, we can't count them. That doesn't mean they weren't prevented.

      How many more deaths would their be from earthquakes if building codes on earthquake-prone areas didn't exist? Look at developing countries' mortality rates after earthquakes and compare them to rates in California. How many more people would have been killed in New Orleans without NOAA warning that a major hurricane was coming and that people should leave, and without government-built levees that at least delayed the worst flooding and almost certainly attenuated it to some degree? We can't say for sure, but that doesn't mean these things saved no one.

      How many people would die every year in the US from foodborne illnesses if there were no health inspectors? How many murders are prevented because the hypotethical killer is afraid of the consequences of breaking the law? None? I doubt it. Are no fires prevented by electrical codes? Would nuclear power plants all keep from melting down if the industry was allowed just just run them as cheaply as possibly by ignoring safety regulations?

      Would there be more morons like you running around if we didn't have compulsory education?

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    10. Re:Uhh, FYI it goes both ways by Chmcginn · · Score: 1
      I feel the need to point out that the DHS, as a whole, wasn't the one failing. The coast guard (run by long-term military members) did its portion (rescusing people stranded in flooded areas) admirably, saving tens of thousands. It was FEMA, through their response, and the Army Corps of Engineers, through not sufficiently strenghting the levees, that failed in their job. Strangely enough....

      In September 2003, Michael D. Brown, FEMA's director and DHS Undersecretary, warned that the shift [from a separate cabinet position to a position under DHS] would make a mockery of FEMA's new motto, "A Nation Prepared," and would "fundamentally sever FEMA from its core functions," "shatter agency morale" and "break longstanding, effective and tested relationships with states and first responder stakeholders." The inevitable result of the reorganization of 2003, warned Brown, would be "an ineffective and uncoordinated response" to a terrorist attack or a natural disaster.

      (Quote from Wikipedia)

      --
      Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
  20. Throw out the coin. by dada21 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This story has a "both sides of the coin" situation to me, and one HUGE reason why I absolutely despise government financing and control of research. To say the Bush Administration is the problem is to ignore the reality of government -- it is seemingly all powerful, very corrupt, very easily manipulated if you have the cash, and never thinking about its citizens as individuals, just as voting groups.

    Clinton was no better, no matter what the Progressives might say. This is the reason guys like this run for office -- to change the climate of thinking in the US and in the World. When it comes to public opinion, you may win on occasion when the big guys pick your side, you may lose on occasion. But when it comes to reality, you'll always lose -- the politicians will never do things the way you want them to, and they usually have hidden reasons for doing what they do.

    If this doesn't help prove the case for withdrawing federal funding of research (and arts and dozens of other areas) to better allow researchers to publicize evidence for their beliefs, I can't think of what will.

    There is no federal mandate for financing science or art or anythink of the sort, and the reason for it was so that the science and the art wouldn't be corrupted by opinion or political control.

    1. Re:Throw out the coin. by Josh+teh+Jenius · · Score: 1

      We need to start a new website: how America lost its way, and how we, the people, can fix it. I'm talking a proactive, non-partisn think-tank with a modest budget but effective (shared) management.

      ...thinking...

      Wait a sec...Bush the elder and Clinton the wise appeared on TV together holding hands, and the "Illuminati" nuts like us are *still* "conspiracy theorists".

      Screw this! I'm off to play some WoW instead...

      ...wait a second, I think I'm begining to undertand this game...

      --
      Math is math. Regular expression is regular expression. The tools are there. The future is now.
    2. Re:Throw out the coin. by dlc3007 · · Score: 1
      Clinton was no better, no matter what the Progressives might say.

      Care to offer any evidence for this statement? What scientific claims were squelched by the Administrative branch of the U.S. government while Clinton was in office?
      I'm sure that you have plenty of examples are aren't just stating your personal opinion as fact. Right?

    3. Re:Throw out the coin. by dada21 · · Score: 1

      Off the top of my head, I had 3 issues that I was anti-Clinton on. When he ran for office the first time, I was in high school (Hilary went to my high school as a teen), so I sort of supported him being the Progressive that I was.

      The three research issues I had the biggest problems with wer:

      1. Clinton openly accepted and continued promoting the 1992 Food Pyramid -- a food pyramid of diabetes and heart disease research now shows. We health nuts tried getting it overturned, but the administration wouldn't hear anything about a safer one. ADM wins one here.

      2. Clinton expanded the War on Drugs -- even though scientific research shows that some of the drugs that were illegal had medical uses. Drug research companies win here.

      3. The DMCA was a Clinton bill that prevents reverse engineering and other research into software. Strike one for the large companies working on DRM and other anti-research schemes.

      There are others, but I am not at home or at the office so I can't look them up. He's promotion of many false sciences are no different than Bush's, even if they might be polarized.

    4. Re:Throw out the coin. by cthrall · · Score: 1
      Clinton was no better, no matter what the Progressives might say.


      Bush's administration has attempted to gut, with some success, some of the Clean Water work done by the Clinton administration. Bush also backed off on his "Clean Coal" initiative that was promised on the campaign trail (shocker), and removed the restrictions forcing plants to install emissions reducing gear if they were going to upgrade the capacity of the plant.

      Clinton was much better on the environment. Saying he's no different is just ignoring the facts.
    5. Re:Throw out the coin. by kabocox · · Score: 1

      There is no federal mandate for financing science or art or anythink of the sort, and the reason for it was so that the science and the art wouldn't be corrupted by opinion or political control.

      Um, I don't about you, but I don't think that the feds should fund "any" art just on the basis that most people will disagree on what's good/bad art. And then you'll have some one through up nude art and you'll have groups try to ban that art as publically sponsored porn, which it isn't, but a debate will happen. Art should only be funded by rich guys like Bill Gates, and if he want's to fund a 10m tall statue of his wife or any random person, so be it.

      There are many valid reasons that the government should sponser research. Personanlly, the last time I checked the whole global warming thing, I just came to the opinion that the entire field was just a scam that the scientists were running on the government to get more research dollars. I studied this stuff to death in highschool back in 1996. As far as I can see, we've not made any progress but some scientists have been funded for research for the past 10 years so new debate on the topic keeps popping up.

      Folks just because the last 2 years has been hot doesn't mean we have global warming! You don't want to know the number of people that I've run into that "believe" in global warming apparently just because the last 2 years have been warmer than average. I complain about the heat also, but that alone doesn't mean we have global warming. It's sad that just some hot weather will get changes made. You know what's next? Global cooling! In the future, scientists will warn people to beware of white stuff falling from the sky during the winter months.

    6. Re:Throw out the coin. by oldenuf2knowbetter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, let's eliminate taxpayer funding and wait for private industry to fill the void. I'm just as certain as can be that we can expect Exxon, BP, and Shell to provide many millions of dollars for research into the role of fossil fuels in climate change with no strings attached.

    7. Re:Throw out the coin. by dlc3007 · · Score: 1

      Thanks.
      Although I agree with your opinion on all three of these, I believe that these are not the same level of scientific censorship as what we're seeing today. These are stupid or sloppy decisions, imho.
      Just for the record, I'm not Clinton's biggest fan either. :)

    8. Re:Throw out the coin. by dada21 · · Score: 1

      You're right, from one perspective, but that's the biggest problem with regulations and subsidies: what seems to not affect something we love may actually affect it more than you realize it. Even worse, someone affected badly by a regulation or subsidy might say nothing about it if they're also getting subsidized by government. Why rock the boat, many people receiving grants like to say.

      I'd say my big problem with science and government is the same as religion and government and education and government: when something is mandated, we're forced to accept it just because 51% of voters (and maybe only 15% of the population) say it should be this way. It is bad at the city level, horrible at the state level and tyranny at the federal level.

    9. Re:Throw out the coin. by dada21 · · Score: 1

      Exxon, BP, and Shell receive more subsidies than almost anyone, plus they also receive a ton of paternalism/cronyism/favoritism in creating an infinite barrier to entry. Try opening up your own refinery or your own gas station distribution company. Try importing gas outside of the 2 ports that it is mandated to go through and then see what name tags those guys are wearing.

      Gas companies love subsidies and paternalism: government protects the company's profits so that it can tax the goods and give the citizens no choice in what they buy.

    10. Re:Throw out the coin. by oldenuf2knowbetter · · Score: 1

      So, if the government should stop funding this research and the companies that have the financial wherewithal to continue it are just as bad as the government, then who will provide the funding? And, equally importantly, how can we trust whomsoever that might be?

    11. Re:Throw out the coin. by dada21 · · Score: 1

      My problem is not necessarily that I don't agree with regulation, I don't agree with federal regulations. The original intent of the Constitution was for the people and the states to decide on local issues. The federal government really was not given power over most regulations. The interstate commerce clause was written so the federal government could stop states from trampling on commerce -- it was not meant to control commerce.

      That being said, in a competitive market, the consumer IS empowered. We have no competition in oil (all the oil companies buy oil from the cartels, who are empowered by the protection of various governments). There is a huge collusion between the 3 parties. Open up competition -- stop subsidizing all energy companies including corn and sugar growers, and let the final decision fall to the consumers. Unfortunately, more regulation will likely happen, and this will just make the US less and less competitive over time. Eventually we wil be so uncompetitive that the system will likely stop itself -- this has happened for thousands of years to every empire, we are no different.

      I just want open competition without GOVERNMENT regulations. If a corporation decides to try to take control of the market, the bigger they are, the easier it is for smaller companies to start competing with them. The problem is when the big corporations are given favoritism, which makes it hard for small companies to even try to compete by entering the market.

    12. Re:Throw out the coin. by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 1

      The food pyramid? That's the best you can do?

      You have innumerable wild-ass insane trolls about the gold standards and Abraham Lincoln, but the best thing you can come up with for Bill Clinton is the freaking food pyramid? Why not complain about the management structure FDR imposed on the Civilian Conservation Core, or James Watt's handling of the department of the interior?

      Your quality is slipping. If you keep this up, your once-clever trolls will be less interesting than the GNAA crapfloods and ASCII text penis birds.

      Slashdot is counting on you dada. Don't let us down.

  21. They certainly don't act like it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    For a bunch of muzzled scientists, they certainly don't sound like it.

    I especially like this quote:

    "The forcings that drive long-term climate change are not known with an accuracy sufficient to define future climate change," Hansen wrote in 1998. He later admitted devising "extreme scenarios" about global warming to get the attention of "decision-makers."

  22. Politics aside... by GrayCalx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Really, politics aside, all I hear about lately is Global Warming. Ever since Gore had his big push when The Day After Tomorrow came out, it seems like its all i ever hear anymore. Time and Newsweek just gave Global Warming their covers recently... I just don't see how theres information out there that isn't getting to me. At least information i could understand, I don't need up to the minute global-current charts.

    1. Re:Politics aside... by SoulRider · · Score: 1

      all I hear about lately is Global Warming

      Maybe because global warming is a REAL problem that needs to be addressed and not ignored.

    2. Re:Politics aside... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because Britney's baby is SO much more important than the rapid decline of our planet.

  23. Semi-familiar by abb3w · · Score: 1
    Not to draw TOO many parallels, but remember when Galileo et al gave scientific findings that the governing powers didn't like?

    Yes, but he was dealing with a bunch of midaeval religious fanatics.

    As science was removed from the political, innovation and creativity flourished.

    Science has always been political; probably always will be. Perhaps you mean "as the supression of politically unacceptable experimental results decreased".

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    1. Re:Semi-familiar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Not to draw TOO many parallels, but remember when Galileo et al gave scientific findings that the governing powers didn't like?

      Yes, but he was dealing with a bunch of midaeval religious fanatics.

      And this differs from the Bush administration how? ;)
    2. Re:Semi-familiar by VitrosChemistryAnaly · · Score: 1
      Yes, but he was dealing with a bunch of midaeval religious fanatics.
      Yeah, as opposed to modern day religious fanatics. Most of whom are Bush supporters.

      Yup, evangelicals love Bush.
      --
      "It's a tarp!" -- Dyslexic Admiral Ackbar
    3. Re:Semi-familiar by abb3w · · Score: 1
      And this differs from the Bush administration how? ;)

      Good question. If there are no further questions, this press conference is now finished.

      --
      //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    4. Re:Semi-familiar by rbochan · · Score: 1

      Yes, but he was dealing with a bunch of [] religious fanatics.

      There... fixed that for you.

      The church says the earth is flat, but I know that it is round,
      for I have seen the shadow on the moon,
      and I have more faith in a shadow than in the church.
              -- Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521)

      --
      ...Rob
      The American Dream isn't an SUV and a house in the suburbs; it's Don't Tread On Me.
    5. Re:Semi-familiar by abb3w · · Score: 1
      There... fixed that for you.

      No, it was still right the first time....

      --
      //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  24. Defend America: +1, Informatiive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Al-Qaeda Operations, how may I direct your call?

    Cheers,
    Kilgore Trout, C.E.O.

  25. Re:The More i hear by Dr+Reducto · · Score: 1

    Hey, if they don't want federal funding, they are free to abandon it and be unfettered by restrictions on who they talk to.

    It's "freedom of speech", not "freedom from consequences". If you go into work and talk shit about your boss, you can't whine about freedom of speech when you get fired

  26. This is government, not business by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Informative

    In effect, a non-issue. Most of you already know you shouldn't go to the media and make comments about the job your boss is doing, or make comments about what they should do instead.

    No, it *is* an issue. My tax dollars are at work funding government scientists. What's the fucking point of paying these scientists to do research if they can't talk about the results of their work with the public? We have a long tradition of federally-funded scientists being generally insulated from politics, because in the past both major parties have recognized the value of unbiased scientific research.

    The Bush Administration has been muzzling the results of government-sponsored research for several years now, and this is a very troubling development. Representative democracies (yes, even republics, for those of you who will latch onto the semantics) need some areas of government to be devoid of partisanship.

    If you're wondering about Hansen's reference to Nazi Germany and the USSR, read Hitler's Scientists to see how science can be co-opted for political ends.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:This is government, not business by Dr+Reducto · · Score: 1

      Godwin'd already!

    2. Re:This is government, not business by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      I agree. We should pull the plug on goverment funded climate research.

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
  27. Offtopic by PinkyDead · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Some time after the fall of the Soviet Union, I had the pleasure of travelling on a Yugoslavian passenger ship. One of the crew was the designated Political Officer - strangest thing - he was just there to make sure the crew didn't say the wrong thing to the western tourists. He was really nice bloke, and well able to throw back a pint but it just seemed a little strange.

    Obviously, this is just an 'interesting' travel anecdote - and has nothing to with anything here.

    --
    Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
  28. Re:Well by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Informative
    People also need to realize that using energy is not necessarily bad, it's the pollution that is bad. If those SUVs get terrible mileage, it's not necessarily bad if they don't pollute. Your little 4-banger from the early 80's may get great mileage but it pollutes a lot worse than a modern SUV.

    The pollution in question is carbon dioxide. One litre of petrol will produce the same amount of carbon dioxide when burned, regardless of the engine in which the burning takes place. Hence, as far as global warming is concerned, the fuel-efficiency of your vehicle is all-important.

    Of course, there are other pollutants in car exhausts, against which measures the new-but-inefficient car may perform better, but that's a separate issue.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  29. Yes, they care by ktappe · · Score: 1
    A few years ago I'd have agreed with you that Americans either didn't know about global warming and/or didn't care. But recently I am definitely sensing a trend that most Americans both know and care. But they (and I) feel that there's little we can do about it. We are stuck with a leader who is adamant about doing nothing (which is but one of the myriad reasons he now has a 30% approval rating), and global warming by its very nature is something that needs to be addressed globally; it can't be tackled by individuals. For example, if I start driving a hybrid, that's such a drop in the bucket that I might as well have kept my old car; we need Federally-mandated mileage standards and emissions standards for any effect to be realized at all.

    So we Americans are tending to feel that we're sliding down a slippery slope but we don't have much in the way of braking mechanisms available to us. It's not apathy, it's helplessness.

    -Kurt

    --
    "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    1. Re:Yes, they care by GreyPoopon · · Score: 2, Interesting
      A few years ago I'd have agreed with you that Americans either didn't know about global warming and/or didn't care. But recently I am definitely sensing a trend that most Americans both know and care.

      As an American, I'd like to add (anecdotal) evidence that many Americans are just as sensitive to this topic as our European counterparts. I apologize if I ramble a lot, but I hope somebody at least finds it an interesting read. I work in the IT department at the American subsidiary of a European-based corporation. Almost every aspect of my job involves working directly with people in Germany, Singapore and the UK via conference calls. Even my interactions with the personnel in the local office are usually over the phone. With the exception of front-end loading on project startups, there is absolutely NO reason why I need to be in the office. Because of the ridiculously overinflated housing market, I could only avoid living in a trailer by buying a house 35 miles from the office where I work. This means that I drive 70 miles a day, every day of the week. The car I drive is one of the more fuel-efficient non-hybrid models that gets over 30 miles per gallon. Although I could do better with a hybrid or diesel, the cost of maintenance on both those types of vehicles leaves me slightly biased against them. And, since I'm a parent, the ultra-fuel-efficient two-seater vehicles are not practical for me. Recently, my company sold part of the land on our local campus, and we are now renting two of the buildings that sit on the land we sold from the company we sold to. I have suggested numerous times to my management that at least two thirds of the workforce could just as easily work from home. I have offered to pay my own bills for internet and telecomm access, only charging back international calls to the company (at a lower rate than they currently pay). I have offered to sign a waiver of liability so that there are no insurance issues associated with my working from a home office. I have demonstrated that I get more done in the same amount of time in the quieter environment of my home office, and I have carefully explained that I would probably start working earlier and finish later because I don't have two hours of driving a day. I have patiently explained that if those whose jobs permitted were allowed to work from home, we would be able to stop leasing the two buildings on the land we sold and easily fit everybody into the remaining buildings with a few "virtual cubes" available for when people need to come to the office. My American management is completely in support of this idea. However, the transplants from our corporate headquarters in Europe absolutely cannot stand the thought of not being able to watch people work. I have even used the "Global Warming" argument (out of frustration), and they refuse to relent. Now, just imagine what would happen if 25% of the work force in the US started working out of home offices. They would reduce their daily driving to vitually zero. Imagine the impact to greenhouse gases this would have.

      So, what's my summary? I think the companies we work for could very easily contribute to improving the environment if they would just think out of the box a bit. For some reason, they refuse to do so. I also think that our European counterparts are just as blind to potential solutions as we are, but just in different ways.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    2. Re:Yes, they care by MullerMn · · Score: 1

      The car I drive is one of the more fuel-efficient non-hybrid models that gets over 30 miles per gallon

      My completely average, not purchased for any particular enviromental reasons, several year old car gets 40MPG consistently (and this is in winter). I imagine most people in the UK/Europe could say the same. The excessive resource consumption in the US runs pretty deep.

    3. Re:Yes, they care by JonathanR · · Score: 1

      If you come from the UK, then bear in mind that your gallon is significantly (20%) bigger than theirs (US).

    4. Re:Yes, they care by JonathanR · · Score: 1

      7 liters per 100 km = 33.6020835 miles per gallon

      7 liters per 100 km = 40.3544362 miles per Imperial gallon

    5. Re:Yes, they care by MullerMn · · Score: 1

      Ah, good point. That hadn't occurred to me. ;)

  30. There is no such thing as global warming! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    If you get drowned, you just weren't praying hard enough and the Dear Lord decided you need some flood to cleanse you.

    You'd think New Orleans would've worked as a wake-up call, to show Bush that there IS actually some problem with the weather, and how we affect it. But I guess we should hope for some flood in his basement for a change to see some change in politics. Some people don't give a rat's bottom until it goes after their own rear.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:There is no such thing as global warming! by The_Mr_Flibble · · Score: 1

      I thought the new orleans flood was due to the government not wanting to spend the money the us army core of engineers said they needed to keep the levies in good working order and that is why they failed (instead they built a bridge to nowhere).

      Or is the media lying to me again ?

    2. Re:There is no such thing as global warming! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what global warming even caused Camille in 1969 that did the exact some thing?

    3. Re:There is no such thing as global warming! by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      New Orleans teaches us that it isn't a good idea to build below sea level on the coast. It says nothing about "global warming". Remember, some years ago it was "global cooling" that we were concerned about, with the ice age returning.

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    4. Re:There is no such thing as global warming! by zipthink · · Score: 1

      Actually, New Orleans was founded in 1718 on a desirable expanse of high ground - not very close to the coast at all. It was flattened by a hurricane in 1722 I think... but... still there, nonetheless. So that would make it 60+ years older than the US Constitution.

    5. Re:There is no such thing as global warming! by demonbug · · Score: 1

      New Orleans wasn't really the result of climate change, alhtough it does offer a look at what might be expected if the current warming and increasing sea levels continue. NO flooding was the result of 150 years or more of land subsidence, mostly due to the dewatering and resulting decomposition and compaction of the extremely organic-rich Mississippi delta sediments the city was built on (currently a major problem in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta here in California, although mostly affecting agricultural areas). The more immediate cause was the design of and lack of improvement on the city's flood-protection system in the recent past. The only implications this carries for what we may see with global warming is the difficulty and expense of providing flood protection to cities already at or near sea level (which will become lower than sea level as sea level rises, never mind subsidence), and the potential for an increase in the number of severe weather events like hurricanes which push those flood protection systems to (or beyond) their limits.

      Also, it illustrates how our "flood protection" systems can actually make matter worse. For example, due to the way water was channeled by the levy system in NO, marsh areas which acted as natural barriers to shield the coast from some of the energy of the storm surge associated with hurricanes, were starved for sediment for a long period of time and subsided well below sea level, destorying their effectiveness.

      So, while NO does provide some lessons for what we may see with global climate change, it is perhaps more apt to consider it an example of engineering ourselves into a corner - something the US Army Corps of Engineers is very good at (to be fair, it really isn't their fault - they developed plans and structures for flood control which have largely worked as planned, it is the regional and watershed management/planning that really failed - to quote Jeff Mount, a respected watershed planning scientist, "New Orleans has lost the battle with the inevitable...").

  31. Canada following suit by whitehatlurker · · Score: 3, Informative

    The new Harper government in Ottawa has cut funding to groups studying climate change. That has to be as chilling as gagging scientists.

    --
    .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
    1. Re:Canada following suit by jholzer · · Score: 1

      Well, there is nothing left to study. The Earth is warming, it's from greenhouse gases do to human activity. The solution is to stop human production of greenhouse gases. All money that has been going to research global warming should go to reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

    2. Re:Canada following suit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Well, there is nothing left to study"

      Of course there is. Who's going to monitor our progress resolving this issue... dentists? That's what you get when you vote in today's crop of the right wingers.

            Ideology instead of sanity.

    3. Re:Canada following suit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good. What conceivable benefits could follow from advances in "global warming research"? It's a waste of money funding this kind of bull$#it pseudoscience. Keeps a lot of hippie scientists flush with granola and ponchos, well not on my dollar, Steve. Not when I've got to leave Canada for the U.S. to get work in genomics research.

      Plus, global warming is going to be *great* for Canada. All that gold, diamonds and oil just sitting around in the newly uncovered riverbeds. But I guess it's gonna be pretty tough for the inuit, who are unaccustomed to temperate weather. It'll be a hard slog for them at first, but I'm sure they'll adapt.

    4. Re:Canada following suit by Eggz+Factor · · Score: 1

      Well, we all know Harper is an ass.

      --
      blah, blah, blah...
    5. Re:Canada following suit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He really is. I can't wait til his term is up, and I hope people wise up before the next election. I do not want to see him back again.

    6. Re:Canada following suit by RexRhino · · Score: 0

      Actually, that is a good thing. It means that climate science will not be tainted by politics. Politicians cannot "intimidate" climatologists, if the climatologists are not getting funding from the government.

      Other than maybe launching weather satalites (which costs hundreds of millions of dollars), there is no reason climate research cannot be done without government funding - and the results will be far more trustworthy and less influenced by politics.

      You wouldn't trust a church to do research about evolutionary science, would you? You wouldn't trust a company to research the flaws of their own product, would you (or at least not make those flaws public)? It is only because we have been conditioned by a government controlled media and educational systems that we don't see the conflict of interest when government (or government funded) agencies do research that directly effects government policy.

    7. Re:Canada following suit by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't trust a church to do research about evolutionary science, would you?

      You must have missed the day on scientific studies. I certainly would trust a church's research on evolution. They would have to put out three types of output: flat out lies, confusing and inconclusive results, evidence of evolution. I would trust the third from a church more than from other organizations. The other two would still be investigated to see if the research falls within them. But if a pro-evolution group were to do the research, then a finding of evidence of evolution would be suspect. With a church, I don't have that concern, so they are more trustworthy than others.

      The most biased make the most independent sometimes. You have to take *all* research with a grain of salt, but the biased research that finds the opposite of what you expect is the most trustworthy at first glance.

    8. Re:Canada following suit by Eggz+Factor · · Score: 1

      My problem with Canadian politics is that it tends to be reactionary, going from one extreme to the other.

      --
      blah, blah, blah...
    9. Re:Canada following suit by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Yeah! We've gone all the way from the middle-left to the... middle-right! Unbelievable. ;)

  32. Wrong. by brunes69 · · Score: 1

    When you work in the public sector, the public is your boss, and they should be your number one priority.

  33. We have Super Computers working On it right now! by davonshire · · Score: 2, Funny
    Don't worry everyone.

    The scientists have 65536 Pentium 4 processors working on the problem right now, each consuming 400W of power, all to model the earth and it's atmosphere in an effort to fortell the climate changes that are underway.

    10 40Ton Air conditioners are cooling the computer room where all this computing is going on. Safely venting the heat to the cool night sky.

    It won't be long before we can prove beyond a shadow of doubt that global warming is happening.

    We just need a few more coal powered power plants brought online to level the power grid as we work to bring on stage 2 of our processor array.

    That will actually model the grass on the Minnesota plains so we can judge their cooling effect... etc etc.

    Thank goodness for computers and Science.

  34. But researchers aren't forthright by adzoox · · Score: 1

    Rarely does an "environmentalist" asterisk or footnote ANY claim with:

    "These findings are carefully researched but only subjective ... it is not proven that global warming is a natural pattern of nature or a human population problem."

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
    1. Re:But researchers aren't forthright by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason that such things are not said is that "proof" on issues like global warming is simply beyond our reach. Aside from reconstructing the Earth, which computer climate models attempt to do but can never be 100% accurate, there is no way to prove the causality through experimentation, as science requires. That does not mean that the science is bad or that scientists haven't reached consensus on the issue, just that they know that such things are beyond their abilities to "prove".

    2. Re:But researchers aren't forthright by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      s/subjective/tentative/

      You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  35. Re:Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Erm, how does this work?

    If an SUV gets 14mpg and a banger gets 50mpg, an SUV consumes more petrol - regardless of the make-up of the combustion by-products! Define 'pollution' - is it just the visible yukky ick or is it the sum total of what pours out of the exhaust pipe - I think the latter and the SUV will pump way more out of that than something smaller, even if it is a bit smokey.

    Pollution is not just about the visible, grimey crap that we see, it is about stuff that we put into our environment that is not supposed to be there.

  36. Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by eldavojohn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's easy to fault Bush and to make him sound like a two year old. Oftentimes, it just requires you to copy and paste something he said.

    But I would like to point out that there is a good article regarding this matter and it happens to take a look at it without political bias (if you believe that's possible).

    Essentially what I'm asking you is, "Would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?" That's hard to decide--both sides are all talk and no action on this subject.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by liliafan · · Score: 1
      Essentially what I'm asking you is, "Would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?" That's hard to decide--both sides are all talk and no action on this subject.

      whilst attempting not to get into a political discussion, I am not directly focusing on a political party here, just a particular individual, that I feel isn't exactly suited to his job.

      I am not saying democrats would be different but the individual leading them could be.
      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    2. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Essentially what I'm asking you is, "Would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?" That's hard to decide--both sides are all talk and no action on this subject."

      Global Warming for some, miniature American flags for others!

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    3. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by CaymanIslandCarpedie · · Score: 1

      To me it seems the whole conversation has been a bit off-topic (not you in particular). I don't see this as an issue about if "global warming" is happening or if there is anything we can do about it. Data may be getting better, but it seems we just don't know enough yet to even know if doing anything any differently would matter. OK, so we now basically know "global warming" is occuring. We still don't know how much of this is because of humans or natural. We still don't know if it may naturally reverse itself. We still don't know exactly what the results will be, etc, etc, etc.

      So to me it isn't so much about "global warming", its about the experts in the field being told what they can/cannot say by poloticians. Any scientist studying this should be shouting his results at the top of his lungs for the world to see. Some of those findings will be absolute crap and others will be very insightful. The point is all this information must be made public so scientfic community can consider it all and advance our understanding of our world and what is happening (not just related to "global warming").

      Now sceience has always had a bit of a political flavor, but I've never heard of the type or amount of coersion which now seems standard policy with this administration. So when you ask "would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?" if you are talking just about "global warming" then who knows, but if you are talking about the policy of repressing open scientific debate then I think the answer is certainly yes.

      Also, a small example of how a democratic president "may" be doing things differently. My home town has an Ethonol processing plant which was opened during the Clinton administration. Since Bush came to office the regulations have been relaxed where they are now allowed to more than double thier pollution output and what is considered pollution has also been relaxed. Is that good for the economy? Is it needed with current energy prices? Does it make a difference in reguards to "global warming"? I certainly don't know, but it is an example of some possible differences.

      --
      "reality has a well-known liberal bias" - Steven Colbert
    4. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by ppanon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Essentially what I'm asking you is, "Would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?" That's hard to decide--both sides are all talk and no action on this subject.

      Actually, the answer is quite clear on this. The last Democratic president was doing things quite clearly differently (i.e. supported Kyoto and didn't suppress embarrassing research results); it was a Republican Congress that blocked his efforts. The 2000 Democratic candidate is active in raising awareness of global warming. It's reasonable to believe that another Democratic president would do things differently as well.

      I'm tired of "the other side is just as bad" bullshit arguments. After the results of the 2000 elections, it should be pretty clear that that's not true. Most of the people who make those kind of claims are just trying to avoid moral responsibility for results of their (selfish) choices.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    5. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by electroniceric · · Score: 1
      I am not saying democrats would be different but the individual leading them could be.

      Interestingly, the individual within the Democratic Party who would be the most different by rights should have been President. Al Gore is a long time environmentalist (about to release his own documentary about global warming), and very knowledgeable about scientific matters in general.

      That said, your point is well taken. If the Democrats really wanted to make global climate change a plank, they could start by making a lot more reference to the Apollo Alliance. It's gonna take an awful lot of clout and will to get through to the industries that are primary emitters of CO2, as well as rolling out all the infrastructure needed to actually change emissions. I'm not convinced the Dems presently have enough of either to make real changes happen.
    6. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by optimus2861 · · Score: 1
      The last Democratic president was doing things quite clearly differently (i.e. supported Kyoto and didn't suppress embarrassing research results); it was a Republican Congress that blocked his efforts.

      The vote against ratifying the Kyoto treaty in the Senate was 98-0. Still care to blame the Republicans alone?

    7. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's hard to decide--both sides are all talk and no action on this subject.

      OK, then I fault Bush for being just as crappy as the Democrats. Is recognizing that both sides suck unbiased enough for you?

    8. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by ColoradoAuthor · · Score: 1
      The vote against ratifying the Kyoto treaty in the Senate was 98-0.

      That's strange, since the protocol has never been submitted to the Senate for ratification. The 98-0 vote may refer to a non-binding vote on a resolution relating to how the negotionations were to take place (see http://www.nrdc.org/globalWarming/akyotoqa.asp).

    9. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by Colonel+Angus · · Score: 1

      Clearly the Rublicans have no plans to address it... so you can choose the other option, the Democrats, and let them have a go at it. They can't do any worse than the current administration so you've got nothing to lose. And if they do, then we're all completely fucked.

      I wish my government would get off their asses and take this seriously as well.

    10. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Wrong. "Although the United States signed the Kyoto Protocol, the treaty has not been ratified by the U.S. Senate. In July 1999, the United States Senate voted 95-0 to pass a resolution co-sponsored by Sen. Byrd (D-W.Va.) and Sen. Hagel (R-Neb.), which stated the Senate would not ratify the Protocol unless rapidly developing countries such as China were included in its requirements to reduce greenhouse gases. The Clinton Administration announced it would not send the treaty to the Senate for ratification." In other words, they voted it down! http://www.enviroliteracy.org/article.php/278.html /

    11. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by AlterTick · · Score: 1
      Al Gore is a long time environmentalist, and very knowledgeable about scientific matters in general.

      Yeah, but consider that Jimmy Carter is a nuclear engineer, but as president signed an executive order banning the construction of breeder reactors in the name of preventing nuclear proliferation. Never mind that he absolutely must have known that reprocessing spent nuclear fuel leaves you with an inseperable mix of plutonium isotopes that are utterly worthless for warheads, being suitable only for use as reactor fuel-- no, the symbolism of the gesture was apparently deemed more important. Subsequently, we're up to our ass in spent reactor fuel, wondering where we can put it, when we ought to be recycling it.

      When it comes to politicians, I'm of the opinion that no matter how much you know that they know better, you can never count on them to do the right thing based on their knowledge.

      --
      Conclusion: the Empire squashes the Federation like a bug. Accept it.
    12. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by bill_kress · · Score: 1

      "Would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?"

      What difference does it matter which branch of the corporate-sponsored ruling party is in office? The issue is still valid!

      (What a great general statement, I should make that my new sig!)

    13. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by hawkfish · · Score: 1
      We still don't know how much of this is because of humans or natural
      I'm sorry, but this is simply not true. It is all because of humans.
      --
      You will not drink with us, but you would taste our steel? - Walter Matthau, The Pirates
    14. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by jhml · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but this is simply not true. It is all because of humans.
      ===============
      So, if it is all caused by humans what caused the last end of the ice ages? Cavemen building overenthusiastic campfires? Belching too much after overindulging in mammoth steaks?

    15. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Care to make a wager on how long that ice age took to come about? Considering the fact that the world's oceans have all risen a degree Farenheight (spelling may be wrong, I use metric) in the last 100 years. Do you have any idea how much energy that would take??

      Oh, and as an example of human effects on the global environment: Central Canada (specifically from the GTA area to Montreal) had smog days last December. Smog. Not only is it huge amounts of pollution, but requires hot temperatures.

    16. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1
      Essentially what I'm asking you is, "Would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?" That's hard to decide--both sides are all talk and no action on this subject.

      Does politics matter in this problem? The situation as it stands is that current administration seems to be trying to avoid the subject of global warming by somewhat totalitarian methods. Currently the Bush administration is named because they are doing this. If it were the Democrats, I don't think the response would be any different.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    17. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    18. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by BluedemonX · · Score: 1

      I had NO IDEA that Canada was run by Bush last December. The joke can be made that Harper is Bush's lapdog, but this was prior to the election. Also, you guys signed Kyoto, so obviously having done that you have no environmental problems.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    19. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by espo812 · · Score: 1
      The last Democratic president was doing things quite clearly differently (i.e. supported Kyoto and didn't suppress embarrassing research results)
      He supported Kyoto so much he didn't even submit it to the Senate for ratification.

      If scientists want to speak any way they wish, they should bank roll their own research. As long as someone else is paying their salaries and research budgets, they will always have to produce results with permission of the person or organization doing the funding (in this article, that's the federal government). Now, if the government wasn't funding global warming research (which it shouldn't be) then no one could complain that any administration is influencing the research. If this research is so important, someone else can pay for it. If it isn't so important, I shouldn't be forced to pay for it.
      --

      espo
    20. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by bobdinkel · · Score: 1

      Essentially what I'm asking you is, "Would a Democratic president be doing anything differently?" That's hard to decide--both sides are all talk and no action on this subject.

      I think your question is utterly irrelevant. It is the duty of every citizen to call out every instance of bullshit committed by those in power. If this were Al Gore or John Kerry or whoever, I'd have absolutely no compunction about calling bullshit. It's disheartening to know that others would hold their tongues because the guy is "one of theirs".

      --
      A publicly traded company exists solely to make profits for shareholders.
    21. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by gentlemen_loser · · Score: 1

      Ever hear of Clinton? You know, the democrat that signed us up for Kyoto? Perhaps you've heard of Bush, you know, the ASS that had us back out of it. Perhaps you've heard of Gore and his environmental record? So, yes. I would say that a democrat would handle it differently.

    22. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      Psst. "We" Americans are the ones doing the funding. We deserve to hear the results. They shouldn't be hidden from us because the currently (un)-elected leader decides that we shouldn't hear them because it would be bad for his friends and special interest parties. You don't think the government should be supporting environmental research? I don't think it should be starting uneccessary wars costing hundreds of billions of dollars, but it is.

    23. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the Kyoto treaty was rejected by unanimous consent of the Senate. Not a single Senator from either party tried to get it ratified, at the very least on an as-is basis.

    24. Re:Cautiously Submitting a Non-Biased Article by ppanon · · Score: 1

      If scientists want to speak any way they wish, they should bank roll their own research. As long as someone else is paying their salaries and research budgets, they will always have to produce results with permission of the person or organization doing the funding (in this article, that's the federal government). Now, if the government wasn't funding global warming research (which it shouldn't be) then no one could complain that any administration is influencing the research. If this research is so important, someone else can pay for it. If it isn't so important, I shouldn't be forced to pay for it.

      Oh, you mean like the tobacco companies who were claiming that cigarettes weren't addictive or cancer-causing when they held results of internal studies proving that they were, studies which allowed them to manipulate the nicotine content to make them even more addictive?

      This is really the same sort of thing. Here you have test results that potentially affect the future health and welfare of every man, woman, and child, and they are sitting on it because it's inconvenient to the administration's wealthy donators. It is important, so why are you whining about paying for it, let alone supporting idiots who want to prevent the public from making an informed choice?

      I'll make my position clear. If you're paying for independent scientific research, then the time your influence on that research stops is when you've handed over the grant check that says you'll fund it. If you try to exert any influence on the results, or try to suppress the results if they don't match your expectations, then you are no longer promoting "scientific" research. Any future "scientific" claims that you might promote in the future should be viewed as probably tainted and worthless.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  37. Anyone else going deaf? by toupsie · · Score: 0, Troll
    'Scientists doing climate research for the federal government say the Bush administration has made it hard for them to speak forthrightly to the public about global warming.

    My God these "scientists" are pathetic. If you believe that the public needs to know and you want to stick it to "the man" (i.e., evil Rethuglicans and Chimpy McHaliburton), stick a freaking web page up on the internet so the whole world will know that my gas guzzling SUV is causing the baby Jesus to cry from Global Warming. Hell, you can start one these new fangled things called a "Blog" for free. Nothing is stopping you. And if Chimpy McHaliburton does come down on you, you will end up getting rich from the book and movie deals that will be cut. Plus either Ted Danson or Meryl Streep will play you on the big screen.

    Let's get real. It's not that "the man" is holding them down that is ticking these folks off, it's that no one is listening to them. I am practically going deaf from all the noise I hear about Global Warming and how man not the Sun is causing it. First Amendment doesn't require me to listen to you.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  38. You really don't get it, do you? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

    Since when are government scientists the presidents "subordinates"? You really need to study how a democracy works, because it doesn't work through those at the top trying to stop any information they don't like from getting out. Ever heard of Government of the People, by the People? The President works for me, and you too. I want to hear what the scientists have to say, and it's actually the role of government to get that information out.

    This administration is starting to look more like China that the United States. There's another regime that's famous for trying to control the flow of information.

    --
    AccountKiller
  39. Perfect reason not to mix science and the state. by RexRhino · · Score: 1

    Why do we have the seperation between Church and State? We have it because when Church and State are merged, religion will be exploited to further the goals of those in charge of the state... and those that disagree with the religion of the ruling class will be persecuted.

    Most people (OK, not everyone) agrees that a seperation between Church and State is good, but that is because nowadays religion has become irrelevant. Sure, it is easy to keep the Church seperated from the State, because the Church is no longer the defining belief of our society.

    Our society is now defined by the science (and the media, but that is irrelevent for this conversation). The danger that once existed when we had State Religion, now exists when we have State Science. This kind of political pressure on scientists is inevitable when the government is the largest financial supporter of science in the country.

    Science will always be clouded by politics, unless we insist on the complete seperation of Science and State, the same way that we do the Church and State! I know that doesn't appeal to the socialists here, who want the government to be in charge of everything. But sorry, government involvement in science means bad science.

  40. Silly and dangerous scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If they can't talk about climate change, how come they're perfectly free to do something that looks even worse politically--claim that they are being muzzled? This is an excellent example of a claim so silly it self-refutes.

    The reality is that we're in the midst of crude attempts to induce hysteria on this topic. Story after story twists and turns to try to scare us. That's why you almost never read anything about the obvious benefits of warming (i.e. longer growing seasons for crops and less need to burn fossil fuels to warm ourselves in winter). Like the old eugenics scare and the more recent hysteria about a "population explosion" it's an example of the more politicized scientists trying to scare us into putting them in charge. (And if you do a bit of research, you'll discover that in the 1970s we were being warned about a new ice age, a hysteria that fortunately didn't catch on.)

    As G. K. Chesterton explained so well in his Eugenics and Other Evils, the worst group to put in charge of society is a self-appointed scientific elite. We'd be far better off in a society run by 1000 people selected at random from a phone directory than in one run by the 1000 most senior members of the National Academy of Sciences.

    --Mike Perry, An Inkling Musing, Seattle

    1. Re:Silly and dangerous scientists by virg_mattes · · Score: 1

      > If they can't talk about climate change, how come they're perfectly free to do something that looks even worse politically--claim that they are being muzzled? This is an excellent example of a claim so silly it self-refutes.

      This isn't a valid presentation of the situation. In this case, scientists are being pressured not to discuss climate change, and as a result they came out and said, "we're being pressured not to talk about climate change." The pressure isn't intense enough to "muzzle" the scientists doing the complaining, but it's enough that they feel pressured not to reveal stuff they've learned.

      Virg

  41. George Bush is CLEARLY teh debbil! by argStyopa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Climatological Cassandras are becoming increasingly apprehensive,
    for the weather aberrations they are studying may be the harbinger of another ice age." - TIME, Monday, Jun. 24, 1974

    But NOW (I understand) they're sure?

    Let's just point out:
    "From around 150,000 to 130,000 years ago, North America experienced colder and generally more arid than present conditions. About 130,000 years ago, a warm phase slightly moister than the present began, and conditions at least as warm as the present lasted until about 115,000 years ago. Subsequent cooling and drying of the climate led to a cold, arid maximum about 70,000 years ago, followed by a slight moderation of climate with a second aridity maximum around 22,000-13,000 14C years ago. Conditions then quickly became warmer and moister, though with an interruption by cold and aridity in many areas around 11,000 14C years ago."
    (Jonathan Adams, Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
    http://www.esd.ornl.gov/projects/qen/nercNORTHAMER ICA.html [ornl.gov]

    Does the temperature seem to be moving up lately? Yep.

    Beyond that, it seems to be a huge guessing game: are humans responsible for the current warming? (personally, I think we probably contribute significantly to it)

    Is warming a catastrophe? Even IF you buy into the Cassandras, for every "coral reef is gonna die because the water's too warm!" it's hard to believe that there's not a corresponding expansion (northward) of coral-reef-able zones. For every acre of expanded desert, there's another acre of former-tundra that now has a growing season.

    And don't even get me STARTED on "cities will flood" crap. Duh? For ANY city in any location, over a long enough span of time, the odds of it surviving unscathed are ultimately zero. Nobody built the big cities (generally starting as a cluster of wooden huts around a river or nice bay) with an eye toward their long term survivability - NOBODY. To presume at this point that we need to exert every effort to somehow FREEZE Earth's dynamic climate to accomodate habitation choices made 000's of years ago?

    That's just stupid.

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:George Bush is CLEARLY teh debbil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      To presume at this point that we need to exert every effort to somehow FREEZE Earth's dynamic climate to accomodate habitation choices made 000's of years ago?

      Well, if the area you currently grow a significant portion of the world's food in becomes that desert, there may be a few problems... But hey, we can just relocate the people in the new fertile land and rebuild the farms (obviously we can go without the food production during the time it takes to get all that ironed out, and it would be far less damaging for our economy than trying to slow the warming down, obviously).

    2. Re:George Bush is CLEARLY teh debbil! by bjrubble · · Score: 2, Informative

      Look at your numbers. You're talking about climate changes taking place over 10,000 to 100,000 years. The current climate changes are theorized to take place over a few hundred years.

      Let's do a little thought experiment. Say that the current climate change takes place over 250 years. That's 50 times faster than for the smallest timespan you cited.

      Now get in your car. Drive 1mph into a concrete barrier. (Hope you didn't damage your bumper.)

      Okay, now drive 50mph into that concrete barrier. When you get out of the hospital (IF you get out of the hospital) let's talk a little about the difference between gradual climate change and rapid climate change.

    3. Re:George Bush is CLEARLY teh debbil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Climatological Cassandras are becoming increasingly apprehensive, for the weather aberrations they are studying may be the harbinger of another ice age." - TIME, Monday, Jun. 24, 1974

      But NOW (I understand) they're sure?

      This is a startling revelation! With two decades of extensive peer-reviewed research showing the world's temperature is increasing due to pollution, I was about to start believing the scientists. But 32 years ago TIME Magazine said we were approaching a new ice age. Now I don't know what to believe!

    4. Re:George Bush is CLEARLY teh debbil! by The+New+Stan+Price · · Score: 0

      250 years? From what I know, the last ice age was around 10,000 years ago and we've been warming ever since. It is possible that humans have sped the process up a little, but by how many years?

    5. Re:George Bush is CLEARLY teh debbil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has _not_ been warming ever since. There were many cooler and hotter periods. But the current increase in temperature is pretty fast, and if it doesn't stop, we have a big problem. A coral reef does not come into existence overnight; regardless of what the parent may suggest. And it is not so simple as temperature only. For tundra to become useful for agriculture there needs to be adequate rainfall as well. I think most studies currently agree that people will have problem in maintaining their foodsupply.

  42. Stop talking about the weather... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Start looking at the skies...

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

  43. He was voted in? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was voted in?

    1. Re:He was voted in? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      That's the consesus, yes. If he wasn't, then why is he occupying the office? If enough people speak up, he can be removed. Since hardly anybody did or does, I'll have to accept that he was voted in, fair and square. Most people have decided to ignore any possible evidence of wrongdoing and have accepted the election as legitimate. Democracy at work. Exactly the way it's supposed to. If there's any failure, it's that of majority rule itself, not of any particular individual.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:He was voted in? by WinterSolstice · · Score: 1
      Yup - the good ol 'Tyranny of the Majority'. People will elect the leaders they want. It's both a blessing and a curse.

      Personally, I dislike Bush. However, I am a serious fan of the process of elections (electoral college and all), even if I don't always like the outcome. I suspect what we need are not better presidents or laws but better politicians and lawyers. If we don't get them, we have only ourselves to blame.

      -WS

      --
      An operating system should be like a light switch... simple, effective, easy to use, and designed for everyone.
    3. Re:He was voted in? by kiatoa · · Score: 1

      For Shrub to have been voted in a fair vote would have needed to occur. Last time I looked into it the evidence suggested to me that the vote was rather less than fair and clean. I couldn't stomach voting for either of the buggers. Without a rational voting system (google for condorcet, approval or instant run off voting) there is zero hope of ever having a representative or sane government.

      --
      90% of the wealth is in 2% of the pockets. Bummer to be in the majority.
    4. Re:He was voted in? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Last time I looked into it the evidence suggested to me that the vote was rather less than fair and clean.

      I agree. I believe the last two(at least) elections were rigged, but we are in the minority. Thus no re-count. The majority has spoken, mostly by their silence. That's the way the cookie crumbles. Respect for the law in general suffers as a result. If the law isn't applied to these people, then how can you apply it to anybody?

      Without a rational voting system...

      We just need to vote one in...

      --
      What?
    5. Re:He was voted in? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      However, I am a serious fan of the process of elections...

      Actually, so am I. It's a great spectator sport. I'm not sure which is more exciting, elections or baseball.

      I suspect what we need are not better presidents or laws but better politicians and lawyers. If we don't get them, we have only ourselves to blame.

      You got it.

      --
      What?
  44. Marketing by silverbax · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Some marketing professionals have stated that the reason people in the U.S. don't care about global warming is because of how it's presented: global is good, warming is good, how can 'global warming' be so bad? They should call it what it is: 'atmosphere cancer', 'oxygen rot' or 'Earth decay'.

    1. Re:Marketing by maxume · · Score: 1

      The earth isn't worried about global warming. The worst case scenario is that it will be infested with different life forms. People should worry about global warming because it will make it uncomfortable for humans to live, not because it 'damages' the earth.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  45. More Bullshit from the Wacky Left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yet another drama filled screed about some scientist being "gagged". Has it occurred to anyone that if we are reading about it and about his opinions on Global Warming that he is not being gagged?

    What's happening is that they are being told that they do not speak for the administration whenever they open their mouth about something. No one is holding a gun to their head to make them say something or prevent them from saying something. They just can't say it as if they are the official spokesman for the Administration. That is nothing more than common sense management.

    Of course, this won't stop the coming wankfest of Daily KOS, Dem Underground pseudo scientists from filling Slashdot with all kind of vitriol towards anyone to the right of Howard Dean.

    And anyone who would dissagree with the wacky left had better post anonymously, otherwise they will have their karma pummeled to the point that they will be effectily "gagged" much more than any government scientist supposedly is.

  46. Hrm? by kyjl · · Score: 1

    Baghdad Bob? Is that you?

    --
    Perl, n. A language spoken by Eskimos.
  47. Not George W's problem by Happy+Lemming · · Score: 1
    Hey, the White House can silence whatever it likes. Global warming won't really be a problem for perhaps five years, by which time it will be so obvious that not even the next incumbent can ignore it, as he (she?) desperately seeks a second term.

    It's already too late.

  48. Obvious by spaztik · · Score: 1

    Its obvious the government is trying to cover up the fact that the source of Global Warming is all the hot air eminating from Capitol Hill and 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

  49. To coin a phrase by Chris.Boyle · · Score: 2, Funny

    White House Effect: The phenomenon whereby government agencies trap climate control funding, caused by the presence in the atmosphere of Republican FUD that allows donator-friendly information to pass through but absorbs evidence radiated back from concerned scientists. (original definition)

  50. Skeptical by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1, Troll

    Look, Earth's temperature has been rising and falling throughout history. If you're going to ask us to do things like follow the Kyoto treaty that just happens to be rigged to do disproportionate harm to America then you're going to have to come up with better proof that adding industrialization to the mix is artificially increasing those natural climate swings. The fact that the people most loudly advocating man-made global warming theories are our political adversaries and/or have a financial incentive to hype it (it would still be useful to know how the natural temperature changes work though, even if that's less alarming) doesn't instill confidence in we right-wingers. Yes, that most definitely includes government researchers.

    The same reasoning applies to government workers in charge of investigating -isms. If their jobs depend on the existence of series racism, sexism, etc, then by golly it's going to be there whether the "commoners" can see it or not.

    1. Re:Skeptical by Dominic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > the Kyoto treaty that just happens to be rigged to do disproportionate harm to America

      Umm.. like America is doing disproportionate harm to everyone else (and itself) right now? Seems fair to me.

    2. Re:Skeptical by Frenchy_2001 · · Score: 1

      If you're going to ask us to do things like follow the Kyoto treaty that just happens to be rigged to do disproportionate harm to America then you're going to have to come up with better proof that adding industrialization to the mix is artificially increasing those natural climate swings. The fact that the people most loudly advocating man-made global warming theories are our political adversaries and/or have a financial incentive to hype it (it would still be useful to know how the natural temperature changes work though, even if that's less alarming) doesn't instill confidence in we right-wingers. Yes, that most definitely includes government researchers.

      The Kyoto treaty puts an heavy burden on the US, because the US is the country consumming the most oil per capita and rejecting the most pollutant in the atmosphere. So, as the biggest pollutant, you get the most drastic changes. It's not so much that the others dont pollute or wont get crippled, it is more that they have already started policies to curb pollution and as such dont have such a big step to take.
      Take a look at this chart of oil consumption per capita. The US uses AT LEAST 33% more per capita than other western nations (outside of Canada). This is what the rest of the world complains about...

    3. Re:Skeptical by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1

      Gee, my previous post has received 2 Overrated mods, 2 Underrated mods, and a Troll for a net loss of 1. The leftist thought police must be napping today.

      The Kyoto treaty puts an heavy burden on the US, because the US is the country consumming the most oil per capita and rejecting the most pollutant in the atmosphere. So, as the biggest pollutant, you get the most drastic changes. It's not so much that the others dont pollute or wont get crippled, it is more that they have already started policies to curb pollution and as such dont have such a big step to take.

      Again, you're assuming that global warming is man-made, to the extent that it exists at all. I don't think it is man-made, so taking drastic measures that are almost certain to cause heavy economic damage seems like a bad idea. And since the global warming cheerleaders tend to fall into the hate-America crowd, well, I get real skeptical about their objectivity and motivation. Leaving rapidly growing economies like China, India, etc. out of the Kyoto treaty makes me REALLY skeptical about the motives of the doomsday crowd. Cough up with enough hard evidence of man-made climate change or I'll continue to dismiss global warming as a pseudo-religion.

      Take a look at this chart of oil consumption per capita. The US uses AT LEAST 33% more per capita than other western nations (outside of Canada). This is what the rest of the world complains about...

      That chart is oil-equivalent energy consumption. The oil consumption chart looks much worse for America... until you consider that we have 300 million people and considerably lower population density than the other high-population countries. We need that oil for transportation. Today's high gasoline prices should knock that back a bit. China's already #2 though and they're growing faster than we are. China is already #1 in coal by a wide margin. Expect that to keep rising since they have no shortage of the stuff. We're also assuming that those figures are accurate, which means we're trusting the CIA and Energy Department that published them.

      We have far better pollution controls than China, so energy used here does less damage than over there. That will change as China brings new nuclear power plants online, something we really ought to be doing but the same people who cry "global warming!" tend to freak out at the word "nuclear". (Which, again, makes me skeptical of their motivations...) Not that any of this matters for global warming since, as I said, I don't think man effects it, but clean air is rather nice.

    4. Re:Skeptical by Dominic · · Score: 1

      Justifying high usage of oil because of low population density is nonsense. It's because of an overdependance on oil that Americans have to travel so much - if you had sensible city planning and people lived close to their place of work rather than in miles of endless suburbia then they wouldn't need to travel in the first place.

      As for your point about not agreeing that global warming is man-made, well, you can bury your head in the sand, but I tend to go with the opinion of the vast majority of climate experts over yours.

      Climate change isn't even doubted outside the US. Don't Americans realise that even questioning it makes them a laughing stock to the rest of the world? It would be like the government here (the UK) claiming that the world is flat or something. Your government sounds like it is from the dark ages, and that's not trolling, it's how the world sees it.

    5. Re:Skeptical by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1

      Justifying high usage of oil because of low population density is nonsense. It's because of an overdependance on oil that Americans have to travel so much - if you had sensible city planning and people lived close to their place of work rather than in miles of endless suburbia then they wouldn't need to travel in the first place.

      Agreed on the need for higher-density housing. Unfortunately, the powers-that-be here in the People's Republic of Ann Arbor (your kind of people) have done everything possible to block such development, so sprawl in the surrounding townships ensues instead (bye-bye farmland). It appears that their anti-development attitude is pretty common among the American left. Not that the right is completely innocent of monkeying with zoning laws and such, but...

      As for your point about not agreeing that global warming is man-made, well, you can bury your head in the sand, but I tend to go with the opinion of the vast majority of climate experts over yours. Climate change isn't even doubted outside the US.

      Most of the world used to believe that the world is flat, so spare me your popularity contests. I'll need more proof than that to convince me that global warming is man-made. I can believe in very limited localized warming from man-made effects (concrete will do that, etc), but global? Given that the Earth is 3/4 water? Given the historical record of large climate swings long predating industrialization?

  51. The best sites on the issue by apsmith · · Score: 2, Informative
    If anybody has any doubts about the science, please take your pick of the following three sites - all excellent material, from historical, science, and political perspectives:

    --

    Energy: time to change the picture.

  52. On The Plus Side ... by rewinn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The deliberate intrasigience of the feddies is not the last word. Technology to combat catastrophic climate change is the next big economic opportunity. The only question is whether we make it here and sell it there, or vice versa.

    As long as our political leadership are tied to old-fashioned energy sources, they have no incentive to develop & implement the new technologies that will replace the old ... it's a classic "Innovator's Dilemma".

    And it has an "Innovator's Dilemma" solution: outsiders develop small, nimble technologies, some of which fail, some of which succeed; eventually they eat the dinosaurs (...sorta like the desktop PC in the era of the mainframe.) You, yourself, can probably figure out a few clever ways to create or implent a green tech in your own city. Give it a try! [A few suggestions here]

    What is better than making an honest buck while thumbing your nose at the anti-scientists!

    1. Re:On The Plus Side ... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I disbelieve a faith in the market's ability to correct ecological catastrophe. More often, economic incentives to technological change are inimical to ecological gradualism. That's why I'm beating the pulpit for a direct, conscious effort to solve the problem of global warming. It would cost less than a moon shot.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    2. Re:On The Plus Side ... by rewinn · · Score: 1

      >I disbelieve a faith in the market's ability to correct ecological catastrophe

      Nothing can do everything ... including the marketplace.

      However, there's no reason not to take advantage of the power of the marketplace to do as much good as possible. Everyone has to make a living one way or another, and you might as well make a living doing good stuff.

      Even Gandhi spun cotton. In fact, he never felt he was too good to do stoop labor as part of his philosophy.

  53. "Scientists muzzled," say scientists! by Errandboy+of+Doom · · Score: 1

    If the government's not allowing scientists to talk to the public, it's doing a pretty inept job.

  54. Misconception by Stickerboy · · Score: 5, Funny

    "So as you feel your skin cancer forming and watch the ice caps come washing over us, just remember it isn't because of mankind, President Bush says so."

    And global warming is linked to an incidence of skin cancer... how?

    I think you're referring to the ozone hole.

    That was the LAST Impending Global Catastrophe. Keep up with the times.

    --
    Light a fire for a man and he'll be warm for a day. Light a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:Misconception by Bemopolis · · Score: 1
      I think you're referring to the ozone hole.

      That was the LAST Impending Global Catastrophe. Keep up with the times.


      You are correct. The ozone hole catastrophe has nothing in common with the global warming catastrophe.



      The American government acknowleged the problem and joined the world in reducing CFC emission.

      Bemopolis
      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    2. Re:Misconception by Bluesman · · Score: 1

      You skipped rain-forest deforestation suffocating us all. That was after we were burned by ozone holes.

      I mean, we had bake sales and everything for the rain forest. Why can't we stop global warming the same way?

      --
      If moderation could change anything, it would be illegal.
    3. Re:Misconception by Guezo · · Score: 1

      > And global warming is linked to an incidence of skin cancer... how?
      > I think you're referring to the ozone hole.
      > That was the LAST Impending Global Catastrophe. Keep up with the times.

      One of the robust predictions of climate models is that the stratosphere will cool, making the prevelance of PSCs (polar stratospheric clouds) more likely. Ozone-destroying chemistry is accelerated by having ice crystal surfaces available. Thus it is not true that there's no relationship between global warming and the ozone hole.

      Typical misconception on your part.

    4. Re:Misconception by LarsWestergren · · Score: 1

      I think you're referring to the ozone hole.
      That was the LAST Impending Global Catastrophe. Keep up with the times.


      That was averted thanks to swift international response thankfully. For instance, British prime minster Margaret Thatcher who was a university chemistry major realised the dangers and she was a driving force in creating a London conference about this, and a fund to help developing countries introduce substitutes for CFCs. It is rumored she helped convince Reagan to take action too.

      There was a real and very urgent problem, and it was solved with a lot of effort by scientists and governments, and now you and other dickheads are going. "Haha, see, nothing happened, it was all just scaremongering. Ignore global warming".

      --

      Being bitter is drinking poison and hoping someone else will die

  55. Since when? by The+New+Stan+Price · · Score: 0

    Since when are scientists/researchers supposed to be activists?

  56. Not about truth by Bombula · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The global warming issue is a textbook example of the very unfortunate and worrisome fact that politics is not about truth. It never has been. The same goes for religion. Back when religion and politics were the same thing (and as they still are in some parts of the world today), religion was able to claim the only authoritative access to Truth. But since science began soundly bitch-slapping religion in the arena of Truth in the last century or two, people have become increasingly jaded with both religion and its bedfellow politics.

    The thing is, the people want both religion and politics to be abou truth. We all have a primal need for our 'team' (ie: tribe) to be correct. We all want to believe our side is the Good Guys. The problem, as people become better educated, it becomes harder and harder for any but the most ignorant and gullible to buy into centuries-old superstitious nonsense of religion or the greed-saddled crap spewed out by politics.

    If we ever have political leadership that genuinely prioritizes truth as their policy, that is when we will see a resurgence in interest from the populous. Until then, people are too bored with the gigantic quagmire of lies to care whether something is coming from one rich white guys' camp or the other.

    --
    A-Bomb
  57. No by apsmith · · Score: 1

    If a reputable scientist is threatened with loss of his job if he does a television interview, it doesn't matter how many websites he puts up, he can't get the message out as effectively as he otherwise could. Censorship, plain and simple.

    --

    Energy: time to change the picture.

    1. Re:No by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      My employer has the right to fire me at any time for any reason, what's so different about a climate researcher? Does the first amendment guarantee employment? I'm pretty sure it doesn't...

      I don't really see anything wrong here. Of course I'm an evil "Rethuglican McHalliburton" who isn't convinced that we should act in response to global warming, so what do I know?

    2. Re:No by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      You fail to see the difference?

      If you can be fired from your fry cook job at any moment, for any reason, and serve entirely at the will of your boss, the implications for your company are minimal.

      If the president could fire a Supreme Court justice at any moment, or the chair of the Federal Reserve, or (insert any political appointee who is protected from firing), then the implications for the country are tremendous and dangerous.

      There are positions in the government that cannot function unless those holding the positions are protected from undue political influence. If a scientest cannot study important subjects, or cannot publicize the results of those subjects, out of fear of termination, then their entire purpose is frustrated.

      If you can't comprehend the need for these protections, then you're confirming all my worst anti-Republican sentiments.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    3. Re:No by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      There are positions in the government that cannot function unless those holding the positions are protected from undue political influence.

      I agree.

      If a scientest cannot study important subjects, or cannot publicize the results of those subjects, out of fear of termination, then their entire purpose is frustrated.

      I don't agree.

      If the scientist is frustrated by his place of work, why can't he just find work elsewhere? That's what I'd do if I was frustrated by my job. Again, what's different about the scientist? That's what I don't understand.

      If I go to a podium and announce something terrible, and my employer fires me... well...
      1) I was in my right to exercise my right of free speech and say whatever I want.
      2) My employer was in his right to terminate employment.

      Nobody's done anything wrong.

      Scientists aren't Supreme Court Justices, they don't set government policy. They shouldn't have any kind of 'guarantee of employment' unavailable to everyone else.

    4. Re:No by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I didn't say the scientest was frustrated. I said that the purpose of the position which he holds has been frustrated. Slightly different meaning of the word.

      If a scientist can be fired for disclosing politically controversial results, or can be forbidden from studying subjects based on any criteria other than the scientific importance of that research, then it's wrong. To engage in science, a scientist absolutely requires the ability to follow wherever the research leads.

      You're acting like I want scientists to be totally unaccountable to their employers. I'm not. What I am saying is that they need the freedom to do science, without worrying about politically touchy results capsizing their careers.

      The government isn't in the same position as a private employer. An employee of a company is supposed to serve the interests of the company that employs him. A government employee is supposed to serve the people, and if that employee isn't able to do that because of pressures from his immediate employer, then we need to put safeguards in place to mitigate that pressure.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  58. You mutated my question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I asked if he would do anything differently. You mutated it to would he take a different approach.

    No argument there. The argument is would there be actions taken?

    The answer for both sides: probably not.
    Don't compare the generic "a Democratic president" to the specific "President Bush".
    This is the internet, I'll compare whatever the fuck I want. Don't tell me what I can and can't do--that'll just angry up the blood.
    1. Re:You mutated my question. by liliafan · · Score: 1
      This is the internet, I'll compare whatever the fuck I want. Don't tell me what I can and can't do--that'll just angry up the blood.


      I am so glad to see you take a mature approach to using your constitutional rights to freedom of speech, perhaps if the current administration did the same and didn't restrict the speech of the scientists researching global warming this entire thread wouldn't exist.
      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
  59. Re:Change ... get used to it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm really glad someone connected the dots between global warming, and the story about the origins of tetrapods. This is the key fact in that article:

    When Tiktaalik lived, the Canadian Arctic region was part of a land mass which straddled the equator. Like the Amazon basin today, it had a subtropical climate and the animal lived in small streams.

    Climate change is a fact of life living on planet Earth. Welcome to reality. There is no garden of eden, and there never was.

  60. Why is this modded funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When this is a perfect example of the ignorance surrounding this debate?

    What the hell do UV rays have to do with global warming?

    1. Re:Why is this modded funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell do UV rays have to do with global warming?

      Who knows, but wackjobs sure think it's funny to correlate both as long as it fits their views.

  61. Global Warming means more OIL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The faster we can heat this planet up the sooner things like the northern trade channel will open. And don't forget the abundant fossil fuels that will have much easier access currently sitting under mountaints of ice in northern canada.

    So ya.. not surprised bush gives a rats ass about global warming. So far global warming has been the best thing to help fight poverty in the US. Bush doesn't hate black people.. he hates poor people..

  62. Re:Well by BadBlood · · Score: 1

    One litre of petrol will produce the same amount of carbon dioxide when burned, regardless of the engine in which the burning takes place.

    I'm not sure this is true. CO production is not constant and varies with ignition temperatures, pressures, and fuel/air mixture composition and ratios. Also, CO production does not equal CO emission, thanks to things like catalytic converters.

    --


    Praying for the end of your wide-awake nightmare.
  63. response to a troll :) by Mashdar · · Score: 1

    You only have to read a slashdot story on Climate Change (and the amount of time posters call it "global warming"

    If you would read TFA you would notice that the researcher being interviewed "measures greenhouse gases linked to global warming"... Sorry to knock you off your horse and all, but this article is about the supression of information concerning global warming (and not the broader sense of "climate change" to which you appear to be referring). All posts about global warming are on topic.

  64. Re:Well by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 0

    This is one thing that really annoyed me about pollution laws, they do it by percentage, not 'grams per mile'. They should be a little more lax(percentage wise) with energy efficient cars.

    --
    Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

    http://financialpetition.org/
  65. You got some stuff wrong there, chief by stlhawkeye · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Is this really a shocker?

    No. I fully expect all presidential administrations to keep a tight leash on what gets reported as "official" government science.

    Bush has had a policy of denying global warming is a result of humans

    It can reasonably be disputed based on our current evidence. We have established correlation, but not causation.

    the fact he is giving the NOAA extra money for research rather than prevention is quite interesting

    Yes, it means he's doing exactly what he said he was going to do - fund more research and gather more data. You can disagree that this is necessary (I don't happen to - more data is always good).

    global warming is something that is happening.

    I don't recall the White House denying this.

    I remember years ago when the offical stance was there is no such thing as global warming

    Under which President? Bush has never as President (to my recollection) insisted that global warming does not exist at all.

    this has evolved to, there is no proof of global warming

    Well, there wasn't any proof for quite some time. Just speculation and incomplete data.

    to okay it exists but it isn't our fault

    Again, this isn't the official White House line. The official line is, "we don't know for sure and I want to be sure before I sign economically crippling policies to screw up everybody's lifestyle." That seems sensible to me.

    somehow I get the feeling the intention now is to attempt to prove it isn't caused by the biggest donators to the Bush administration.

    Such as? Bush isn't running for election again, even if the Democrats are still running against him. Why would he still pander to lobbyists?

    When the whitehouse and the pentagon started to open up and declassify documents all those years ago, it was a good thing it felt like finally they are opening up

    Well, a war can tighten up the flow of information.

    now things are going back to feeling more like the cold war, a policy of secrecy, spying (although internally now rather than on a foreign element)

    Spying internally? So wiretapping people who are suspected of having conversations with foreign Al Qaeda operatives is NOT spying on a foreign element?

    lies

    Such as?

    and gagging the people with important information.

    This does bug me, but since this administration can't seem to keep a lid on its leaks, it doesn't seem to be a real problem.

    So as you feel your skin cancer forming and watch the ice caps come washing over us, just remember it isn't because of mankind, President Bush says so.

    He could end up being right. He probably won't. We'll find out eventually!

    --
    "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    1. Re:You got some stuff wrong there, chief by IngramJames · · Score: 1

      [humans causing global warming] can reasonably be disputed based on our current evidence. We have established correlation, but not causation.

      Most scientists, on the evidence, think there's a very good chance humans are the major cause. It is safer to cut the emissions than not to, and find out we were wrong when it's too late. That's the point.

      And people would do well to remember that "correlation, but not causation" was the rallying cry of the tobacco industry for decades, with their well-funded scientists saying one thing and virtually everybody else saying something else.

      I think this is pretty much the exact same thing.

      --
      'No rational religion claims "supernatural" exists, that's an atheist slander.' - seen on slashdot.
    2. Re:You got some stuff wrong there, chief by cthrall · · Score: 1
      It can reasonably be disputed based on our current evidence.

      Are there any peer-reviewed published articles that argue we are not causing global warming?

      the fact he is giving the NOAA extra money for research rather than prevention is quite interesting


      Congress cut that funding. NASA's science missions have also been cut, even though the spacecraft is built.

      Bush talks about doing more research, while cutting funding for that research. It's pretty obvious.
    3. Re:You got some stuff wrong there, chief by aminorex · · Score: 1

      There's nothing "safe" about cutting emissions. Much of the food we eat could not be produced or delivered without substantial emissions using currently economic technologies. Waiting for economic technologies to change is a losing proposition. The only feasible solution is to directly address the problem by fixing carbon.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    4. Re:You got some stuff wrong there, chief by bigpat · · Score: 1

      It can reasonably be disputed based on our current evidence. We have established correlation, but not causation.

      It can be disputed, and such a dispute can be based on reason, but I wonder what basis of dispute you would see as reasonable. Climate models based on everything we collectively know about our climate, chemistry and physics say that CO2 and other gases that are estimated to be emited by humans will raise global temperatures. Unless of course the Sun starts emitting less light, but if it starts emiting more light, then we would be doubly cooked.

      There isn't just a correlation, there are testable theories of physics and chemistry that when taken in aggregate show a causal relationship to global warming.

      Like our theory of gravity, it may not be complete. But that doesn't mean the apple is going to fall away from the ground and it doesn't mean that the planet will not get warmer with more CO2 in the air.

    5. Re:You got some stuff wrong there, chief by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      So? Scientists gave us Eugenics, Archaeoraptor liaoningensis, the saccharine scare as well. Sometimes the scientific community does what is called Consensus Science, as exampled here in your statement:

      "Most scientists, on the evidence, think there's a very good chance humans are the major cause. "

      It is a type of logical fallicy. They shut out debate about alternate theories, because "4 our 5 scientists agree!".

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    6. Re:You got some stuff wrong there, chief by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

      "It is safer to cut the emissions than not to"

      How do you know this? You've jumped from correlation to identifying the cause and finding the solution.

      Now, do you understand why this is a VERY BAD thing? If you do not, you probably shouldn't comment on the subject further.

      --
      "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    7. Re:You got some stuff wrong there, chief by atlasdropperofworlds · · Score: 1

      The official line is, "we don't know for sure and I want to be sure before I sign economically crippling policies to screw up everybody's lifestyle." That seems sensible to me.

      Heh. I didn't know his concern for the economy was so great, considering his stance on the war(s). Frankly, I don't think that he needs to sign economically crippling policies, but he has to do something. We know that we are influencing the climate, we do not know to what degree. It's a grand experiment we are performing on ourselves, and the worse-case scenarios are pretty dramatic. That alone means we should do something to at least bring ourselves out of the equation as much as we can. If the climate continues to change dramatically, we can take solice in the fact that we at least tried to reduce out influence.

      What is needed is a plan - something that will move us forward into a generation of highly efficient energy usage. For example, there could be a policy moving us towards battery-powered cars for city commutes, since battery technology is getting so good, and it's easier to manage emissions at the power-plant level than in the general population. It would potentially be better for the economy because it would create a new market, and since BOVs are typically simpler than ICEVs or Hybrids, they would become very cheap very rapidly in an economy of scale.

      Aside from all that, I can tell you what else would be/is bad for the economy - dependence on foreign energy. We need a plan, or to know a plan is in the works, that will reduce these dependencies, and let us get the most out of our energy. We could and should make an effort to become as efficient as our technology and scale allows. We are currently enjoying an overabundance of available energy which is giving us bad habits - this is something we should be actively moving away from.

  66. I'll take the karma hit by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "There is that feedom of speach"

    SPEECH. It's spelled SPEECH, so please, if you plan to cite it in your argument, and try to make the case that it's important to you, then PLEASE SPELL IT CORRECTLY.

    I realize this is pedantry, but do you realize how ridiculous that looks?

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
  67. Don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are their free speech rights being infringed upon? Now I know that's a legitimat question with this administration but I doubt it's happening in this particular case. Just because you want to say something doesn't give you the right to the resources to MANIPULATE people. (Which is ultimately what these researchers want to do. Even if they think the earth is going to pot and are right about it, they are motivated by their own desire for power/influence as much as any politician.) Be that the status of a government agency's report, the White House, media coverage, artisitic expression, etc. There is unpreccidented access to information in this country in the hands of each of the millions of citizens. Anything you want to say can be said by anyone who wants to hear it. I think what I'm writing is true and important for people to read. You won't find me whinning because I'm not going to be moderated 5+.

  68. Nothing but Chicken Little... by slashname3 · · Score: 1

    Someone please mod the parent UP!

    The Earth's climate has changed in the past and it will change in the future. All we can do is adapt to it. The change is not happening over night. There is plenty of time to adapt. Coastal cities will either build flood control walls or will be slowly abandonded as the coast lines change. In another few hundred years the decendants of the current Chicken Little's will be screaming about global cooling and how they no longer have beach front property.

    If you want a static climate then establish self sustaining colonies off this planet. Only in completly sealed environments are you going to be able to have a non-changing environment. Just don't make the same errors that the Spaceship Earth people did in there experiment many years ago. Oh wait, they also had a carbon dioxide issue. Seems they could not control even a small enclosed environment. And people think we can control the Earths environment.

    1. Re:Nothing but Chicken Little... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      St. Louise had plenty of time to adopt to hurricanes.
      Well... it's almost gone now, in a matter of hours.
      The reason anything left out of it is hardly because we adapted so well.

  69. No, they are not by GuloGulo · · Score: 0, Troll

    "the current administration is not guilty of the actual crime but they are covering up or skewing the truth"

    I take serious issue with this statement, but it does happen to be consistent with the rest of your posts.

    The administration is censoring RESULTS. Results are not "the truth" they are simply results.

    Does that make the action any less objectionable? Not really, but that's not my point.

    You cannot decide arbitrarily that because you agree with the results that they are the truth. That's not science.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    1. Re:No, they are not by liliafan · · Score: 1
      You cannot decide arbitrarily that because you agree with the results that they are the truth. That's not science.


      I am not going to argue with your point, your are completely correct, poor wording on my part I should have used the word results and not truth. But my point does remain the same there is censorship going on here.
      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    2. Re:No, they are not by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 0

      Results might not equal truth, but concealing or suppressing results certainly amounts to untruth, i.e., lying by omission.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  70. Greenland isn't supposed to be...well...green? by belligerent0001 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I think I am going to start burning full cans of pain in my back yard. I am so sick of this drival!! Lets look at fairly recent history shall we? Greenland, "discovered" in the 10-th century by Erik "The Red" Thorgromson. When he found it it s was friggan GREEN. Less than 100 years later it was covered in friggan ICE. I don't recall pre-viking aged northern europeans having friggan CARS to create a global warming trend. Maine, 1770's (I am too frustrated and pissed off at you tree hugging bastards to remember the exact year so look it the hell up) had a complete year with NO spring, summer or fall. It friggan snowed in July. What does this suggest? ummmm planet hostile, life tough, friggan planet has been here for millions of friggan years and us, we humans, think that we can influence weather on this tiny rock adrift in an insignificant solar system in the backwaters of an unnoticable galaxy? How about this, lets spend more time counting the grains of sand on the planet, because sand can cause desserts. ARGH!!!

    --
    "...a civilian some of the time, a soldier part of the time and a patriot all of the time." -Brig. Gen. James Drain
    1. Re:Greenland isn't supposed to be...well...green? by Rude-Boy · · Score: 1

      Nobody is saying that the earth doesn't go through natural cycles. The concern is that our influence is increasing the negative effects of these cycles.

      As for your idea that we (humans) can't affect the climate of earth, may I point out holes in the ozone layer?

    2. Re:Greenland isn't supposed to be...well...green? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When he found it it s was friggan GREEN. Less than 100 years later it was covered in friggan ICE.

      Ummm no, it has almost always been largely covered with ice. The habitable part of Greenland has always been a thin slither of land, supporting at its peak a few thousand people. Yes, it did cool which caused them all to die, but that was hardly radical change.

      Maine, 1770's (I am too frustrated and pissed off at you tree hugging bastards to remember the exact year so look it the hell up) had a complete year with NO spring, summer or fall. It friggan snowed in July

      You must be speaking of the Year Without A Summer. That was hardly a typical year, but rather believed to be the temporary consequence of a bunch of volcanos erupting.

      Your arguments are to take a few abnormalities and use them to disregard the facts. I hope you're not an investor; I can see it now: "It is a lie that lottery tickets are a bad investment; I can name many people that won millions of dollars!"

    3. Re:Greenland isn't supposed to be...well...green? by belligerent0001 · · Score: 0

      prove that the holes (which as I recall are all but gone now) aren't part of the natural cycle. While the use and a fe european countries decreased thier 'harmful' emmissions it was not nearly enough to impact the massive ozone holes. not to mention that Mt.St. Hellens put more 'harmfull' gasses into the atmosphere than the entirety mans influence. Come on people. The treehuggers have you all stymied into an arrogance. I am willing to be that one tyranosoraus fart would produce an equal ammount of 'harmfull' gases as my gas guzzling car produces in a month! There were a shitload more of them than cars I assure you.

      --
      "...a civilian some of the time, a soldier part of the time and a patriot all of the time." -Brig. Gen. James Drain
    4. Re:Greenland isn't supposed to be...well...green? by Anthony · · Score: 1

      What was the CO2 atmospheric concentration in the Mesozoic? Perhaps you's understand why it was a greenhouse age. What is the average atmospheric CO2 concentration over the last 25million years? Perhaps you will understand why we live in an icehouse age? What is the current atmoshperic CO2 concentration? How does it differ from the max and min range of icehouse concentrations? What is the residence time of CH4 in the atmosphere? What does it oxidise to? Answer these questions and ponder the consequences.

      --
      Slashdot: Where nerds gather to pool their ignorance
  71. Be afraid! by Colosse · · Score: 1

    We have to raise the Global Warming Threat Level to RED. Your government watch ouver you! Thus we are declaring war on global warming, we're going to get it wherever it hides.

    --
    Colosse.
  72. Re:Well by jackbird · · Score: 2, Informative

    You mention CO (Carbon Monoxide), but the original poster is talkiing about CO2 (carbon dioxide), which may or may not be a typo by you. Your statement is correct as applied to CO, but as the OP says, this is not the issue. The issue is CO2, and If CO2 production from combustion goes down, the percentage of other nasty pollutants goes up. Pure C02 and H20 is the ideal exhaust of a 'clean' internal combustion engine, and the purpose of a catalytic converter.

  73. Disheartening by DRM_is_Stupid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The academia usually doesn't get censored very often in the West. During Chairman Mao's rule, Chinese professors were criticised for being "anti-revolutionaries." Smart people who know shit and know what's going on are liable to expose the administration's lie.

  74. This is not an American issue by mOOzilla · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is something that is affecting us all and beyond. Can the rest of the world not sanction the US on these issues?

    1. Re:This is not an American issue by aminorex · · Score: 0, Troll

      Better yet, sanction India and China and Brazil. However, supressing the economic growth of disadvantaged societies is a cruelly selfish thing to do. Better still, just solve the problem, and forego the necessity of sanctioning or waging war on anybody.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    2. Re:This is not an American issue by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Only on slashdot does proposing a concrete, feasible, and constructive solution to a terrible problem constitute a troll. Whatever.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    3. Re:This is not an American issue by mOOzilla · · Score: 1

      Keep up with the news, America is so arrogant and dictating "Human rights" to other people yet they do not practice what they preach. It is a case of "Do as I say, not as I do". America is too big for its own boots these days. It is about time they face up and be responsible for their actions that not only affect them but EVERYBODY. This is an issue that does not stop at borders or nationlism. This is a GLOBAL issue, other countries are using cheap fossil fuels because CLEAN ALTERNATIVES are expensive and look at the money they owe America. Why can America not write off the debts of those countries and HELP them use CLEANER ALTERNATIVES. How about being a RESPONSIBLE player in this game and HELPING the rest of us but no they would rather set a BAD EXAMPLE.

    4. Re:This is not an American issue by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I'm proposing to save the world. Or at least save the lives of the people who would otherwise die of the ancilliary effects of anthropogenic carbon emissions. A little encouragement could go a long way.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    5. Re:This is not an American issue by maxume · · Score: 1

      They can use the U.S. Military to enforce the sanctions. Snap!

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:This is not an American issue by mOOzilla · · Score: 1

      Thats all the US ever does, Envade and sanction. When it comes to peace keeping they are never around except maybe a handful of people. Check this out for Afghanistan, http://www.nato.int/issues/afghanistan/040628-fact sheet.htm They have a whole 89 troops compared to everybody else, yet the US was the invading country. Its the same story every time.

    7. Re:This is not an American issue by maxume · · Score: 1

      You're being silly. Those are the NATO ISAF attached troops as of February 2005. Other places on the internet give different numbers for the current U.S involvement in Afghanistan.

      19,000 with planned draw down to 16,000:
      http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html ?id=50827c9b-acae-4b3f-ab68-2b9fe8018139&k=37894
      (same as above)
      http://www.pej.org/html/modules.php?op=modload&nam e=News&file=article&sid=4331&mode=thread&order=0&t hold=0

      Neither of those links is particularly friendly to the US...

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    8. Re:This is not an American issue by mOOzilla · · Score: 1

      NATO is US friendly no?

  75. ID is relevant to this debate! by misanthrope101 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The problem is that IDers are not just a bunch of harmless backwater hicks. They are actively trying to redefine the meaning of the word science. That statement is not hyberbole. The Kitzmiller decision is one good example -- it was admitted on the stand (by Behe) that for ID to qualify as science, then the definition of science would have to change. What it would change to would also include (also according to Behe) astrology.

    They are attempting to undermine the very basis of rational thought just because it doesn't align with what they think the Bible says. This is NOT new -- Luther himself called reason "Satan's whore." There is a long and rich tradition of anti-intellectualism in this movement, and the denial of global warming (and then the backup position, that humans aren't involved) goes hand-in-hand with Intelligent Design. Also involved here is the fact that most evengelicals (who make up the vast bulk of the ID movement) believe that Jesus is coming back during their lifetime--i.e. end-times are nigh. If you literally believe that you and yours will be raptured to Jesus in the next few decades, then don't you think that might just influence your views on the necessity of environmental activism? So flinging about the label of religious nutjob, while entertaining, is not by any means gratuitious.

    ID and "skepticism" over global warming are both integral parts of the same movement. This linkage is not figurative or polemical--we're talking about two fronts being fought by the same army. So bringing up ID in this context is nothing at all like calling someone a Nazi just because you don't like them.

    Yes, moderators land hard on ID proponents, just as they would if someone said "I don't buy it that germs cause disease," or, "I don't believe in continental drift--it's just a theory." The astounding arrogance and willful ignorance of ID proponents deserves to be modded down. Would you be for "teaching the controversy" to placate a group that wanted to displace the germ theory in favor of the idea that demonic possession causes illness? No, eventually you'd get snippy and start humiliating them in public, because it's just a stupid position to take.

    1. Re:ID is relevant to this debate! by gobbo · · Score: 1
      ID and "skepticism" over global warming are both integral parts of the same movement. ... it's just a stupid position to take.

      It's more than just a stupid position, it's a trojan horse.

      I'm a broad skeptic, even towards reductionist scientific dogma (because we're infants in the realm of systems). But ID is, as you identify, simply another front for interests that are extremely dangerous to me and mine.

      ID's grassroots backers will have us living under a neo-christian version of sharia law as soon as control over our cosmology is once again returned to the keepers of biblical interpretation. If the stories about our origins can be controlled within the emotional framework set out by the preachers, the stories about how we should live can be controlled by them too. Then come the laws that control our daily morality. It's bad enough that the quasi-theological State determines what I can or can't do with my own body (drugs, sex, suicide, etc.). It could get much worse, and many of the ID'ers would like that.

      ID (and scientist repression) represents a deeply dystopic vision of society. This is a fight not just about what's right, but about what's just.

  76. Why Bush and Cheney anger people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I tried to illustrate the absurdity of the people who jump all over the Bush administration for global warming. Granted the person I responded to did it in an admittedly level headed way. But, I would not be lying if I said I have seen people go into seething rages when global warming and Bush are mentioned in the same sentence

    It's like seeing a tobacco executive in the 80's deny smoking causes cancer when, in the previous 15 years, you've had a number of family members who smoked heavily then die of lung cancer.

    He's lying. He knows he's lying through his teeth and so do you. And yet many people believe him because they're in denial of their smoking habit.

    And, as you see his smug face on TV denying a smoking-cancer connection, you vividly remember your relatives as they were in pain and wasting away in a hospital bed. Wouldn't that piss you off too?

    That's why some people get angry about Bush and Cheney when the latter deny man's influence on global warming or, until recently, global warming itself. They are lying to protect their self-interest and those of their oil-industry executive buddies who make big campaign donations. They know they are lying and they don't care how bad the results are.

    It's beyond hypocritical. It's evil.

    1. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by Glock27 · · Score: 1, Informative
      That's why some people get angry about Bush and Cheney when the latter deny man's influence on global warming or, until recently, global warming itself. They are lying to protect their self-interest and those of their oil-industry executive buddies who make big campaign donations. They know they are lying and they don't care how bad the results are.

      First, read this.

      I don't think you have before. It was written in 2001, hardly "recently". Bush had just gotten into office.

      What do you think of the point regarding China and the Kyoto Protocol?

      Other than avoiding the Kyoto Protocol (which I support) Bush is advocating most of the things that will help in the long-term effort to reduce pollution. Actually, Bush has behaved entirely responsibly with regard to global warming. His administration is also correct in pointing out that the first thing that's needed is definitely a LOT more research!

      It's beyond hypocritical. It's evil.

      You're misinformed. Or could it be that your distaste for Bush has muddied your thinking?

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    2. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      Reading what I wrote, I realized there was an ambiguity. I meant I supported not joining the Kyoto Protocol, not that I supported the protocol itself.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    3. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by freetolio · · Score: 1

      Letting the pre-drafted clean air act standards for automobiles slide a few decades is not responsible.

    4. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by dubl-u · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, Bush has behaved entirely responsibly with regard to global warming.

      If you call what he's doing "entirely responsible", what would you call what European countries are up to? Because they are inarguably way ahead on doing something about the problem.

    5. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by prurientknave · · Score: 1

      if you argue correctly you can never be wrong.

    6. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by matrem · · Score: 0

      Actually, Bush has behaved entirely responsibly with regard to global warming.

      Have you even RTFA? If scientists need clearance from government officials to talk to media, wouldn't you agree that somehow, Bush is not completely candid about it?

      It's just hard to grasp how wrong your statement is. When Bush just came into office, the US had already signed the Kyoto protocol. Bush used the classic political manoeuvre of parking the whole issue in the "we need more research" department, meanwhile pulling out of Kyoto, the only framework we had of reducing greenhouse emissions worldwide. Of course it was only a first step, but Bush is argueing from both sides: it's insufficient, India is not participating etc. and also it is too much, too costly etc.

      After that, he continued the political game by rallying countries for an alternative emissions agreement, which is based on voluntary cutdowns (and we know how well that works, voluntary reductions was also the basis for his environmental policies in Texas when he was the governer there). Then the administration tried to prevent the people from realizing that global warming is, indeed, a threat, altering climate reports, putting pressure with funding and now deciding who can and cannot talk to the press.

      And this you call "responsibly".

    7. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      If you call what he's doing "entirely responsible", what would you call what European countries are up to?

      Well, Britain for instance is behind on it's Kyoto goals, which has or will hurt its economy. On the other hand, check this page on Germany. Interesting, no?

      Kyoto is unecessary, ineffective, and little more than a thinly veiled wealth redistribution scheme.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    8. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      If scientists need clearance from government officials to talk to media, wouldn't you agree that somehow, Bush is not completely candid about it?

      Are scientists "media spokespeople" now? Many organizations have rules about who can talk to the press, in other words make public statements regarding the policies and actions of an organization.

      I would be concerned if there was evidence of:

      • Research tampering.
      • Suppresion of research.
      • Faked results.
      • Influence over the peer review process.

      None of this has been alleged, as far as I know.

      As long as valid papers are appearing in peer-reviewed journals, scientists and policy makers the world over can make their decisions. Whether or not *government employed scientists* are allowed to present their *opinions* as a form of government policy is a separate question.

      Consider this paragraph:

      None of the scientists said political appointees had influenced their research on climate change or disciplined them for questioning the administration. Indeed, several researchers have received bigger budgets in recent years because President Bush has focused on studying global warming rather than curbing greenhouse gases. NOAA's budget for climate research and services is now $250 million, up from $241 million in 2004.

      Climate change is a highly politicized topic, my view is that the administration is looking for more light and less heat (so to speak) on the topic. Politicians do find it annoying when people that they fund provide ammunition for their political enemies, and doubly so when those people are of the opposite political persuasion. ;-)

      Scientists need to report their findings in scientific, not alarmist, terms. In science, as in many other areas, there are often "beliefs" that are reported as "facts", especially when the scientist is using layperson's language.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    9. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by matrem · · Score: 1

      Look, I would be very concerned if my government funded research, and then discarded the results because it doesn't agree with its policy. We are not talking about scientist's *policy* opinions here, these people need permissions to express their *scientific* viewpoints. You and other Americans are being denied the result of science that you yourselved paid for. Public funding is for the greater good, not to support whatever administration is currently ruling!

      The government doesn't need to tamper with the results or directly influence the scientific discussion. They just need to suppress the outcome of that discussion. I think the New York Times article I linked to is quite a good example of that. If on top of this, Bush is calling out for the need of more research, that's just hogwash.

    10. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by matrem · · Score: 1

      Britain is expected to meet (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4849672 .stm) its Kyoto target.

    11. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      Kyoto is unecessary, ineffective, and little more than a thinly veiled wealth redistribution scheme.

      Kyoto is also the best global effort so far. If the current solution is flawed, the proper response is to improve it, not stand around ignoring the problem. Of course, given the administration's behavior around government debt, personal savings rate, or balance of trade, it's pretty obvious that ignoring long-term problems is an acceptable Bush strategy.

    12. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      We are not talking about scientist's *policy* opinions here, these people need permissions to express their *scientific* viewpoints.

      They have *every* permission to speak their *scientific* viewpoint. Those are expressed when they publish papers in refereed scientific journals. The linked article specifically says that has not been affected, and that research areas are not being dictated.

      When they give a *press conference* it often involves expressing their personal opinion, often in unscientific language. It does remain an *opinion* that humans are the driving force behind global warming. Many very responsible scientists feel that the data do NOT provide good evidence that humans are the major cause of current climate change.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    13. Re:Why Bush and Cheney anger people by matrem · · Score: 1

      The opinion they express is that global warming is a threat, humans are causing it, and something needs to be done about it. That is their opinion, and I think they should have every right, like you and me, to express this. I call this their sceintific opinion, because I think this is based on the research they have done. If you want to call this a policy opinion, fine. You say many scientists feel that the data do not provide evidence that humans are causing global warming. I disagree, but I think also these people should be allowed to express that viewpoint, and politicis should not try to muzzle them either. The evidence is so overwhelming that I trust the right answer will come up in the end, by having an open discussion about it.

      It worries me that you think it's a scientist job to not get in the way when politicians say something, just because those are the ones that pay them. We all know where this can lead to. Just replace "global warming" by "WMD" and scientists by "CIA".

  77. Well yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Seems fair to me."

    I'm sure it does. I assume all kinds of things make sense when you're an idiot.

  78. Americans can't complain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This can not be news to anyone. This is the same Bush administration which fabricated claims about weapons of mass destructions. "Americans are not getting the full story" is just a way of doing business with the public for this government. But Americans can't complain: they elected this, two times.

    1. Re:Americans can't complain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get it straight. This twat was not elected. He railroaded the system with his psycho brother the first time and the second time got the fools in Ohio to railroad the system again. He won via purchase of our grandchildren's futures. There's a huge division in the USA due to the fact that this flake is in charge and ruining the world. Keep your insight to yourself you fuck. The American people were hoodwinked when the Bush/Rove machine got rolling.

  79. Actually we are probably at 4 by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Given the releases of methane from the permafrost, we may already be beyond the point of no return.

    Also consider the following issues:

    We have more people alive today than were born in the entire history of our planet up to a hundred years ago. We are consuming a large amount of energy from a variety of sources. We can shift some of the burden away from fossile fuels and maybe even help slow global warming by looking at generating some electricity off methane emissions from sewars, landfills, farms, and the like, but this will really be a small impact considering the vast amount of fossile fuels that we have to consume every day.

    There are no sources of energy that are sufficiently environmentally friendly to create a net positive impact given other human activity.

    This doesn't mean we should not try *really* hard to slow down the process. Global warming, while not a huge global threat to human activity in the same sense that nuclear war was, is going to be a very painful adjustment. Slowing it down will give us more time to adjust to the new environment and possibly help prevent economic collapse when it happens.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Actually we are probably at 4 by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Considering the threat to the food supply by the synergy of climate change and the end of abundant petroleum, I think nuclear war is essentially inevitable, as national leaders panic at the prospect of being removed from power by social disorder. That's why I am doing my best, as the opportunity arises, to advocate solving the problem by technical means, which appears to be both possible and economically feasible.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  80. Another plausible perspective by Errandboy+of+Doom · · Score: 1

    It's pretty evident from the study of climatology that climate change doesn't need our help to happen very rapidly.

    In addition, it's pretty clear we've pumped so many CFCs into the atmosphere at this point, if human climate change can happen, it's unavoidable.

    If this is the case, we need tech and industry to insulate us from the dangers of global warming, whether it's building higher flood walls, or making healthier crops. We can spend our resources in industry on a) more expensive fuel that won't stop the inevitable, or b) innovations to help us address our needs on the fly.

    Industry usually opts for the latter.

    So I guess I'm saying, it's not necessarily a lack of care, or lack of appreciation of the risks here; maybe it's just a different cost benefit analysis. And while I sympathesize with your approach, it's not completely implausible that industry is opting for the better path here.

    1. Re:Another plausible perspective by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I would hardly consider it inevitable, since it is technically and economically feasible to fix enough carbon to offset anthropogenic sources. Assuming that you can raise one billion dollars a year for the purpose, that is.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  81. Sciam by Gat0r30y · · Score: 3, Informative

    Scientific American Did a great article recently on how the Bush Administration has been censoring scientific reports to fit thier particular agenda. It seems an oilman doesn't want oilmen to look like bad people. Who would have guessed? LINK TO ARTICLE

    --
    Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
  82. Who needs proof? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a real shame that BushCo didn't require the same amount of evidence for WMD's in Iraq that they do for gloabl warming.

  83. Polar Bears Going Extinct by avicarmi · · Score: 3, Informative
    The polar bears' ice sheet habitats are literally melting beneath them - putting polar bears at serious risk of extinction.

    The thick multi-year ice essential to polar bears has been shrinking 8 to 10 percent per decade, and already, an area of sea ice roughly equal to twice the size of Texas has melted away. Some studies forecast an ice-free Arctic in summer as early as 2050, spelling certain doom for polar bears.

    The effects of global warming on polar bears can already be seen in the western Hudson Bay, where there has been a 14 percent decline in the Hudson Bay polar bear population over the past 10 years, and polar bears weigh about 15 percent less than they did 30 years ago.

    Polar bears in the United States are also showing the effects of global warming. A recent report by the U.S. Minerals Management service revealed that polar bear drownings, once a rare event in Alaska, are now taking place with greater frequency due to the bears being forced to swim longer distances. Indeed, a new record was established in September of 2005 for the lowest Arctic sea ice extent since satellite monitoring began in the late 1970s.

    However, we can help protect our last remaining polar bears by listing them as an endangered species. Please click on the following links to send a message to:

    Supervisor Scott Schliebe
    Polar Bear Project Leader
    Marine Mammals Management Office

    http://ga3.org/campaign/polar_bears
    http://www.savebiogems.org/polar/takeaction.asp

    --
    -avi
  84. Is global warming really bad? by ttroutma · · Score: 1

    Do the negatives outweigh the benefits? So there are some negatives, coastal areas continue to be more covered in water as they have been slowly since peak glaciation. And on the plus side, papaya's from the midwest and corn crops in the NW Territory. Shipping from Murmansk to Churchill Canada. A NW passage. Blah Blah coastal cities flooded, well, they obviously shouldn't have been in a million year flood zone. It is A Change - what is a bad change, what is a good change?

  85. Re:Here's a simple answer for you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Al Gore ran against Bush.

    Would Gore take a different approach to the environment and scientific research than Bush does?

    Yes. He would.

    Don't compare the generic "a Democratic president" to the specific "President Bush".


    Damn right! He could just lock up all of that nasty greenhouse gas in our lock-box. But until his sanity returns and he can once again continue to save the world, we're in for a bumpy ride. Look up in the sky... made you look.

  86. Save the Polar Bears by avicarmi · · Score: 2, Informative
    The polar bears' ice sheet habitats are literally melting beneath them - putting polar bears at serious risk of extinction.

    The thick multi-year ice essential to polar bears has been shrinking 8 to 10 percent per decade, and already, an area of sea ice roughly equal to twice the size of Texas has melted away. Some studies forecast an ice-free Arctic in summer as early as 2050, spelling certain doom for polar bears.

    The effects of global warming on polar bears can already be seen in the western Hudson Bay, where there has been a 14 percent decline in the Hudson Bay polar bear population over the past 10 years, and polar bears weigh about 15 percent less than they did 30 years ago.

    Polar bears in the United States are also showing the effects of global warming. A recent report by the U.S. Minerals Management service revealed that polar bear drownings, once a rare event in Alaska, are now taking place with greater frequency due to the bears being forced to swim longer distances. Indeed, a new record was established in September of 2005 for the lowest Arctic sea ice extent since satellite monitoring began in the late 1970s.

    However, we can help protect our last remaining polar bears by listing them as an endangered species. Please click on the following links to send a message to:

    Supervisor Scott Schliebe
    Polar Bear Project Leader
    Marine Mammals Management Office

    http://ga3.org/campaign/polar_bears
    http://www.savebiogems.org/polar/takeaction.asp

    --
    -avi
  87. You're THE Dave Martorana?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That was awesome when you played third base and shortstop for the Chicago White Sox in 1991. It was such a rip that you were picked 593rd overall in the draft that year.

    Can I have your autograph?

    1. Re:You're THE Dave Martorana?! by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1
      That was awesome when you played third base and shortstop for the Chicago White Sox in 1991. It was such a rip that you were picked 593rd overall in the draft that year. Can I have your autograph?

      Um... yes. And for only $50. ;)

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
  88. Come on now.... by norman619 · · Score: 1, Informative

    Humans are the cause of global worming? VERY doubtful. Myth: Humans Are Causing Global Warming. Scientists do not agree that humans discernibly influence global climate because the evidence supporting that theory is weak. The scientific experts most directly concerned with climate conditions reject the theory by a wide margin. A Gallup poll found that only 17 percent of the members of the Meteorological Society and the American Geophysical Society think that the warming of the 20th century has been a result of greenhouse gas emissions - principally CO2 from burning fossil fuels. [See Figure II.] Only 13 percent of the scientists responding to a survey conducted by the environmental organization Greenpeace believe catastrophic climate change will result from continuing current patterns of energy use. More than 100 noted scientists, including the former president of the National Academy of Sciences, signed a letter declaring that costly actions to reduce greenhouse gases are not justified by the best available evidence. While atmospheric carbon dioxide has increased by 28 percent over the past 150 years, human-generated carbon dioxide could have played only a small part in any warming, since most of the warming occurred prior to 1940 - before most human-caused carbon dioxide emissions.

    1. Re:Come on now.... by Eggz+Factor · · Score: 1

      C-
      Show your work.

      --
      blah, blah, blah...
    2. Re:Come on now.... by liliafan · · Score: 1

      1800's industrial era, humans have been producing fairly high levels of CO2 by way of coal burning since that period.

      --
      GeekServ Unix Consulting Services (http://www.geekserv.com)
    3. Re:Come on now.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      A Gallup poll found that only 17 percent of the members of the Meteorological Society and the American Geophysical Society think that the warming of the 20th century has been a result of greenhouse gas emissions


      That was in 1991. A year or so later, Gallup reported that most researchers believed that global warming was a reality. Today, about 15 years later, pretty nobody with a brain they're willing to use doubts it any longer.

  89. Your skin IS melting by zukakog · · Score: 1
    Can't we just put this "volcanoes are the problem" urban legend to rest once and for all?

    I can't wait to see how MythBusters does this one!

    Jamie: "We've recreated a volcano here in our workshop."

    Adam: "We're now going to see how high Buster will be launched when the volcano erupts."

    Both: "The pain, the pain!" (as a flaming buster lands on them)

  90. rightwingnuts please explain by dogsucks · · Score: 1

    The earth is warming, we may or may not be contributing to it. Regardless of whether we are we would be foolish not to do something if it prevented us reaching the tipping point beyond which there wont be a comeback. I fail to understand why this is such a political issue, what are the right so afraid of here? Are they afraid of the dent it might put in the billion dollar profits of the oil companies and power companies? As someone else pointed out some kind of carbon trading system would generate whole new industries and opportunities. So again what is the far right so afraid of? And I dont understand why something that is agreed upon by a huge majority of scientists is in dispute here? What have the scientists got to gain? Scientists typically just want to do science, its up to us to decide whether to listen to their results. I guess its like evolution, I mean the majority of scientific consensus is behind it, and as someone once said 'we have the fossils, we win', but for some this is threatening in some way I dont understand. You can have evolution AND believe in God. You can take steps to reduce carbon emissions and maybe slow global warming AND still have a functioning economy.

    1. Re:rightwingnuts please explain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Listen up dumbass, you are part of the problem.

          The very infrastructure by which gives you this forum would not exist if not for these "billion dollar profits of oil and power companies".

            What do you propose, restricting usage of fossil fuels? Dont you think activites not remotley resembling anything but essential services (if they are not then rationed)would ever even take place.

      Forget commerce of which you benefit as you know it, especialy this forum.

      Period end of story, now go back to your fossilized thought process and continue the self induced intellectual comma you are in.

          Its not about the Right Wing its about whats Right and the Science on GW is as flawed as Leftist ideology on Communism...its a losing proposition

  91. Please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shut the fuck up. Idiots like you are why intelligent people can't discuss this subject.

  92. No need for Genocide just yet by aminorex · · Score: 1

    As an alternative to killing several billion people (probably in a war orchestrated for the purpose, or by means of a genetically tailored virus developed under the sponsorship of a wealthy person who has affection for his or her offspring), I would suggest instead just solving the problem of excess anthropogenic carbon emissions. That will result in much less disruption and destruction, and less impediment to human technological progress -- which, I would remind prospective producers of genocide, is much more likely to extend your life than will merely eliminating the competition.

    --
    -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  93. Flying Spaghetti Monster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I welcome our new pasta overlords. Yarr! I'm doing my part to prevent global warming. I'm singing pirate songs and drinking lots of Captain Morgan's rum. Yo ho ho. Fly the Jolly Roger on high!

  94. Just A Thought by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    Maybe the folks at NOAA could hire the likes of Pat Robertson to run a P.R. campaign stating that if the world doesn't cool its respective ass off, then the Lord Almighty will do it for us.

    Just a thought.

  95. OMG what a bunch of whiners! by couch_warrior · · Score: 1

    There is probably no more useless and self-indulgent class of people on the planet than so-called "scientists" working on the federal payroll.
    I have had the miserable and thankless job of providing IT support to these clowns at several federal agencies for the last 20 years.
    Ask them to give up a sun workstation for a Linux box to save cost - and it's a conspiracy to deny them their freedom to conduct research. Ask them to use the enterprise email system instead of sendmail from their workstation so that their email can be screened for viruses and spam, and you're accused of censoring their communications and cutting them off from peer review. Ask them to store their researech on a central database so that they can share results - and they REALLY panic because it might be discovered that 75% of their work is repetetive and redundant - and get their budgets cut.

    Just for the education of the audience, ALL federal employees have to ask for permission before talking to the press about their jobs. This has been the case for decades. The problem isn't censorship, its that "scientists" consider themselves to be an elite race of superhuman enlightened beings for whom rules and laws don't apply.

    At our agency we can't even get them to give up FTP to use SFTP to secure their file transfers. If we even make the suggestion we are the subject of complaints to the agency head for "interfering with their ability to conduct research".

    If you had ever worked around federal scientists, you would very rapidly lose all respect due to their lack of integrity, and you would never take any of their claims seriously.

    --
    "Sic Semper Path of Least Resistance"
  96. By way of counterexample... by aminorex · · Score: 1

    I'm an evangelical Christian, and I seriously considered assassinating Bush during the run-up to Operation Iraqi Liberation, in order to prevent war crimes and crimes against humanity.
    I also am urgently advocating solving the problem of global warming due to anthropogenic carbon surplus. If you can spare a billion dollars a year, please consider solving the problem. I'm more than happy to collaborate with heathens to save all of our children from malnutrition and disease.

    --
    -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  97. Re:The More i hear by virg_mattes · · Score: 1

    > If you go into work and talk shit about your boss, you can't whine about freedom of speech when you get fired.

    You can if your boss is an elected official. That's how the whole "freedom of speech" thing works, and even how it was intended. The First Amendment exists to prevent governmental control of the dissemination of information. Restriction of scientists from reporting the results of research by government officials because it doesn't ken with official policy is inexcusable, and is in fact reason to "whine about freedom of speech". Just because it's government agency is no reason to expect that they should have to restrict their results. Their "boss" isn't the Bush administration, it's the American people at large. Don't forget that.

    Virg

  98. Not literal unless you read it in original languag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope you read well those hebrew languages in the most original form, without alterations. All translations lose the meaning. The Genesis cannot even in theory be word-to-word from God unless you have a complete copy of the original version in the original language.

  99. Reactions to tags and comments by MilenCent · · Score: 1

    The story is not a dupe that I can see, contrary to the tag that has been assigned to it: it was published by the AP on April 6th, today, and I don't see any other stories referring to it. If it's a dupe (just being "yet another" story on Bush science censorship isn't enough), could someone point out the story that it duplicates?

    The story is not flamebait. It consists almost entirely of a quotation from the article, and the quote does not misrepresent the opinions of the researchers. The editorial perspective of Slashdot is pro-science, so they would certainly be on the researchers' side in this.

    That the story is obvious (another tag): Considering that these things keep happening, it's certainly not obvious enough.

    I guess I can't believe people are finding these faults with the story. Am I missing something?

  100. Internet! by Rinisari · · Score: 1

    The Internet can be used for publishing! It's very simple to use a blogging service to publish results or hire one of the many thousands of Slashdotters who are willing to make websites. Given the gravity of such research, I'll bet that many of the web-enlightened Slashdotters would be willing to make the site pro bono.

  101. Why is McCain exempt? by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Informative
    My most sincere hope is that McCain can carry the Republican ticket, and we can wrest the Republican party back from the lunatic fringe.

    What makes you think he's any better? McCain voted for every one of Bush's failed policies, stood shoulder to shoulder with him in 2004 and has his share of lobbyists on his staff payroll doing his part for the K Street Project. Oh, he stood up against Bush on torture. Woohooo, that was a pretty safe departure. He didn't stand up and slam the administration's response to hurricane Katrina, didn't start yapping about campaign finance reform until the Repubs got caught with their hand in the cookie jar. And didn't take a stand on the war in Iraq until the political wind started to shift. He voted for the Credit Card Company give back labeled bankruptcy reform, the Drug Company Medicare Benefit Plan and all of the spending in the 8 TRILLION dollar deficit. That's $90,000 for every family in America.

    I say he's just as corrupt as the rest of them and you're one of the people who supported them.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Why is McCain exempt? by rossifer · · Score: 1

      I say he's just as corrupt as the rest of them and you're one of the people who supported them.

      How did you reach the conclusion that I supported "them"? I haven't been able to vote for a Republican at the national level in many years.

      In the last election, I voted for Badnarik, though if I had still lived in Ohio where the vote was close (I now live in California), I would have voted for Kerry. Not because he's better than Bush, but because he's not Bush.

      But I'd love to continue the discussion: how could I support "them" less?

      Regards,
      Ross

    2. Re:Why is McCain exempt? by rossifer · · Score: 1

      To more substantively respond to your post. I agree that McCain is not perfect, for many of the reasons you mention. However, I wonder how many of his votes that you and I object to are based on his own principles, how many are the result of the necessity of compromise, and how many are because he's bought and paid for.

      His own conscience and the compromise votes (presumably in pursuit of longer term goals in line with his conscience) aren't the problem, IMHO. How much he's bought and paid for is the core issue, and I have to admit that I don't see a whole lot of evidence of that.

      In my final analysis, with all of McCain's questionable statements and votes, he still seems to be the best of the current crop, and if we are going to have a Republican president, I'd really rather it was him than any of the other contenders.

      Regards,
      Ross

    3. Re:Why is McCain exempt? by Templaris · · Score: 1

      Mccain lost in 2000 to Bush because he was more moderate and couldnt gain the backing of the Republican party. As a result, he is not going to make the same mistake twice. So he garners support of fellow Republicans so he can win his party's nomination and then be free to do what he wants.

    4. Re:Why is McCain exempt? by vudmaska · · Score: 1

      ++mod points if I had them.

      Bush beat Mccain in 2000 by resorting to hardball tactics that exemplify everything since. A sad day in history, IMHO. I am to blame. I did not vote.

      McCain tows the line because that is better for his party, he's a better man than most of us, but I wish he would distance himself, at least to the extent that he stands up in the party against recent hegemonal, arrogant miss-steps, that seem, at least to some degree, to have turned the world against us while sqandering the good will of the world following 9/11.

      'They hate us for our freedom' isnt flying anymore and he should publically stick a fork in that idea by showing more respect for the world. I don't see any reason why McCain could not do that. But not if he is still in bed with Bush.

      Kick Bush to the curb and ride him like a sheep at the kiddee rodeo. It could be the best thing Bush does for America.

      http://mountbushmore.com/

      --

      my other sig sucks less

  102. Your skin is melting, rhetorically by inca34 · · Score: 1

    It would serve us well to remember that there is a difference between rhetoric and dialectic. If we are talking about truth and logic, as those who subscribe to the whole Western thought process often do, then we stick to the Aristotelian dialectic and shun the rhetoric since rhetoric just confuses the issue at hand--truth. If you wish to compare the rhetoric between the IDer's and the Bush administration, I don't think it's a hard point to prove, especially given that they were both conceived from the same group--the conservative right. It seems natural that the rhetoric be similar, as it needs to appeal and seem familiar to the same people who have over the years grown to be comforted by it and possibly even need it in order to believe anything, whether it be news or science, fact or fiction, or even religion.

    However, I have not seen much in the way of formal arguments with actual quotations and descriptions of the rhetorical devices used and direct comparisons made between these two groups. It might prove to be an interesting study in some academic sense, but where's the fun in that? It's easier to make sweeping generalizations and such at the problem instead of dealing with people and the issues.

    In any case, back to the point, before we skewer all IDers in general let us make the distinction between the private IDer that keeps to him or herself and does not impose his or her belief upon others and the extroverted loadmouth with a loaded agenda to keep the wool over our children's eyes, thus giving anyone the power to use words to circumvent truth. Now why would anyone ever need to do such a thing... oh wait, maybe this will clear it up in a slightly more on-topic sense: So as you feel your skin cancer forming and watch the ice caps come washing over us, just remember it isn't because of mankind, President Bush says so.

    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true,
    by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful. -- Seneca

  103. Re:Over Simplification by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    The basis on which the government was designed is that power corrupts. The whole idea people miss is that corruption is NORMAL. They should not get put off by that fact. The system is supposed to produce some good as a result of corrupt factions fighting for public support so they can keep their power.

    The system does not work with a corrupt society or a lazy ignorant one...
    We can not continue to allow politicians to "ebay" their votes, and that is just the 1st step towards reasonable recovery.

    I can understand you wanting to save face for voting for the man who will go down in history as the worst president ever; however, self-delusion is not a healthy practice for any reason. On the environment Clinton was clearly BETTER.

  104. This is an engineering problem, why not solution? by BluedemonX · · Score: 0

    I love how all these gloomers and doomers assume that because the planet is getting warmer, it's automatically because of humans. This based on a COMPUTER MODEL of climate, and remember, these can't even predict the weather beyond four days with any reasonable accuracy. Now we're supposed to trust a model telling us what's gonna happen in 150 years?

    Let's suppose that pumping out CO2 is a bad idea. Though I think global warming mantra is nothing short of religion, I believe you! But what's to say that rather than telling everyone to go back to horses and carts and living in yurts, we find engineering solutions to the problem, hm? If we burn butanol rather than gasoline (which we can do in existing cars without modification) we have a net CO2 situation - we're not burning stuff that was underground).

    But even if we can't get out from under oil because all the folks in charge are oil barons, we can sure as hell figure out how to build carbon dioxide sinks and somehow get this out of the atmosphere. If engineering is the problem, engineering can sure as hell find a solution. We can tell the eco-freaks to shut it when we build nuke plants, and engineer sinks.

    Of course once we clear the CO2 out of the atmosphere and it's STILL getting warmer, we can say I told you so.

    --

    --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
  105. Negligent Misrepresentation is actionable in tort by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we have a bunch of evidence about global warming, and we pick the 5% while ignoring the 95%--how accurate of a conclusion can we draw?

    Will our decisions based on that be wise? Will the results we create based on "faulty intelligence" be the desired outcome?

    Can we blame the scientists for giving us bad intelligence and fool the public into believing that by using TV & newspapers?

    Haven't we seen something similar and aren't we already paying a huge price for that?

    In U.S. there is something called "negligent misrepresentation"--it is easier to prove than fraud. Look it up. Seriously.

    "Unlike fraud, negligent misrepresentation only requires that the defendant make a false statement negligently, i.e., without reasonable care." - Jaime Drozd Allen (KCBA)

    It applies in a business context. We citizens are paying taxes, and our elected officials are expected to do things for our benefit--if negligent misrepresentation cannot be applied to elected officials, then we must change that so we can prevent further damage to our country's health.

  106. The Young Republican bots are out in force today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To the morons who modded Brandioch "troll" for saying that Al Gore would do things differents regards the environment than Bush, a little history lesson:

    Al Gore was the environmentalist Senator. He wrote the book Earth In The Balance. He made statements to the effect that we had to move past the internal combustion engine. Basically, he less of a stereotypical Dem than a socially and fiscally conservative Green, and he was lampooned for it for most of the 90's.

    So would Al Gore have taken a different approach to the environment and scientific research than Bush? Yes. He would.

  107. Bush, Science, and Galileo by Pchelka · · Score: 1

    I think some people are missing the point here. There is a good reason why the intelligent design issue keeps coming up in any discussion regarding the Bush Administration's science policies. Bush's decisions and public statements have continously undermined science in the United States - from his beliefs on intelligent design, the re-organization of NASA to emphasize manned missions rather than science, to the actions of his administration regarding the environment and global warming. The intelligent design debate and the censuring of scientists who warn of the impacts of global warming are intimately connected through Bush's personal beliefs and the policies he makes as a result of these beliefs.

    Maybe the debate on /. isn't the most sophisticated, and it does tend towards flames from both sides of the ID controversy, and name-calling between Democrats and Republicans. However, the fact that these same issues keep coming up shows that a lot of people are deeply concerned about the way the U.S. government appears to be stirring up anti-science sentiment, undermining our educational system, and encouraging intolerance and religious fundamentalism.

    This whole thing sort of reminds me of what happened to Galileo. People didn't really want to accept the way his observations would change the way we view the world. He also really irritated a lot of powerful people in the church, through both his scientific studies and some of his political actions. The result was that the church imprisoned him, in an attempt to cover up what they considered a blasphemous and incorrect view of the world. Of course, most people now believe Galileo was right about the objects in our solar system. I'm surprised that the parallels between what happened to Galileo and the ID/evolution debate and the treatment of the global warming scientists hasn't been brought up here before.

    Galileo supposedly once said: "I do not feel obliged to believe that the same god who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use." Lately, it seems that politicians and the general public have lost all sense of reason, and are trying to deny what science is telling us about the world around us.

  108. Re:Not literal unless you read it in original lang by jdavidb · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the help.

  109. Has anyone read State of Fear by Michael Crichton? by plazman30 · · Score: 1

    Very interesting read. Makes one realize, that, even if the book is wrong, everyone has an agenda. Sure Bush and Cheney are on the side of the oil companies. But who's side are the global warming people on? The side of the planet? Trust me folks. The planet doesn't need our help. If we wiped ourselves off the planet, new species would evolve to replace us and the planet would go on until the next intelligent species finds our fossils. The only thing we're trying to save is OURSELVES.

  110. Which version of the Genesis tale? by edremy · · Score: 1

    I believe the literal understanding of Genesis is the most likely explanation of what happened,

    Umm, which version of Genesis? Genesis 1 is very clear: plants and animals were created first, then humans. (The order is earth, plants, sun, animals) Genesis 2 is very clear: humans were created first, then the plants and animals. (The order is earth/sun, Adam, plants, animals, Eve) Genesis 1 is very clear that men and women were created at the same time; not true in Genesis 2.

    Which do you believe to be true? Why is the other one not true? How can you claim to be a biblical literalist if you don't believe that both are true, even when they contradict?

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
    1. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      Whenever someone talks about the Bible and says something is "very clear," it's always a sure sign that they are insisting one possible understanding is true when others are valid. I've done it myself, and still catch myself doing it from time to time.

    2. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by edremy · · Score: 1
      I'm a little confused why you think there can be any other interpretation. I'm merely reading the text here: surely you've done the same yourself?

      Genesis 1
      Genesis 2

      Please explain to me which you believe, or give me an explanation for how both can be true. Don't dodge- you're the self-proclaimed literalist. Surely you can handle the horde of self-contradictions in the Bible?

      --
      "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
    3. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      You should check out documents like How to Ask a Question. Show me you've done some homework first.

    4. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by geoffspear · · Score: 1

      You should go into politics. You're very good at dodging questions when answering them would show that you're a hypocritical moron.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    5. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by digitallife · · Score: 1

      You can't have your cake and eat it too. If you believe the bible literally, then any obvious contradictions make your position look very, very weak.

      To me it seems a stretch to think that some ancient text has any answers about the universe for modern day humanity, but at least those who believe it to be figurative or metaphorical don't look completely blinded by their desire to have a big daddy taking responsibility for them and everything.

    6. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by Stealth+Potato · · Score: 1
      What the zark are you smoking, man? :-)

      That's one hell of a brazen dodge. He asked you a pretty simple and direct question - PMuse observed what seems to him to be two contradictory statements in the bible. He then asked you which of these statements you believe to be true, or alternately, why you feel there is no contradiction at all. I can't imagine why you would refuse to answer this simple question, except that perhaps you have realized that you cannot logically defend something your narrow worldview compels you to defend.

    7. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by edremy · · Score: 1
      Ah, I see. You can't answer the question. Instead, you'll try to deflect blame onto me for asking an unclear question and cut and run from the actual issue. Do you really understand the issue and the history of the Bible?

      I *have* done my homework. I have a better than layman's understanding of both evolution and early Christian history. I understand why the Bible is self-contradictory in numerous places- it's an amalgam of multiple creation myths that don't necessary have much to do with each other. In the case of Genesis, it's a mashup of two different stories: you can tell them apart by how they refer to the creator deity. Genesis 1 through 2:3 is from the polytheist version of the tale with Elohim (plural) as the creator god, 2:4 and on from the older Jewish version (YHWH). The author of the first few books managed to remove most of the polytheistic elements from the Elohim sources, although hints remain.

      Now, back to the *very* simple question. Which version of the Genesis tale is the correct one? You claim that Genesis is the correct record of how life came to be. Fine: all I want to know is which one. This is not a complex question. There are even good rebuttals to the issue- I'm surprised that you don't know them. Any biblical literalist who wants to debate evolution better have them available at the drop of a hat. As a side note, I'd encourage you to do some serious reading on biblical scholarship. Elaine Pagels has some wonderful books on biblical history, although she focuses on early Christian history rather than the Old Testament. I'd also recommend Robert Alter's translation of Genesis as a really wonderful resource that captures both the scholarship and poetry of Genesis.

      --
      "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
    8. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by 3nd32 · · Score: 1

      Okay, I'll attempt this one. Anyone can feel free to disagree with me, I'm hardly an expert.

      First, my source: BibleGateway - New International Version.

      Reading this, it states that no plants of the field had yet sprung up when humans were created. This does not mean there were NO plants, it means there were no CULTIVATED plants. Trees aren't "plants of the field".

      It continues to describe the creation of Adam and Eve. This also does not contradict Genesis 1. It is a more detailed account of that creation. Saying "God created Man and Woman" in no way contradicts "God created Adam then Eve".

      In this translation, it states "Now the LORD God had formed out of the ground all the beasts of the field and all the birds of the air. He brought them to the man to see what he would name them; and whatever the man called each living creature, that was its name." This would seem to indicate that the animals had been formed before Adam was, and they were presented to him later for naming.

    9. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      PMuse observed what seems to him to be two contradictory statements in the bible

      ... and hasn't got the foggiest idea what Christians actually believe about those two statements and why they don't contradict. If he'd indicated he already knew WHY Christians don't believe those statements are in contradiction (i.e., he already knew what explanation Christians have) but found that the explanation still didn't resolve things for him, and offered a reason why not, then it'd be clear that it'd be worth my time to dig into the details with him. It's like solving a problem with your computer. To say, "Well, I've got this problem, what's the solution?" doesn't say nearly the same thing as, "Well, I've got this problem, and I tried A, but it didn't work, so I tried B, but the problem with that was ..."

      There are many, many, many places on the web where someone can look to see explanations for all kinds of alleged contradictions in the Bible. This one is about as easy as "Genesis 6:15 says the ark was 450 feet long, but Joshua 3:14-15 says two men carried it on their shoulders across a river." But he can't be bothered to check to see if there's a reason Christians have never noticed this "contradiction" before. No, clearly to him the reason is that Christians must be out of their minds.

      If someone wants to know WHY Christians don't think those passages conflict, and is clearly willing to put forth some minimal effort to find out, and is then willing to discuss the results of his search, I might be willing to talk with him. But for someone who's starting out by saying, "Nope, the only reason Christians think this is they're nuts," it's just not worth my time.

    10. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      There are even good rebuttals to the issue- I'm surprised that you don't know them.

      I'm afraid you missed my point. I do know them. And if you already knew them, you'd've done better to start by indicating that you already knew them, as well, and what problem you have with them.

      Any biblical literalist who wants to debate evolution better have them available at the drop of a hat.

      I didn't post here today to debate evolution. I posted to make a funny comment about fundamentalists and slashdot.

    11. Re:Which version of the Genesis tale? by edremy · · Score: 1

      Reading this, it states that no plants of the field had yet sprung up when humans were created. This does not mean there were NO plants, it means there were no CULTIVATED plants. Trees aren't "plants of the field".

      A little iffy if you go back to the original Hebrew. Gen 2:5-6, "Now no shrub of the field had yet grown on the earth, and no plant of the field had yet sprouted, for the Lord God had not caused it to rain on the earth, and there was no man to cultivate the ground. 2:6 Springs would well up from the earth and water the whole surface of the ground." The first term translated as shrub in Hebrew is "siakh", which refers to uncultivated plants, the second is "'esev", which refers to cultivated plants. In either case the implication of the author is most likely "before there were plants".

      Note that this also contradicts Gen 1:2 and 1:6, which implies that the Earth was covered in water first and God seperated created dry land second

      In this translation, it states "Now the LORD God had formed out of the ground all the beasts of the field and all the birds of the air. He brought them to the man to see what he would name them; and whatever the man called each living creature, that was its name." This would seem to indicate that the animals had been formed before Adam was, and they were presented to him later for naming.

      Decent try, but still not quite good enough. Gen2:18 (the verse before your quote) makes it clear that animals did *not* exist before Adam was created- "The Lord God said, "It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a companion for him who corresponds to him." You can try to claim that this refers to Eve, but she doesn't come along until 2:21 when it's obvious the animals aren't enough.

      BTW, thanks for taking a serious stab at this. jdavidb doesn't seem to be real interested in an actual discussion. I'd love for some serious bible historian who can read the actual Hebrew to correct me if I'm wrong.

      --
      "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  111. New study by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All's I would like to know is how many campaigners of this sort, and so called "experts" drive to work

  112. Silicon Valley commute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I recall reading, actually years back, on /., a particularly interesting comment about why it was, with all the brilliant minds in Silicon Valley, that they had such a horrendous traffic and commuting issue. I mean if they put there minds to it, they could solve this. You'd think. Start with dropping the American insistence on their ranch houses, with their neat little manicured lawns and start building up. Frank Lloyd Wright was wrong - rather, I've always been impressed with the European cities and landscape, which is quite beautiful (I'm thinking of Berlin, or Austria for example, not the Ruhr valley perhaps) where they might live in a small apt, but have a plot of land outside the city, i.e. vikendhaz (weekend house) to use the Hungarian term. Americans, with their vast amount of land, waste it with minimalls, "Town Centers", and the requisite massive parking lots and roads roads roads required to support this habit, probably helped in no small part by corrupt politics allied with construction companies and DOT, subsidized by massive federal dollars.

  113. Climate Economics by atlasdropperofworlds · · Score: 1

    "Although Bush and his top advisers have said that Earth is warming and human activity has contributed to this, they have questioned some predictions and caution that mandatory limits on carbon dioxide could damage the nation's economy."

    Wars could also damage a nations economy. Good thing he didn't... d'oh!

  114. Re:yum by ccarson · · Score: 1

    Apparently, the Earth magnetic field has decreased by 10% in the last 10 years. I'm an electrical engineer and during my studies in sub-atomic physics, I learned that a particles velocity can be effected by magnetic fields. I keep hearing about the increased activity of our Sun (it's been getting hotter) and I believe it's possible that more of the Sun's radiation is penetrating the Earth's magnetic field due to it being weaker. If more radiation hits the Earth and the Sun is spewing out more heat, shouldn't that also increase the overall temperature of the Earth and can global warming be attributed to this? I've been bouncing this idea in my head for a while now and I can't see why this MAY not be true.

  115. McCain exempt? He's better than most of them! by miller701 · · Score: 1
    didn't start yapping about campaign finance reform until the Repubs got caught with their hand in the cookie jar.

    What part of McCain-Feingold http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCain-Feingold DON'T you understand? It took forever for that to get passed, and he still works for campaign finance reform.

    The pharmacutical thing: He's from Arizona and there's a lot of retired people there.

  116. Dada21: TROLL! Re:Throw out the coin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    >> Clinton was no better, no matter what the Progressives might say.

    > Care to offer any evidence for this statement? What scientific claims were squelched by the Administrative branch of the U.S. government while Clinton was in office?

    > I'm sure that you have plenty of examples are aren't just stating your personal opinion as fact. Right?

    Sorry, wrong.

    You must be new here, but Dada21 is a fucking troll. Everything is a "teh gub'mint suxx0rs!!1! Free Market rulez!"

    He has something like an opinion, except since when has ignorance become an opinion?

  117. Re:We have Super Computers working On it right now by atlasdropperofworlds · · Score: 1

    See, Heisenberg applies to climate science too!

  118. I like my Bush Warmer anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dont you!

          GW is todays Boogeymen. Yesterday it was Y2K. Before that it was the Overpopulation Bomb and before that it was the so called earth axis shift.

          GW adherents, your planet is wobbly as are your brains. In order to relieve the pressure and save us all of the trouble debunking every flawed doomsday scenario (other than the real and pressing scenario of terrorists and their nuclear ambitions) you present and then parade around like you actually have a clue, climb onto this new amusement ride and dont pay no mind to the abscence of tracks and that big rocket motor, we assure you, its perfectly safe and no it will not harm the environment any more than your misunderstanding of ultra complex natural dynamics you simply refuse to acknowledge you cannot prove definitively.

    In other words, enjoy the trip to where global warming is not a factor human or otherwise...frickin Pluto!

    Interesting how the Global Warming Leftists have no problem suspending belief in this but to ask them if God could exist or have created all we see and then to present to them a plausible scenario they then vehemently deny that and defend the science they created to bolster their GW paranoia and eschew any possibility in creation other than something from nothing, alla the Big Schwang.

    Thats just like their Global Warming theory, something from nothing!

  119. ohhhhh, SNAP! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, some people have a problem discerning fantasy from reality.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:ohhhhh, SNAP! by AaronBrethorst · · Score: 1

      interesting, thanks for the link

      --
      No, but I used to work for Microsoft.
  120. "Search for the Holy Grail" covers all in life by jhml · · Score: 1

    "Help! Help! I am being repressed"

  121. Re:Has anyone read State of Fear by Michael Cricht by Warlock7 · · Score: 2

    How about being on the side of humanity and it's continued survival on the planet?

  122. Slashkos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    News for Sniveling Parasites with an Overgrown Sense of Entitlement. Politics that Don't Work, Have Never Worked, and Will Never Work.

    1. Re:Slashkos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for your deep insight AC.

  123. Re:yum by qeveren · · Score: 1

    I don't think solar particle radiation does much to heat the Earth's lower atmosphere, so I doubt changes to our magnetic field are going to do very much in terms of the actual climate.

    --
    Don't just stand there, get that other dog!
  124. Run your own climate model at home by HoneyBeeSpace · · Score: 1

    If you want to duplicate any of the work the climate scientists have done, you can try with EdGCM, a NASA climate model that has been ported to Win/Mac and wrapped in a GUI.

  125. treason by DennisInDallas · · Score: 0, Troll

    There is NO global warming! Scientists that claim otherwise should be charged with treason. We can not tolerate this type of irresponsibility in a time of war. They can't really be scientists at all or they would be saying these things. They're just a bunch of Godless commies that want to say bad things about our president. They're probably all child pornographers, too. TAP their phones this instant!

    1. Re:treason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey Dumbass number 2, no ones saying there is no Global Warming, the key controversey is over alleged "man made global warming" of which you cannot seem to grasp the distinction of.

            Get it right or die...from Global Warming of course!

  126. Re:Has anyone read State of Fear by Michael Cricht by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're not supposed to do that?

  127. Models have one big factor that is still a guess by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    That being the interaction between temperature and the water vapor level.

    To get worrysome levels of global warming from CO2 levels you have to postulate a strong positive feedback between CO2 caused warming (which pretty much everybody agrees will be small but real) and water vapor levels. These elevated water vapor levels will in turn cause additional warming and drive even more water into the atmosphere. The extent that this feedback happens is the key unknown factor in climate models.

    Of course there are disagreements. Modelers can plug pretty much any number into the model and look at the results. The confidence levels in any of these numbers isn't high. Hence the wide range of possible outcomes.

    Getting backcasts right would be a great place to start. That's how most modelers validate their assumptions. Climate modelers have CO2 levels and IIRC long term temperature infered from isotope mixes in ice cores. This is by no means geographically complete and it is known that non-intuative things happen with weather patterns. In recent geological history the upwelling of mountain ranges and the resulting rock weathering has caused a drop in CO2 levels that we have basically undone. We have'nt undone the changes in weather patterns these mountain ranges have caused (little things like the asian monsoon pattern) nor do we have ice core data that far back. I will freely admit backcasting climate is to say the least problematic. It's still the only way (short of waiting) we have of validating models.

    But what do I know, I've only modeled much simpler systems with much better historical data sources professionally (that being power generation and transmission). My intuition is that the historic climate data is also driven somewhat by political agenda and the modelers being aware of this will take it as license to throw out historic data that is'nt in line with their own agenda. Peer review will be tested, consensis science in such an environment is particularly suspect.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  128. Total and Utter Bull by ipour · · Score: 1

    This latest round about scientists being muzzled is utter and total bullshit. Between blogs, Slashdot, and environmental activist sites, these guys have absolutely NO problem getting out their point of view, either directly or indirectly.

  129. Said it before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I'll say it again.

    It's easy to see if Global warming is real. If the polar ice caps melt, sea level will rise. If the caps expand, sea level will drop. By 10's of meters up, or 100's of meters down. (High and low from previous interglacials, and glacials. We have been near a high for the past 6,000 years, so we are near the top of the cycle.)

    So, to establish the case, how many meters has the seal level risen in the last few years? What's that, NONE?

    Come back when there is real evidence, not just the panic of the week.

    I don't see real evidence from either side. Just lots of posturing, and lots of ignorant pro's and anti's.

  130. Email discussion with a friend by wastedbrains · · Score: 1

    a friend and I our currently debating this topic part of it with good links follows: >>> Here's a very professional, non-sensational letter sent to Senators Frist and Daschle from more than 1,000 scientists across the country Many are from major research universities. Notice this particular point "computer simulations do not reproduce the late 20th century warmth if they include only natural climate forcings such as emissions from volcanoes and solar activity. The warmth is only captured when the simulations include forcings from human-emitted greenhouse gases present in the atmosphere."

    http://go.ucsusa.org/global_environment/global_war ming/page.cfm?pageID=1264#Inst

    This is actually one of the few things that I can find, that the IPCC overall releases reports supporting global warming, and this is why I am still pretty much undecided, they release good research and facts supporting their theory. The problem is even their reports never paint near as dire of situation as all the media tries to report about global warming. It still puts out many good points, but all their findings are less than a degree of change and we have records of other rapid temperature changes in the past such as the link jesse first sent out. Also, we dont have the good of temperature data for more than 100, years or so seeing heating in one half doesnt seem to be a large data set. Seeing some warming when on a large climate scale we are still coming out of an ice age and expecting to be warming (http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/ice_ages.html). In fact the IPCC report says we have shown most of the heating in the last 50 years (and some reports claim it is even more noticeable around the most industrialized countries, because we also are the most deforested, and our gauges are nearest to cities(see below)), but if you look we actually cooled from 1950 until 1975 according to public data.

    During the last 100 years there have been two general cycles of warming and cooling recorded in the U.S. We are currently in the second warming cycle. Overall, U.S. temperatures show no significant warming trend over the last 100 years (1). This has been well - established but not well - publicized. (same link as above)

    Dr. Patrick Michaels has demonstrated this effect is a common problem with ground- based recording stations, many of which originally were located in predominantly rural areas, but over time have suffered background bias due to urban sprawl and the encroachment of concrete and asphalt ( the "urban heat island effect"). The result has been an upward distortion of increases in ground temperature over time(2). Satellite measurements are not limited in this way, and are accurate to within 0.1 C. They are widely recognized by scientists as the most accurate data available. Significantly, global temperature readings from orbiting satellites show no significant warming in the 18 years they have been continuously recording and returning data. -A scientific Discussion of Climate Change, Sallie Baliunas, Ph.D., Harvard- Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and Willie Soon, Ph.D., Harvard- Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

    (Ziegler, 1998). Again, we have a natural mechanism, correlated to periods of high sea level, for warming the poles that is independent of CO2 levels. -http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/~polsen/nbcp/phyto.h tml (sorry for the bold and colors copy and past does weird stuff)

    I did have a harder time finding alot about computer simulations that weren't directly tied to the IPCC. Computer simulations can't reproduce next fridays weather, couldnt predict Katrina until days away, can't predict historic weather based on known test data with in the ranges we have

    --
    Dan Mayer: my blog, essays, art, etc
    1. Re:Email discussion with a friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes and all this proves is that this computer model shows a positive reaction for the desired result when specific data is input ala man made emmissions.

          Nothing more.

  131. Re:This is an engineering problem, why not solutio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think lowering the amount of CO2 would be the proper thing to do since there is some amount required to sustain life on the planet. Also, Methane is a problem, so engineers need build fart sinks as well. Lord knows that farts are a huge contributer to pollution. I have this theory, since quite a bit of environmentalists are vegitarians, and vegitables produce large amounts of farts (ever eat a veggie burger?), environmentalists are inadvertantly causing global warming.

  132. Missing the point by nephridium · · Score: 1
    Might be redundant, but I'll make this post anyway.

    Whether global warming is occurring and to what extend humans are involved is not the question! How we prevent or at least slow down its effects (desertification, floods, hurricanes etc.) is the question that needs to be answered.

    When looking for solutions for complex problems you have to ask the right questions.

    --


    And when you gaze long enough into the code, the code will also gaze into you.
  133. defending science from political interference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The manipulation, suppression, and distortion of climate science by the Bush administration is just the tip of the iceberg. Political appointees have misused science on issues from mercury pollution to childhood lead poisoning to breast cancer.

    In addition to releasing its two reports on the Bush administration's unprecedented level of political interference in science, the Union of Concerned Scientists is actively organizing scientists and citizens to defend science from misuse for political reasons.

    Scientists, engineers, and health professionals who want to show support for independent science should sign the scientists' statement on scientific integrity at http://www.ucsusa.org/scientific_integrity/interfe rence/scientists-signon-statement.html Other concerned citizens can sign the citizens call to action http://www.ucsusa.org/forms/rsi-activist-enrollmen t-form.html

    There is also legislation to restore scientific integrity in federal policy making. Urge your representative and senators to co-sponsor the legislation (or thank them for doing so) here: http://ucsaction.org/campaign/9_14_05_political_in terference_science_senate

  134. Re:The Young Republican bots are out in force toda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    talk is cheap, what did Gore actually accomplish?

  135. Re:This is an engineering problem, why not solutio by uncadonna · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This based on a COMPUTER MODEL of climate

    false

    from sci.environment today:

    i will point out that the argument from classical radiative physics is very well known for more than a century. i understand from some of your previous posts that you are most sceptical and disbelieving of large numerical models requiring extensive computation. i therefore suggest you read the following paper

    Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, Fifth Series, page 237 et seq., April 1896. 'On the Influence of Carbonic Acid in the Air upon the Temperature of the Ground' by Svante Arrhenius

    i further suggest that you equip yourself with pencil and paper and work through the arguments presented therein.

    this is a very nice paper and may be verified with some elementary calculation, with no use of elaborate computer models. i have done so and satisfied myself that the result is sound.

    if you are able to find some glaring error in the physics or the mathematics in this paper, i am sure you will forever be famous.

    these can't even predict the weather beyond four days with any reasonable accuracy

    Irrelevant. Waves are not predictable but tides are.

    we find engineering solutions to the problem, hm?

    yes please. Nukes, I think.

    we can sure as hell figure out how to build carbon dioxide sinks and somehow get this out of the atmosphere. If engineering is the problem, engineering can sure as hell find a solution.

    Not much surer than hell, though. The scales are daunting, and by the nature of the problem we can't solve it by applying more energy. People are working on it, but the solutions so far all turn out to be either non-functional or more expensive than just finding ways to cope with less energy. I'm sure if you have any specific ideas you can find some funding to develop it, though. Don't let me discourage you in this regard. We NEED such a solution. It's just not sure there is one.

    --
    mt
  136. Re:Models have one big factor that is still a gues by uncadonna · · Score: 1

    Since the models will never be perfect they will always have a weakest link. At present, on the radiative timescale at least, it is not the water vapor feedback but the cloud radiative feedback. Paleoclimate validation of models as you suggest is seriously pursued. My guess is that the reason you don't hear about it in the general press is because people are walking on eggshells around the huge subset of the population who have convinced themselves that time started a few thousand years ago. Nobody wants to stir that mess around.

    --
    mt
  137. Don't Worry by keithltaylor · · Score: 1

    To Quote George Carlin on "saving the planet": "The planet is fine.... its the people that are fucked."

  138. Re:Models have one big factor that is still a gues by bigpat · · Score: 1

    consensis science in such an environment is particularly suspect.

    I definately didn't mean to imply that it must be true just because most people say it is... regardless of if the people we are talking about are wearing lab coats or have a Phd next to their names it isn't science to take their word for it.

    My point was just that it is not merely a correlation between observed warming and observed rises in CO2 levels. We have testable theories that can be tested. And that is the point of science. As you point out some of those test rely on suspect historical data, and future trends will be proof too late in some models of climate change.

    Personally, I find the reasoning compelling that global warming is happening and is caused by gas emmisions from people's activities. And I think it is compelling enough to take action. But what is not clear to me is that negative effects will ultimately outweigh the positive effects. There will be winners and losers for sure, but if we just stopped harnessing fossil fuels in any wholesale way today, then there would just be losers. So, even if you agree on the science I think you can disagree on the politics reasonably based on the tenuous details of global warming.

    But I live in the Northeast US which under some models sees a rise of perhaps 10 degrees of average winter temperatures and small increase in rainfall. So, I stand to gain from global warming. I am just hoping sea levels don't rise by more than a few feet, or else I could be living on an island. Even that doesn't sound too bad as long as ocean temperatures go up a bit around here.

  139. Government shouldn't do science by Sloppy · · Score: 1
    This isn't really a Bush-specific problem; the real error is that anyone in government somehow has a say in what gets researched. Bush just sticks out in this particular situation because he chooses to use this power. But the vulnerability remains, even if you replace this particular politician.

    Our elected officials must be accountable for how our tax money is spent (that's how we the people get control, even if it's indirect) and therefore they must have the power to say Yes/No to these expenditures.

    Yet, at the same time, it's ridiculous that they should be allowed to influence the progress of science.

    The only solution to this dilemma, is for tax money to not be used for science. (Or education, or religion, or any of a thousand other things where there is not a 100% concensus on what our all our values are.) We should be directly funding this stuff outselves, without government's involvement. If you want to fund weather research, you should be able to do so, and someone else should be allowed to fund "faith-based initiatives" if that's what they care about, instead. Nobody should have to lose.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  140. Capturing/Extracting CO2 - argue til the cows ... by planckscale · · Score: 1
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dioxide#Captur ing.2FExtracting_CO2

    In the reference above, there are several ways to remove the CO2. The most productive remover of CO2 is the ocean, but not enough of it reaches the surface to interact with the atmosphere to reverse the trends. The second most productive is plants (so yes, do plant a tree). However, I read on Slashdot of a third mechanical means of removing CO2 that I can't recall, but produces a toxic by-product. Why not focus on getting the public involved in a solution? We can all bitch and complain until our trousers are soaked but if there's a solution to global warming, should we be focusing on that? Maybe we can convince a member of our congress that the toxic by-product will be benificial to the military machine.

    --
    Namaste
  141. Global warming won't cause a boreal ozone hole by Phronesis · · Score: 3, Informative
    One of the robust predictions of climate models is that the stratosphere will cool, making the prevelance of PSCs (polar stratospheric clouds) more likely. Ozone-destroying chemistry is accelerated by having ice crystal surfaces available. Thus it is not true that there's no relationship between global warming and the ozone hole.

    But even in the presence of PSCs you need stratospheric chlorine levels above a threshold value before substantial ozone depletion takes place. That's there wasn't any ozone hole before 1980 despite plentiful PSCs over Antarctica. By the time anyone thinks we'll have enough cooling for significant PSC levels over the Arctic, CFC concentrations will have fallen well below the threshold for ozone hole formation, so it's very difficult to imagine a polar ozone hole even in the presence of very strong global warming.

  142. The issue is credibility of government agencies by apsmith · · Score: 1

    Though I used the word censorship, I wasn't referring to the First Amendment. Obviously these guys don't have legal grounds to sue, or this would be in the courts already (assuming US courts haven't been compromised by the past 40 years of right-wing dominance, another story).

    The problem is, the government works for us. We, the taxpayers, pay for these services, including responsible and accurate scientific information. Because we, through our representatives, created and staffed them, we respect and trust government agencies. People who work at government agencies have a lot of credibility. If our representative goverment has placed mid-level bureaucrats in agencies for the purpose of muzzling some of their people in order to suppress information we need, they are violating the trust we place in them.

    Unfortunately, we only have the opportunity to kick our government to the curb every 2 years - and that'll only work if our election system hasn't been compromised by 40 years of right-wing dominance. Unfortunately, I'm hearing from a lot of scientists who ARE seeking new employers - in other nations. Unless things change real soon, the US is close to driving off a very big cliff...

    --

    Energy: time to change the picture.

  143. I'm not asking for perfect. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    My impression was that clouds generated negative feedback (lowering the albido of the earth in the visible spectrum more then they reflect IR back, perhaps contributing to 'global dimming'). They are a factor that needs considering with all the others.

    I'm asking for a model to reasonably backcast before it is used to justify turning the economy upside down. Current ranges of predicted outcome go from 'no problem' to 'learn to swim'.

    My impression is that backcasting is not reported because the researchers that are interested in validating there models are'nt the same ones that sell newspapers and secure grant money with dire predictions every three months.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    1. Re:I'm not asking for perfect. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but nobody knows if more water vapor causes more clouds, nor whether more either causes more or less warming. Which is a ridiculous situation because most of the Earth's greenhouse effect is caused by water vapor.

  144. New Orleans is an important port not city. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    It is not an important city.

    The port is running back at near 100% right now. So is the off-shore oil terminal.

    How's the city doing?

    That tells you what's important.

    Face facts there is no money to be made rebuilding one of the worst slums in the USA. It will not be done. Look for the nineth ward park in ten years. Perhaps I'm giving the government too much credit for common sense.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  145. So much money do they want? by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Not that I would be acidic, how much money do these guys want that they didn't get? I have absolutely no reason, without knowing them, to believe that they are remotely telling the truth. For all I know, someone in the Dems could be telling them - if you help us, we'll help you. It goes on all the time.

    The amazing thing is not that Bush is manipulating science - all political parties do. For years Democrats have muzzled any inquiry about the cost effectiveness and economic impact of a wide variety of government regulation, and blithly ignored for four decades mountains of economic evidence that show the welfare state posited by LBJ has utterly failed. And they still do. And what's affirmative action but turning science of natural selection and free enterprise upside down? And of course, Rachel Carson's DDT damnation has probably killed at least 100 million people since she wrote it. So right off the wheel, this whole Bush anti-science thing is so much lies from the Democrats. Scientists that work for the government are like puppets that are made to do whatever each political party wants. For christ sakes, Roosevelt took a bunch of peacenik communists and got them to build the atomic bomb for us!

    Be that as it may, why is that whenever a scientist cries foul, there's a crowd of that political ilk that runs to their defense like they are little angelic victims, little jesus's on their little crosses of knowledge for the benefit of all mankind. They aren't. The persecuted scientist is a myth. Even Galileo really went to jail more calling the pope and idiot, and get this, for making claims that he himself could not devise an experiment to prove. Read, please read, some of his work directly, before buying into that nonsense.

    Fortunately, the public as a whole sees the scientific establishment for what it is: guys and gals researching new products to try and make a few bucks. When the general public thinks of "scientist", they don't just think about the 1950's image of the brave man of knowledge working feverishly to develop a cure for cancer, they think of the doctors that stop by in the hospital for two minutes while billing for an hour. They don't think of Doctor McCoy, they think of the Doc that left a sponge in Aunt Sarah. They don't think of Spock. They think of Ron Popeil or that Carl guy that said the earth was going to freeze to death. To their company, you can add the guys that appear on TV with Phds talking about how cheeseburgers will kill you, how you aren't supposed to eat this or that product, and then two years later have someone reverse them. The public eats up the sensational stories about how universities are suing each other trying to patent human genes, about how, and yes, the one that soured me on the hallowed nature of science, about how scientists deliberately gave bogus drugs to patients dying of sepsis all in an effort to pump up their stock price. In the meantime, the quiet, slow and steady successes that generally constitute real science are completely and unfortunately ignored, becuase, the tv preachers of science have so completely dominated the field.

    As a result, scientists complaining about being muzzled have very little credibility. You people wonder why folks would be so stupid as to buy into crap like intelligent design, or how Americans could blithely ignore a fairly large body of evidence that suggests human induced climate change is a reality, and, all they do is see it snowing in april, think about the doctors that screwed them, the promises of cures and research that failed, and rightfully decide that scientists are probably full of shit and there's no reason to believe them at all.

    The bottom line is this: If cars flew, fusion actually arrived, cancer were cured, and the docs did not leave a sponge in aunt sarah or could make up their minds about what drugs to take and what to eat, then, scientists would probably believable to the average joe. But right now, they have about as much crediblity as a TV preacher, which is to say, not a lot.

    --
    This is my sig.
  146. Americans not getting the full story? by CherniyVolk · · Score: 1


    A month ago, it hailed in San Diego. HAIL... not a little bit, but a lot; sustained for atleast an hour or two, and keep in mind were aren't talking about the Yukon here, but San Diego. In the mountains, maybe Big Bear or Alpine? Noooo...

    Mission Beach, Mission Valley, Mira Mesa, La Jolla, Kearny Mesa, Downtown San Diego... San Diego, in all it's sunny glory got hail. Where you can go the entire year without a "coat", frozen precipitation formed below 800 millibars. Even Tijuana Mexico got the surprise package...

    We don't need to be told by scientists that the climate is changing.

    1. Re:Americans not getting the full story? by chawly · · Score: 1

      Agreed ! And don't forget the exceptional twisters, hurricanes etc. The message that falls on your head is the one that makes you think ! Perhaps George Bush should get out more ?

      --
      How many beans make five, anyhow ? ... Charles Walmsley
  147. WTO just found against Canada by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    Stop dumping your excess wood at below cost and we'll stop tarriffing it.

    You might want to keep up on these issues.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    1. Re:WTO just found against Canada by RetroGeek · · Score: 1

      It is not dumping.

      The original submission was based on 1 2x4 of lumber. A company in BC donated the 2x4 to a community group. They then needed to account for it. Some PHB executive gave it an arbitrary price, which was below normal market value.

      The US companies found out, then based their entire case on this one 2x4: "Look what they are selling it for in BC, yet we pay $$ more".

      --

      - - - - - - - - - - -
      I am a programmer. I am paid to produce syntax not grammar. Deal with it.
  148. Christians ignore any part of the bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that doesn't concure with thier current desires...wars,torture,etc...notice how they talk about helping thepoor but they never actually do it?..that's why non believers think "beLIEvers" are kooks because the only time you claim to follow the path of god is when your trying to push it on someone else. That and the fact you find it more plausible that an invisible man in the sky who no one has ever seen (except when they are by themselves), heard (again), or smelled created everything with a sweep of his hand....than for things to evolve or change, despite the fact we can see elements of evolution happen right in front of our eyes often in a span as short as a year. That and the fact if you look back in history you can see all the benign work of the church....witch hunts, inquisition, crusades, etc. If god knows everything that has, is then why set up rules to follow? He already knows who will follow and who won't. The answer is because god doesn't exsist. Religion was created to control to make you follow a certain train of thought, like commercials try to get you to follow a certain train of thought. And the sad part is you can't give it up because that would make you wrong, and being wrong is just one of the many things their afraid of.

    Most of you have the same MO you have a daily grind that consists of going from job to suburbia (or ruralria new word!) doing the same shit day in day out. And you make off handed comments about shit you know nothing about. You talk about how people in the ghetto don't want to work yet you've never even been in a ghetto unless the navigation in your gas guzzling suv was on the fritz. You talk about how pollution doesn't effect the planet.....yet I don't see you drinking out of the rivers in pittsburgh and you clearly haven't seen a cloud of pollution roll across the phoenix valley. The only thing you've experienced of life is what you've been sold or what you can see out the window or on your TV. Your afraid and don't telll me your not because that's what your TV says terror terror terror and judging by your other views its quite clear that that is where you get your train of thought.

    Most of you don't even have a concept of poor......you think poor means can't afford the new xbox 360......when poor really means can't afford things like new shoes and clothes......ever here of a swap meet? What do you think they are for?

    Now lets say you don't care about the poor which is fine, but then you can't exactly be surprised when those uncared for poor jack you for your car and the $200 in your pocket....and since they grew up in an environment where crime is exceptable way to make ends meet you can't be surprised when the worst of them come out of the dark and rape and murder. And since you refuse to see police corruption and blindly back tough crime laws that benefit only corporations you can't exactly be surprised when said criminals shoot at police....after all when your looking at 20 years whats another 20 since any prison time over 10 years is a death sentence. If not literally it certainly ends any career chances...which leaves one option crime............but you don't see the viscous circle you've created your too busy patting yourself on the back for your "ingenuity" And the poor know how much you don't care that's why they don't have a problem selling your kids crystal, coke, crack, and heorine.

    I'm done ranting I could go on forever because you people piss me off so....

  149. You Can't Illustrate the Issues Better Than This by soloport · · Score: 1

    I firmly believe this link will settle the whole debate, once and ferrell.

  150. We didn't listen! by htnprm · · Score: 1

    Now give me your Jew gold!

  151. Hot Air coming from Washington D.C. ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If only we could harness the power of all the hot air coming from blow hard politicians,
    fossil fuels would be totally obsolete!

  152. In all seriousness... by Josh+teh+Jenius · · Score: 1

    Please, please prove my "theory" wrong. Please. Someone out there. Someone *so* smart that, unlike me, they see beyond this petiness to the solutions. Profit from fuel cells. Profit from bio diesel. Profit from some common fucking sense. That's all I've ever asked.

    --
    Math is math. Regular expression is regular expression. The tools are there. The future is now.
  153. Re:Has anyone read State of Fear by Michael Cricht by plazman30 · · Score: 1

    Oh, I believe in that. But I don't believe Global Warming is going to wipe us all out, because the climate of the planet changes all the time. I tend to think, if there is a warming trend, then it's part of the natural state of the planet, and not due to the burning of fossil fuels all over the place.

  154. Correlation does not equal Causation by kinglitho · · Score: 1
    Here's the thing: yes, the climate is changing but no, the cause is not necessarily human influence.
    Way back in the 1970s (remember them?) the flavor of the day was the impending ice age! TIME magazine(http://www.time.com/time/archive/preview/ 0,10987,910467,00.html) even ran a story about it. It seems that ". . .the earth has undergone at least eight periods of extreme cold and seven of torrid heat in the past 400,000 years."(emphasis mine)
    Now I know that there are a lot of paleoconservatives in the Republican party, but I'm pretty sure they weren't around 400,000 years ago! The facts are:
    • climate change is far more influenced by water vapor than by CO2, and we can't do anything to change that

    and
    • the geological record tells us that extreme climate changes are a natural occurrence

    So we can spend trillions of dollars limiting CO2 emissions, which will probably have little or no effect on the climate, or we can put that money to better use by improving construction techniques and hardening our utility systems against violent weather.
    Change happens people, deal with it!
  155. Re:Has anyone read State of Fear by Michael Cricht by Warlock7 · · Score: 1
    ...I don't believe Global Warming is going to wipe us all out...
    Why not? What do you think Global Warming is going to do? Just make things hotter?
    ...because the climate of the planet changes all the time.
    So what? There are also mass extinctions that go along with those fluctuations, which we've been seeing. If the food chain is disrupted enough then our bountiful selection is damaged and there isn't much hope. There is a delicate balance and once that balance begins to tip we could see a drastic effect that would tend to become very bad very fast. This isn't about things merely getting too hot or too cold, it's about a delicate ecosystem where everything is tied together. As a species we tend to place ourselves above the rest of the life on this planet and that tends to lead to us ignoring that we, just like every other living thing on the planet, are very closely tied together. We can't be responsible with this arrogant attitude.

    If you're right then we go blindly along without changing our habits and nothing happens. If you're wrong, as most of the scientific community appear to believe, then it's the end. If we act progressively and curb emissions in a reasonable manner what harm is done? The oil executives don't make as much of a profit, but the rest of us benefit.

    I see the Crichton argument as an excuse as to why we shouldn't make any effort to change and be more "responsible" in our behavior. I also see his perspective as being very selfish and lazy. At what point does it become reasonable to make those changes? Our adaptability isn't limitless.
  156. Re:Well by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Your little 4-banger from the early 80's may get great mileage but it pollutes a lot worse than a modern SUV.

    If the environmentalists had their way, the 80s 4-banger would have been cleaner then, and modern SUVs would be non-polluting. Oh, and the modern SUV does put out more CO2 than the 80's 4-banger. Also, based on the current age of the average vehicle, vehicles are retired pretty quickly. So the impact of the average 80s vehicles is negligible. But don't let me stop your emotional rants.

  157. Wow, the first intelligent poster I have seen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You used the printer link. Thank you!

  158. Re:Has anyone read State of Fear by Michael Cricht by plazman30 · · Score: 1

    Well, why do we, as humans, feel so arrogant that we NEED to survive the next mass extinction? The planet is going to do what it is going to do. Sure, we should curb emissions because the air quality sucks. But say we should curb emissions because air quality sucks, not because of global warming. And where does the air quality suck? In LA, in New York. Does the air quality suck in the woods in Montana where there are no homes? Nope, the animals there seem to do OK.

    And, sure, nature exists in a delicate balance. And that balance is disrupted all the time by nature itself. Those disruptions take evolution in new directions and introduce species that would never arise otherwise. Volcanos, Earthquakes, Tsunnamis, Hurricanes and other disasters have the ability to shape continents and wipe out entire species off this little rock of ours, yet somehow we feel man is the greatest threat to the planet.

    If we're all so damn worried about the natural balance of things, why don't we introduce wolves back into areas with deer overpopulation so that NATURE can properly thin the deer herds to what they should be.

    If you're worried about balance, sell your house, break up all that concrete that f**ks with the water table and drainage, and live in a teepee like the Native Americans did, so you don't cause issues with erosions, so your fence doesn't mess with an animals natural migration patterns, and so your house isn't in a spot where a dozen trees provided nests for various North American birds before it was built.

  159. Interesting related article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  160. Re:Has anyone read State of Fear by Michael Cricht by Warlock7 · · Score: 1

    I'd be happy to do what you suggest if there was some realistic way to live off the land these days, but the fish from the great lakes, the rivers and streams and the oceans are filled with mercury and other heavy metals. Most of the native wildlife has been killed off or forced into such a small area that it isn't possible to survive for long in the world today. The water has become so polluted due to this laissez-faire attitude that you and so many others have that it's not realistic anymore. The areas with a reasonable climate to support our species are so overrun with development and pollution that your suggestions are jokes, and they aren't funny ones.

    Sure the planet disrupts things without our help, but your apathetic position is just what I described, lazy and selfish. I admit that I am selfish because I want a better environment to live in and I do a little bit every single day to try and improve things the best that I can. While people like you sit back and throw stones and suggest that the beliefs of the majority of scientists and the general population today are wrong because you aren't willing to make the changes necessary to improve things yourself. One person or family changing their habits isn't enough, according to the science, it's got to be everybody working together to improve things. People with your attitude don't have any real evidence to support your positions, but you're completely unwilling to make any effort to change things in case you're wrong. If I'm wrong, the changes might improve things even though we're doomed, if you're wrong things just get worse as that balance tips. It doesn't matter why you do the things to attempt to improve the situation, it just matters that you do them.

    The saddest part is that, like the scientologists, you're using some science fiction author's perspective to justify your position. Your position seems to be purely a lazy one.

    It'd be great if you just admit that you just don't give a shit and turn your back, instead, you attack the position of those that aren't as lazy as you are.

  161. Jesus Fucking Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not everything is due to (or proof of) your stupid religion.

  162. the view from the north by phossie · · Score: 1

    "Is warming a catastrophe? Even IF you buy into the Cassandras, for every "coral reef is gonna die because the water's too warm!" it's hard to believe that there's not a corresponding expansion (northward) of coral-reef-able zones. For every acre of expanded desert, there's another acre of former-tundra that now has a growing season."

    Sure, maybe your picture makes sense. Here's a question which assumes it's correct: where are the myriad marine species that need the nutrition, temperature, current signatures, and other facets of our colder waters going to go? What happens to them? We're seeing some pretty major effects of climate change up here. I live and work in a fishing village in the Aleutians. We are perfectly situated to view the ecosystem interaction between the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea. Our economy depends on the health of the ecosystem, and yes, we all know it (we're not mindless resource extractors up here). We want sustainability, and so we work - slowly, as an institution - towards making our livelihood (and thus that of the fish, etc.) as sustainable as possible.

    But there is not a whole lot we can do about climate change on our own. The ice edge is farther north every year. There are fewer and fewer salmon. Other fisheries are suffering too. Recent research on a few different marine species indicates that there are a lot of environmental signals that guide migrations, and lots of these are strongly affected by climate change. Look too at the sea between Japan and Russia/Kamchatka, which used to freeze over. Nutrient levels in the water are dropping.

    The tundra needs to remain tundra for so many different reasons, and not all of them are explicitly conservationist. Traditional sustainable ways of life become impossible when the traditional food sources cannot survive even without harvesting. This land is not exactly suitable for agriculture, but humans have been living on it for many centuries with success. The conservative estimate is that the Aleut civilization was continuously successful for 8000 years. Eight thousand years... some say ten. In other words, one of the oldest continuous civilizations anywhere on the planet, and in one of the harshest environments. And as in much of Alaska, life here is considerably better with subsistence methods than without.

    This climate change stuff is lot more serious and a lot more urgent than most people think. Look at what the northern people are doing and thinking. You can almost use us as an indicator class - when traditional methods begin to fail, examine them for longevity and then consider the contributing factors.

    Please, take this issue seriously.

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