b_line
Well-Known Member
Thanks for the link. The information on that page shows me that temperatures were going up as of ten years ago, but the data collected since that time (which is not available on that page) shows me that the trend has not continued. Here is a graph of the last 25 years showing what was projected v.s. what has occurred:
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If you were to use that data to draw a trend line for the last ten years it looks like it would be flat (or very close to it). Yet Obama has told us that the problem is more urgent than ever, and that 2014 was the hottest ever. Why are so many people okay with this even though the data does not appear to support his claims?
The temperature trend is nowhere near what the GW alarmists told us it was going to be 25 years ago, but this good news not only seems to have no impact on the delivery of their message, they seem to be more adamant than ever that we are in imminent danger. Anyone who questions it is ridiculed. Why is this? It seems to me that the Al Gore crowd has hijacked this movement for political purposes. I wish the scientific community would divorce themselves from the alarmist hyperbole, but instead they seem to be embracing it. What is going on here?
You showed a graph that clearly indicates that temperatures are rising, yet you continue to question climate change?
There is a lot of merit to what the alarmists are saying. They could prpbably go about it in a better way, but what they are saying is real.
Sea levels are rising. Levees are super costly, and moving entire cities is even more costly. This stuff is already happening in places like new Orleans and new york. The cost of the storms we experience on a more regular basis than the past is crippling the economy in these places. New Orleans is shattered. New Jersey and new york had billions of damage and some loss of life from a storm more recently. The storm that hit Puerto vallarta recently was purportedly the largest storm on record. How is that not alarming?
Locally, our water supply is dwindling and affecting the growth of consumables like produce and cattle. If you don't believe it, ask literally anyone in Nevada and California. Utah is somewhat insulated as the population base does not rely solely on the water in the Colorado River basin. Look at flaming gorge, lake Powell and lake mead. They might not ever be full again. How will the west support a growing population with a decreased water supply? Likely at a much greater cost or a reduced quality of life.
I get that the alarmists sound like tomorrow the world is going to end, but the reality is that the changes that are occurring are extremely costly already, and the cost in monetary and human value will continue to rise. It will nit be tomorrow, but our grandkids will have a very different world to live in.