You have to admire the determination of those that persist
in promoting the idea that what humans do as they live on the Earth is the
proximate cause of severe damage to the environment. They believe that having
evolved from living in caves to using the Earth’s riches to make electricity,
fuel vehicles, and improve their lives, humans are slowly killing the planet.
It is certainly reasonable to investigate and discuss this idea,
but the debate must be honest and any argument has to be supported by data,
pure data, not manipulated data, and not just “friendly” data that is
constructed in such a way as to support a particular point of view.
In this debate over whether human activities negatively
affect the environment, talking points have replaced factual data, talking
points carefully, and sometimes deceitfully constructed from the most favorable
pieces that support the argument. We know this because the arguments don’t
reason out, and also because some of these prominent scientists got caught with
their hands in the cookie jar a few years ago.
But the manmade climate change faction is a stubborn lot and
stick to the talking points no matter what other information may be circulating,
and when new arguments come along, or when there is a spike in the discussion
favoring the perspective contrary to theirs, they shift into high gear.
For example, talking points appeared, of all places, in the
2015 State of the Union message, when President Barack Obama presented faulty
information as truth when he spoke to the nation. The President of the United
States said, “2014 was the planet’s warmest year on record.”
Some data support this assertion, but even that data isn’t
definitive. The supposed increase is just two-tenths of a degree Celsius, but is
within NASA’s margin of error. And, the “record” at the top of which 2014 purportedly
sits goes back only 135 years, a mere blink of the eye in the Earth’s long
history. Essentially what this means is that at some point in that brief eye
blink the temperature may have been higher than at any other time in that eye
blink, or maybe not.
Playing havoc with the climate change faction is the Medieval Warm Period that ran from the 9th
century to the 14th century. Some say it was actually warmer then
than now, while others say it really was about the same as the mid 20th
century.
How did that happen? Did the Vikings burn
fossil fuels in their factories, boats and land vehicles? If not, the Earth
must have somehow managed to warm itself. And then it cooled itself, because
after the Medieval Warm Period came the Little Ice Age when the Vikings must
have abandoned the factories, gone back to sailing vessels and ox carts, and
killed all the methane producing animals, causing 500 years of dramatic global
cooling.
There are other warm periods further
gumming up the argument: the Roman Warm Period of approximately 2,000 years
ago, and the Minoan Warm Period of roughly 3,000 years ago.
An Associated Press story on Jan. 16,
that might have been the impetus for the president’s dragging the subject into
the State of the Union message, reported that 2014
was the hottest year on record, citing the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration and NASA.
The AP has since clarified the story,
noting that the case is much less certain than originally stated. The NASA
press release upon which the AP story relied neglected to say that NASA put
only a 38 percent certainty on the assertion that 2014 was the warmest year
since 1880.
The human-caused climate change idea is fraught with
problems going back decades. Back in 1970 and 1971 newspapers across the
country predicted a coming ice age due to atmospheric pollution, and other
catastrophes. More recently, the Hockey Stick Graph made with faulty data, and
the Climate Research Unit’s email revelations, cast grave doubt on the
conclusions about climate change.
Considering that the Little Ice Age started in the 14th
century and lasted 500 years until the 19th century, if the warming
period that followed lasts only as long as The Little Ice Age, which is not a
long period for either a warming or cooling, it will continue until roughly the
24th century, or between 2300 and 2400 AD. Therefore, should anyone be
surprised if the climate is warming in 2015? We should, in fact, be very
concerned if it isn’t warming.
Natural occurrences have produced alternate periods of
warming and cooling for at least thousands of years, and all scientists agree
on that. Earth should be warming now, given the brief time since the last
cooling trend ended. Is the warming proceeding faster than before? Probably not.
But if so, why? The sun? Man’s activities? Was it something else, like what
happened in the Medieval Warm Period? Probably.
We don’t need to implement expensive and harmful measures
that will make negligible changes if and until the evidence – reliable evidence,
not manipulated evidence – is far more compelling than it is today. Perhaps
what really needs to be investigated is the role of filthy lucre in this
controversy.
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