Total Pageviews

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Top Ten Climate Change Questions That Need Answers

Earth's climate 
has been changing 
every day of your life.

The past 325 years,
since the 1600s, 
have had intermittent 
global warming.

About +2 degrees C.,
based on Central
England real time
temperature data.

Other real time data
do not go back that far,
and temperature proxies,
such as ice cores, 
are not that accurate. 



Humans have been 
adding CO2 to the 
atmosphere for over 
100 years.


And we've heard 
scary predictions 
of a bad news
future climate
since the 1970s.

The future climate 
is imagined to be 
completely unlike 
the climate in the 
past 100 years, 
but the predictions
since the 1970s
have been wrong.

The imagined future
climate has been so
wrong, for so long !



Much more useful 
for predicting the 
quantity and effects
of FUTURE 
global warming, 
would be a better
understanding of 
PAST global warming.

What we really need 
are honest answers 
to the following ten
questions, based on 
our actual experience 
with global warming : 

(1)
Why is it that leftists 
always claim FUTURE
climate change must be 
bad news ?


(2)
Was there any bad news 
from global warming 
in the PAST 325 years ?


(3)
Who was harmed 
from global warming 
in the past 325 years ?


(4)
Has life been bad 
since we started adding 
CO2 to the atmosphere, 
over 100 years ago ?


(5)
Why do leftists think 
scary, wild guess,
always wrong predictions
of the future climate 
are real science ?


(6)
Why does the media 
ignore the fact that 
today's climate has 
significantly improved,
for humans and animals, 
since the 1600s ?


(7)
If we keep adding CO2 
to the air, just like most
greenhouse owners do
for their indoor plants,
won't the rising outdoors
CO2 level also be 
good news for plants ?


(8)
How are warmer 
nights in Alaska 
an existential threat ?


(9)
How is 6 to 9 inches 
of sea level rise 
in a century an 
existential threat ?



(10)
How is a ‘greening’ planet, 
from more CO2 in the air, 
an existential threat ?