Prediction: Losing election simply due to climate scepticism

anybody read that book "Dark Winter" by Casey?
I saw a documentary/paid programming on it on Newsmax last night
It has me really scared about climate change
especially when they asked him what we can do about climate change and he replied, "Protect your food source."
This is a great example of the confusion surrounding climate change. Talk to one of the "experts" and it's the heating of the planet which is the problem. Casey says it's the cooling. Cooling primarily caused by the sun according to him. He goes on to say, "trends indicate we could be headed for colder temperatures similar to those seen in the late 1700s and early 1800s"
Okay climate geniuses, is it the sun or the evil carbon emissions? Are we about to fry, or freeze? Maybe both?
Seems to me that the climate is in for a dramatic change in the not too distant future(that might be a hundred or more years) and there isn't a f'n thing we can do about it. And lets say for the sake of argument that it is caused by the evil man and not the sun. What's the plan? Evil America cutting our emissions while China and India increase theirs dramatically? Yeah, that'll work out just fine.

http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/dark-winter-cold-global-cooling/2014/11/16/id/607672/
 
http://www.elitetrader.com/et/index...ude-prices-on-oil-powers.296808/#post-4225162

Q

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rober...891888.html?utm_hp_ref=australia&ir=Australia

Robert Redford Become a fan

Actor, director and environmental activist

Paris Agreement Marks Epic Movement Away From Fossil Fuels

Posted: 30/12/2015 09:33 AEST Updated: 30/12/2015 09:59 AEST
CALIFORNIA WIND TURBINES


As a son of southern California in the 1950s, I grew up surrounded by reminders of the oil industry that fueled generations of economic growth in our country. Dad was an accountant for an oil company. I rode my bike past the giant derricks that pumped day and night. I even did a stint myself as a roustabout on the rigs.

In recent decades, though, it's become increasingly clear that our reliance on oil, gas and coal has come at a grave and unsustainable cost to our health and the future of the planet. We just can't tolerate blowouts polluting our oceans, oil trains exploding in our communities, pipeline ruptures across our ranches and farms or the carbon pollution that's driving climate change.

We have to shift away from fossil fuels and all the damage and danger they bring, and move toward cleaner, smarter ways to power our future.

That's the heart and soul of the historic climate agreement reached this month in Paris, where the United States and 186 other countries put plans on the table for real action to fight climate change by moving toward a low-carbon global economy.

We won't get there overnight. The fossil fuels that have been shaped the wealth of nations since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution still account for about 80 percent of global energy use.

The Paris agreement, though, consolidated an epic movement away from those fuels. It advanced that shift. And it sent a clear message to the markets: we're not stuck with fossil fuels - and neither are our children.

I've been pushing for this kind of breakthrough for four decades. I went to Paris to add my voice to those calling for real progress and change. It starts by doing what's right for our people at home, cutting our own carbon footprint in our own backyards. And it depends on all of us doing our part.

That's why it was so heartening to sit in the grand Hotel de Ville - the city hall of Paris - alongside 400 mayors and other local leaders from around the world who are already taking action to make buildings more efficient, create sustainable transportation options and shift to wind and solar generation to power their cities.

There's a global contest already underway over which country, or countries, will be best positioned to reap the benefits from the historic transition away from the dirty fossil fuels of the past and toward the cleaner energy options of the future.

Now, much as California was near the center of the oil age, the state is leading the way to the clean energy era remaking the world. With four decades of progressive policies to promote clean air, energy efficiency, renewable power, carbon reduction targets and other sustainability goals, California has stolen a march on the competition in the greatest economic play of our lifetime.

At the Paris climate talks, delegates clamored for a chance to ask Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti about his plan to cut carbon pollution and other greenhouse gas emissions 80 percent by 2050. International governments from China to Israel got in line to hold bilateral meetings with Gov. Jerry Brown and his state legislative delegation. When Brown and Silicon Valley clean-tech investor Tom Steyer hosted a dialogue at the opulent Petit Palais, several hundred climate delegates came to hear their advice on how to stoke a clean energy revolution.

"You need to get the right ideas, you need to be able to present them, and you have to build a coalition," said Brown. It's all about creating conditions where private industry, public policy-makers, visionaries and voters all play their respective roles. "This is an art," said Brown, "and a science."

How's it working out? Last year California's economy grew 2.8 percent; national growth was 2.2 percent. California is getting more clean-tech investment than the rest of the country combined. And California creates nearly twice as much economic value, per unit of energy used, than the country overall.

That's saving real money for our families and businesses. It's given California a leg up on its competition, across our country and around the world. And it's created a virtuous cycle as technological advances make clean-tech investments more attractive.

Fighting climate change is a moral imperative. And yet, just as protecting our children from the widening dangers of climate chaos is a challenge, it's also an opportunity. It's the economic play of our lifetime. By doing what's right for our people at home, California has positioned itself for leadership abroad. Our people, and those of the world, are the better for it.

UQ
 
This is a great example of the confusion surrounding climate change. Talk to one of the "experts" and it's the heating of the planet which is the problem. Casey says it's the cooling. Cooling primarily caused by the sun according to him. He goes on to say, "trends indicate we could be headed for colder temperatures similar to those seen in the late 1700s and early 1800s"
Okay climate geniuses, is it the sun or the evil carbon emissions? Are we about to fry, or freeze? Maybe both?
Seems to me that the climate is in for a dramatic change in the not too distant future(that might be a hundred or more years) and there isn't a f'n thing we can do about it. And lets say for the sake of argument that it is caused by the evil man and not the sun. What's the plan? Evil America cutting our emissions while China and India increase theirs dramatically? Yeah, that'll work out just fine.

http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/dark-winter-cold-global-cooling/2014/11/16/id/607672/
yeah, except Casey's theory makes perfect sense to me, and it scares me, and I am all for doing something about it if that is what the left wants. If you just want to get people like me scared so you can control them to do something, the global cooling works a heck of a lot better than global warming.
 
It has me really scared about climate change
especially when they asked him what we can do about climate change and he replied, "Protect your food source."
Not to worry. I'm sure that a lot of guys here have their bunkers filled with canned beans. Of course, they're less concerned about climate change wiping out the human race than they are about Obama coming for their guns.
 
Not to worry. I'm sure that a lot of guys here have their bunkers filled with canned beans. Of course, they're less concerned about climate change wiping out the human race than they are about Obama coming for their guns.
Obama should give the people safe bunkers, guns and beans.
 
Q US storms: Shipping halted on Mississippi as record floods hit Missouri

Date
December 30, 2015 - 9:56PM

http://www.theage.com.au/world/us-s...cord-floods-hit-missouri-20151230-glx2dd.html

A week of chaotic weather continued throughout the United States as a storm system that spawned deadly tornadoes in the Midwest and Southwest pushed north. More than 40 people across the country have died of weather-related causes during the Christmas holidays in the past week.
UQ
 
Q
Unprecedented flooding in Britain prompts renewed discussion about climate change

Date
December 29, 2015
http://www.theage.com.au/world/unpr...ion-about-climate-change-20151228-glw0lw.html

London: Climate change is forcing England to reassess its flood defences in the face of unprecedented river level surges, one of the British government's most senior environment officials says.

"We are moving from a period of known extremes into a period of unknown extremes," said David Rooke, deputy chief executive of the government's Environment Agency, which manages the country's rivers.

"We will need to reassess all the defences right across the country."

UQ
 
Q
Victoria bushfires: a state of anxiety as Victoria fears a black January

Date
December 29, 2015

http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/v...ia-fears-a-black-january-20151228-glvw5x.html

Victoria's grasslands are now as dry as they normally are in early February, a worrying scenario which increases the threat of fire and adds to the evidence that the state faces a longer and more threatening fire season than normal.

Much of the state's forests are also drier than normal for late December, a point reinforced by the dangerous behaviour of the Otways fire on Christmas Day, a fast-moving blaze which destroyed 116 houses.


The blaze brings the total number of houses lost so far this fire season to almost 140. It is a staggering statistic, particularly given that January and February are when Victoria suffers the hottest conditions and greatest number of house losses.


A grassland curing map shown on the Country Fire Authority website shows at least two-thirds of Victoria covered in bright red, indicating the grasslands are 100 per cent dead, or "cured". This means grasslands in these areas would carry fire easily.

The grasslands have almost totally dried out in all of western Victoria, north-western Victoria, northern Victoria, central Victoria and much of the north-east. The map, dated Monday, shows that in Gippsland the grasslands are about 60 to 90 per cent dried out.

UQ
 
Not to worry. I'm sure that a lot of guys here have their bunkers filled with canned beans. Of course, they're less concerned about climate change wiping out the human race than they are about Obama coming for their guns.

Did you say " about climate change wiping out the human race " ?

It would be too expensive, and too much money involved! Not worth to consider it! Just Don't worry about it! At All!
 
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