Trump and Global Warming

mmm4444bot

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In the past, our president has claimed that global warming is a hoax. (He thought the Chinese created the hoax.)


However, as with other matters of fact, his proclamations fluctuate over time. On the issue of global warming, it seems like Trump still needs a teacher.


It's been reported that our president does not read. But he can look at the pictures. Right?


He could start with this one, which comes straight from NASA data.

giphy.gif
 
It has never been my impression that anyone is about the business of denying "Global Warming". Anyone can see the pictures and say, "Yup, there it is". Perhaps some use a phrase that sounds that simple, but I really don't believe such language.

The dispute is two-fold.
1) Is it REALLY "climate change" or is it a normal cycle and we just don't have millenia of information to judge?
2) Are humans doing anything that makes it worse and can we do anything to make it any, as some would deem, "better"? The Paris accord is a tricky thing. Most of the improvement talked about is in the future. We have no current idea how to make any difference RIGHT NOW and we have little idea RIGHT NOW how to make it better in the future.

Does the ambiguity mean we should do nothing? Absolutely not. We see much correlation with human activity. Do we see causation? Unclear. It's not an experiment we can repeat.

My favorite ambiguity is electric cars.
1) In Norway, most of the power generation is hydro. Electric cars have a valid claim on changing the global outcome for cars.
2) In the U.S.ofA., nearly 2/3 of power generation is still from fossil fuels. Thus, electric cars are substantially just fossil fuel cars. The effect on Climate Change is entirely unclear.

In addition, one cannot simply shut off entire employment segments. We saw this with tobacco in former times. We came to the conclusion that in order to eliminate tobacco production, we would have to rewrite the entire economies of North Carolina and Kentucky! We would have to think carefully about that sort of change. Previous U.S.ofA. administrations have tackled the Coal Industry rather vigorously. West Virginia has not been pleased.

Anyway, there is nothing about this issue that is simple, except the pretty pictures with data from just the last century or so.

My views. I welcome others'.
 
It has never been my impression that anyone is about the business of denying "Global Warming".
Really?

I would encourage you to google keywords examples of climate change denial. Start with the Wikipedia article.

As recently as last year, more than one United States Senator were in the business of denying that global temperatures are rising. Senator Tom Coburn continues to claim that our planet is undergoing global cooling. Senator James Inhofe (who has a well-established history of denying that temperatures are rising) brought a snowball onto the Senate floor as "proof" of this.

There are many more examples of other people who are very much about the business of denying "Global Warming".
 
In the past, our president has claimed that global warming is a hoax. (He thought the Chinese created the hoax.)


However, as with other matters of fact, his proclamations fluctuate over time. On the issue of global warming, it seems like Trump still needs a teacher
No, President Trump doesn't still need a teacher. Scientists' data cannot be trusted,
just as one aspect of it.
Your own reaction shows you are an alarmist and are working off of emotionalism.
I welcome the deniers and skeptics who work against major charlatans such as Al Gore who
continues to get rich off of their failed doomsday climate predictions over the decades.
 
… Scientists' data cannot be trusted …
I'm curious. Do you make this claim in general? That is, do you distrust all scientific data?

Or, are you saying that only climate-change data cannot be trusted?
 
Scientists' data cannot be trusted

The number in that sentence plural - isn't it!

One Scientist's data cannot be trusted.

One hundred scientist's data cannot be trusted.

But when thousands of scientist say the same thing - it needs to be attended to....

I suppose there are still people who deny earth is round ....

Corner-stone speech never happened...

Man did not land on moon...

I feel depressed for my children and grand children - what a world we are ready to hand-over (much better than what it was ~100 years ago - good-old days - but still)...
 
I would encourage you to google keywords examples of climate change denial. Start with the Wikipedia article.

I require no such encouragement. Your examples are what I was talking out when I said I simply didn't believe the statements being made. I don't consider political-agenda-motivated speeches as sources of truth or honesty. I am relatively sure that if I sat down and had an off-the-record chat with any of the individuals in your examples, that there would be no such foolishness.

If you include the Pleistocene Epoch in our charts, it should be easy to show Global Warming.

As far as your very nice moving info-graphic, before there is an amazing result taken from it, you'll have to explain the absence of new records from 1944 to 1980. Global warming just took a break for 36 years, in the thick of industrialization, while humans weren't even thinking about greenhouse gases? Doesn't quite make sense favorable to the argument's intended conclusion.
 
Your examples are what I was talking out when I said I simply didn't believe the statements being made.
Oh, I see. I had misunderstood you. I had thought you meant that the individuals themselves did not actually believe their own words. Please excuse me.

I don't consider political-agenda-motivated speeches as sources of truth or honesty. I am relatively sure that if I sat down and had an off-the-record chat with any of the individuals in your examples, that there would be no such foolishness.
I'd like to be a fly on the wall, during those chats!

I've seen two casual sit-downs with Senator Inhofe, and, he always presents himself as a very pleasant gentlemen -- always civil -- listening carefully and not interrupting the interviewer, but he was insistent and unwavering in his personal belief system that there is no upward trend in mean global temperatures. He has said (both) that he thinks science has simply got this one wrong and that claims of warming are "the greatest hoax" by liberals who want to take away states' rights while creating the largest new set of taxes on business ever. More recently, however, he has said, "I'm not a scientist, so I can't say." Maybe his perspective has evolved, but I think you're a bit over-optimistic regarding no foolishness from any of them.

As for data lapses in that particular display, I can't say for sure, but I could try to find an answer at nasa.gov. I suspect that global records of the type used by NASA for that graphic were not available/verifiable (or something like that) for certain date ranges. When I pulled that image, I did not read through all of the NASA information on that page regarding their scientists' methodology. I got the general impression that the graphic reflects aggregate data from a number of different sources -- not just NASA itself.
 
I had thought you meant that the individuals themselves did not actually believe their own words

No mistake there. That is my intent. As long as we talk liberals, conservatives, left, right, or whatever other political variation, there is no doubt in my mind that there are opinions and views that are party-based and have little to do with actual, personal ideology. I am personally offended at the voting booth when I see the Party Button - just click this one button and you can vote for ALL the democrats or ALL the republicans. I simply don't believe that any individual truly and factually and honestly believes it is how they should vote. Do they even know some of the people for whom they just voted? It is party-speak and I blame the party, not the individual.

I'd like to be a fly on the wall, during those chats!

I'm guessing that you listening in might violate the "off-the-record" premise.

I've seen two casual sit-downs with ...

I too have seen many interviews. We are very, VERY good at coaching to control the message. I need to sit down with them myself, without cameras, without aides, before I believe it. It should be interesting to note that I almost always vote for a candidate who will talk to me. The public words rarely sway me so much as the personal conversation.

...overly optimistic...

Perhaps. :)
 
I'm guessing that you listening in might violate the "off-the-record" premise.
A fly cannot pass on any information seen or heard. I'd just like to witness those chats firsthand, for personal reasons only. :cool:

Yes, it's hard to take politicos at their word, public or otherwise. I posted about the president, and your initial reply was about "anyone". I then gave more examples, choosing politicians; perhaps that was my mistake.

I could have quoted a farmer, a hillbilly, a pastor, or the 711 clerk down the street. There are deniers who have no agenda, to speak of. They simply do not believe that the planet is warming. I'm surprised and trying to understand your claim that none of them are sincere.
 
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Click thumbnails below, to enlarge images.


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Editorial Cartoon (Not Enough Ice Left for Health Care Plan) 06-01-2017.JPG
 
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Yes, and you continue to reveal more. I notice you did not
refer to him as "President Trump," at least for that moment in
your lead thread post.

In some other thread there was some mention by you, I believe, about
the March for
Science (or the equivalent). That was really a march against
President Trump. And there was a March for Women. That, too,
was really a march against President Trump.
These attacks/resistance on/to President Trump are based on
emotionalism. The liberals/Democrats encouraged Donald Trump
to run for president, because they thought he would be an easy loss
to their chosen Hillary Clinton. But when he won, they lost their
collective minds. So ... we have had multiple fake news coming
at President Trump from what should be journalists, as well as these
"marches" that claim to be for a certain theme.
 
… the comic strip's message doesn't even count!
The message of any editorial cartoon belongs to the cartoonist. It's an opinion, and so it cannot be validated or invalidated by anyone.

I like sharing these messages because they present current events in a thought-provoking way -- using analogy often combined with humor, wit, sarcasm, et cetera. They're fun!

Particularly, when times are tough, laughter is good medicine. Have you had any, lately? :D
 
… I notice you did not refer to him as "President Trump," at least for that moment in
your lead thread post.
Seemingly, you skipped my thread's subject line. It's clear I'm talking about Trump, and I referred to him as "our president". He is our president.

In some other thread there was some mention by you, I believe, about the March for Science (or the equivalent). That was really a march against President Trump. And there was a March for Women. That, too, was really a march against President Trump. These attacks/resistance on/to President Trump are based on emotionalism. The liberals/Democrats encouraged Donald Trump to run for president, because they thought he would be an easy loss to their chosen Hillary Clinton. But when he won, they lost their collective minds. So ... we have had multiple fake news coming at President Trump from what should be journalists, as well as these "marches" that claim to be for a certain theme.
I respect your right to hold these opinions! You have strong emotions, too. And, if you were to express these thoughts in an editorial-style cartoon, employing stuff like humor, wit, and sarcasm, I'd pay even more attention.

Democrats are targets of public opinion, too. Sometimes, they piss me off; sometimes, I just have to laugh. Nobody is off limits.

I spend more time laughing at or criticizing the president above others in the public eye because he provides so much more ammunition than anybody else. He is very unique, among presidents. He does a lot of controversial stuff, intentionally, because that's his style. He's an entertainer. He's a master distractor. He's used to being a bully in the business world. (A tiger cannot change its stripes.) He's learning on the job. He craves constant attention. He evokes strong opinions from other leaders past and present, and that's news! He provides a level of salaciousness to what would otherwise be unremarkable events. Sometimes he acts stupidly and sometimes dangerously. Of course people are going to get upset with him. Of course people are going to make fun of him. Of course the mainstream media scrutinizes him. He's the president, and he's outrageous. He has raised the bar.

America has a sense of justice, and we like to see everyone get their due. Personally, I like to rock the boat. I want citizens to be engaged. I think it's important to spend more time paying attention to our government than to Charlie Sheen's latest escapades or the Kardashians' wardrobe. I spent almost six hours on the phone yesterday, calling Senators' offices. The switchboards were jammed. I kept trying because the current debate is about very important issues and they need to hear directly from citizens. (I presented my case on the issues important to me, and I'm mentally exhausted. Excuse me, if I'm starting to ramble on.)

So, everybody is entitled to their own opinions, and, ultimately, history documents and judges.

Our country has survived much worse than Trump; we'll be fine.

Stay loose, my friend. :cool:
 
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