turnkey4099 said:
No. Facts just are. They don't change.
That's a very metaphysical interpretation of 'fact'. Human history, and the history of science itself, is pretty much just a long list of 'facts' that weren't facts after all. So while your take on 'facts' might be correct, it does not consider our human propensity to mistake fact from theory, myth or faith.
Fact: gravity exists Theory: what is it, how does it work, etc.?
Nah. We used to think the same sort of thing about time and light. We were wrong. If science has taught us anything it is that right here, right now, we are wrong about most of the things we believe to be 'scientifically proven.'
Thus we have, to take it a bit to the extreme,:
Fact: GW exists
I agree, still a bit extreme, and depends largely on how GW is defined. And that definition is impacted hugely by how you look at trends and time and also relies tremendously on historical data. The globe is a big complex thing. Our grasp of it remains
extraordinarily tentative. We know less about the deep ocean floor than we do about the moon. Time is also a big complex thing that confounds us. And if you use the term 'global', you have to account for the whole thing and if you use the term 'warming' you indicate change which must account for time. So is it getting warmer over time? Maybe. Does it account for the whole globe and represent a
significant change over
significant time? I have my doubts.
Theory: It is caused by mankinds spewing CO2
Actually I don't agree with that theory. IMO we are only contributing to a natural cycle. I also don't consider it a 'scientific theory' as it hasn't been tested, studied, etc enough to come up to that level. AFICT it is still at the 'hypothesis' level if even that high.
Harry K
I agree with you 100% here. But what we do in response to the theory is the key. If the science is solid enough (it isn't) and if the consequences are as dire and immanent as Gore, et al would have us believe, then you could justify all sorts of things from abuses of civil liberties to war to 'population control'. Extreme problems
require extreme measures, no?
It is how we respond to the problem that is key. And quite frankly, if Gore thinks the stakes are as high as he says, he isn't being as active or extreme as he needs to be, nor do his recommendations rise to the occasion.
I think some of us who have been labled 'complacent' are really just folks who believe that as a nation, and possibly a species, we can handle the changes in climate better than the attempts to change it back.