Environmental Extremism (sigh)
Note to Anonymous from yesterday's post: 200 years seems like a long time, but go back to this for a long perspective.
Some relatively warm years recently have created a geological micro-focusing on a very... very... short time period where a change in climate appears... appears... to be occurring. Rapid change in climate is not without precedent... and has had nothing to do with man's involvement. Nevertheless, the result is that there is a focus on atmospheric carbon dioxide as a "cause" of "climate change." It's a popular concept for those who would like to see the elimination of large cars and trucks... and a return to what??? but who... conveniently... oppose new nuclear power generating plants that are the only viable means of reducing the use of oil and coal for producing electricity... and having enough electricity available to convert from an oil-based to a hydrogen-based economy. And who... conveniently... support a treaty that does nothing to affect the most rapidly growth contributors of all pollution... China and India.
So my "needling" about Environmental Extremism does have a "point"... those that shout the loudest rarely have a viable alternative... and many of their alternatives (such as wind turbines) are vigorously opposed by other "environmentalists" who see them as dangerous to birds or ugly or have some other reason.
People rally easily to "noble" sounding causes without really thinking through alternatives and implications... and with the weapon of short-sightedness. It reminds me of the guy who "voted for the ice age coming before he voted against it" (for those of you old enough to remember the winters and cold summers of the 1950s... snow in July in Wisconsin... something I saw more than once... came during a time that there was a lot of talk about a new ice age... something that happens when a few years of unusual weather comes along).
One other thought... those who use "average global temperatures" are truly kidding themselves into believing that it is possible to rely on readings from 100 years ago for comparisons with data obtained by today's technology.
Here is a site that is worth looking at to get further insight to what I have written about:
http://www.techcentralstation.com/climatechange.html