Thursday, October 27, 2011

How to get the message across on climate change
For many scientists working in the field of climate research, one of the most alarming trends has nothing to do with the climate itself: It’s the poll numbers showing that even as scientific projections of global climate change get ever more certain, public perceptions about climate change are getting ever more skeptical.

Why is there such a huge — and growing — disconnect? John Sterman, the Jay W. Forrester Professor of Management at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, says there are specific characteristics of climate change that make it unusually difficult for people to grasp. But the good news, he says, is that there are approaches that can help bridge that gap in understanding.

For example, Sterman’s group has developed climate simulators to help policymakers, business leaders, the media and the public learn about the dynamics of climate change and the consequences of the choices we must make.
Truth in advertising does not work with politicians | Tulsa Beacon
The claims of Al Gore and his global warming terrorists are just that and are intended to scare us into accepting massive controls on our way of life that would vastly lower our standard of living. The claim that carbon dioxide is a “greenhouse gas” is likewise totally false. The removal of this gas from the air would result in the reduction of plant life and thus the reduction of the oxygen that all animal life, including humans, must have to exist.
There is ample proof that many, if not most, of the wild claims made in his movie are totally false and the examples he used were carefully and falsely crafted to attain the maximum scare value.

No comments: