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Monday, March 11, 2013

Time to forget global tipping points - opinion - 11 March 2013 - New Scientist
Even the force of human-induced climate change, so evident across the planet, does not meet these requirements. For example, it warms and dries some regions while cooling and moistening others.
Climate change and violence symposium | UVU Review
“Climate change is rapidly changing the meaning of culture, education, politics, economics, and ethics across the planet,” said Michael Minch, director of Peace and Justice Studies. “It is arguably the single most important challenge we face.”

We know our use of fossil fuels has heated the world, causing once arid and semi-humid grassland climates to turn to desert wasteland, but the problem is proving to be greater than just fossil fuels.
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The upcoming dialogue, “Climate Change and Violence: How Heating the Planet Creates Conflict and Death,” will focus on the various factors of climate change, how it is shaping the lives of those who are most affected, and potential solutions to the problem.
Flashback: Buffoon/fraudster Al Gore, just before blaming CO2 emissions for drought: [Human emissions are] "evaporating much more water off the oceans and filling the sky with a lot more water vapor and these great basins of water vapor in the sky are now filled or overflowing"

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