Friday, April 12, 2013

Why Jim Hansen Stopped Being a Government Scientist [Video] | Observations, Scientific American Blog Network
He’s worried about preventing “climate chaos” and instead preserving the relatively stable climate of the past 10,000 years—when human civilization developed and flourished—for his five grandchildren.
[Hansen]  "If you get asthma from air pollution, you pay the health cost, not the fossil fuel company.”
Why Joe Barton's biblical flood comment is so illogical - CSMonitor.com
It turns out that lots of things – not just fossil fuels – can make our planet go warm or cold, or wet or dry. These include volcanic activity, plate tectonics, meteor impacts, the wobble of our planet as it spins on its axis, magnetic activity on the sun, and even the location of our solar system as it circles the Milky Way.
Twitter / RogerPielkeJr: We are all pragmatists now, ...
We are all pragmatists now, EU --> "Any new carbon or clean-energy targets should be more "modest and pragmatic""
Twitter / RogerPielkeJr: EU-> "We are looking at ...

EU-> "We are looking at climate protection in its entirety, taking into account that energy has to remain affordable"

Twitter / RyanMaue: Wasn't this the null hypothesis ...
Wasn't this the null hypothesis -- oh wait, we changed scientific method for leftist climate advocacy a while back.

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