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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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Soaring
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![]() Quote:
http://environment.yale.edu/climate/...as-March-2012/ Original paper, full length, graphs and tables: http://environment.yale.edu/climate/...March-2012.pdf
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#2 |
Wayfaring Stranger
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Yet again Skybird wants to tell us what we are thinking.
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#3 |
Captain
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Location: Oz
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Wow, there's a bit of an enviro theme going on tonite. Almost makes you think there's a glint of hope out there!
On the first of July '12 our (Australian) Government committed political suicide and took the brave move of introducing a 'carbon tax'. They most likely won't be returned to office at the next election and the victorious opposing party will no doubt repeal the tax. Regardless of this, I can't help but feel a sense of patriotic pride and a fleeting glimpse of a previously unkown level of trust in the Government. To be amongst the leading countries prepared to take a first step in tackling this issue is incredible. No, the tax will not be perfect and yes there will be major setbacks. Fair chance some demographics will be worse off and (heaven forbid) some big companies may even loose out. It may fall in a big steaming heap, and be a total failure, but you can't learn if you don't make mistakes! Someone has to give it a go! That we had the kegs to do it, and make some sacrifices, which will provide a reference point for other countries to learn from in the future makes me really feel proud. It's only a very small step, but in the scheme of things, it may have a big flow on effect. |
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#4 |
Lucky Jack
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What I don't understand is Al Gore who was leading the charge has seemingly disappeared from the face of global warming.
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“You're painfully alive in a drugged and dying culture.” ― Richard Yates, Revolutionary Road |
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#5 | |
Rear Admiral
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#6 |
Lucky Jack
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#7 |
Wayfaring Stranger
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It became known that he had a financial interest in carbon trading companies and that he used more electricity at his house than most small towns so rather than continue to be seen as a hypocrite he stepped out of the limelight.
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#8 | |
Stowaway
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As for the swing to 70%?????? 4 years ago they had the 70% the new survey gives 69%, doesn't that mean that the swing isn't much of a swing at all and the increase is actually a decrease. Then again I did read that a survey is empirical evidence and is not open to interpretation as it only can mean one thing ![]() |
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#9 | ||
Soaring
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The important part is the third link, the original document, in full length. And from that, page 66ff: methodology. Quote:
Next step: go thorugh the document and show why and where their reported answer patterns are wrong, and erratically listed. Or do you mean the whole thing is just forged and faked? You then can file a charge at or against two of your universities: Yale, and George Mason. If they are serious with their reputation they will be glad to get evidence for people working in their name and in their institutes compromising their name and reputation by forging results and data sets. To what degree this is also a criminal offence under legal penalty in the US, I donot know. In Germany, such betrayal can serve you high financial penalties.
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#10 | |
Navy Seal
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An interesting take on these so-called facts:
Quote:
In other words, every time the weather warms, or there is a drought, or an ice storm, or a wildfire, or a blizzard, or a heat wave, people start talking about it being global warming. This is why those numbers seem to be in constant flux. This 'paper' only gives a snapshot of this opinion at a high point, and does so to make a political statement, making it disingenuous at best. Back when we were having those nasty winters a few years ago, no one was talking about that. Of course, we are also in an El Nino cycle, which gives us warmer, dryer weather in my part of the country. I imagine that this would not be the first time that people got hysterical about things, and I know that it is not the first time that Skybird has been caught up in it. |
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#11 |
Officer
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surveys only show the results of those surveyed. i don't care HOW statisticians "weight" their surveys. everyone knows that 99% of statistics can be used to show whatever you want.
global climate change is now the preferred term, because some folks don't understand that global warming doesn't actually mean it gets warmer where they live. anthropogenic climate change has become undeniable, except by those with a vested interest int the current energy system and those who blindly listen to them.
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#12 | |
Soaring
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However, the Philly article is way too short and superficial as if I would make it a basis of questioning the results alltogether. The argument of that article would need to become object of empirical examination itself. We may have won some time in which we can adapt, but I think what it all means is that at the end the final rise in temperature will come even sharper and more drastic, if we do not get ready to cope with that. On surveys, what is being done if they should fulfill the criterion of being representative for a population, is to make sure that the sample offers demographic represenation, and is big enough in size to minimise the margin of error (= that sample's findings are not meaning anything, but are by pure chance, by randomness, by luck) is not exceeding a certain level, which usually is set at 5%, 3% or 1%. In experimental settings, these error margins often are set even lower, for example 0.5, 0.25 or 0.05%. This is what separates a poll from a representative survey: the poll is just a random snapshot that can but must not be representative at all, since one does not care for the structure of the sample. The representative survey uses statistical calculations to determine how big a sample must be at minimum to bring down the margin error to this or that wanted level. This gets calculated by formulas, it is no random or arbitrary process. You cannot do a representative survey with too small a sample, therefore. The trustworthiness becomes the bigger the greater the sample is, but beyond a certain level, the additonal gain slows down, and from some point on it is not economic to increase the sample size anymore. On the Philly article, they may have a point. It'S not that I studied those 60 pages so much in depth that I have every detail on my mind. A relation between weather at the time of the questioning, and given answers, would not be that surprising. We know according links between psychic state and mood, and season/light/weather.
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#13 |
Navy Seal
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AL GORE AL GORE
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#14 | |
Rear Admiral
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#15 |
Officer
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Antrhopogenic Global Climate Change is not an "opinion", it is a fact. The only remaining question is exactly how much influence mankind has had in it. There is NO DOUBT AT ALL that we are indeed part of the cause however.
El Nino/El Nina. right. how many years now are those to be blamed? sure are turning out to be some long cycles there. Crazy winters and crazy summers and crazy storms and crazy droughts .. ALL OF THEM are due to global climate change to some degree. One can not point to any specific event and say "this was global climate change". It doesn't work that way. One CAN however point to the overall trend in weather events and say, with confidence, this has been global climate change. I just read an article the other day where researchers (actual climatologists, published in Nature) are saying WE CAN NO LONGER STOP THE RISE IN SEA LEVEL FOR SEVERAL HUNDRED YEARS. ![]() "Follow the money" clearly, and always has, traced back to the current energy syndicate making less profit. Not losing money, mind you; simply less profit. they still make money, just not as much. Global Climate Change is not a political OR economic thing. It has been politicized and economized. Global Climate Change itself is purely science. And the science is now completely undeniable. Period.
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