reece
Well-Known Member
Right. It's a conspiracy. Like I said. There is hyperbole on both sides. I used to be cynical like this. All the evil politicians and what not. But it's a cop out. It's all too easy to broad brush a group of people and declare them all evil, or lazy, or racist, etc. Everyone's motivation is greed, blah blah. And I'm sorry but it's hard to consider someone credible when you don't even understand that if something is in the Constitution it is Constitutional no matter how much you disagree with it (a little off topic but it goes to state of mind, your honor). All of the conspiracy talk just shuts me down. Not that I don't find it interesting. I am fascinated by conspiracy theories. But if we're going to have a rational conversation it can't include the "they're out to get us" argument (unless there's proof).stickstones said:My point is that we still don't know what the fuck we are talking about when it comes to global warming and its causes. Therefore, we shouldn't panic to change policies without thinking them all the way through. When global warming proponents can sit down and calmly and rationally talk through what the problem is, what has caused it and what we should do about it, then they will be worth listening to. At this point in that cycle, they seem to be skipping the thinking things through part and wanting to rush into change. In this political climate, any time any politician sends up an alarm with a solution that involves limiting resources to its people, taxing its people to pay for it, etc...tread cautiously.reece said:With the newly discovered fudge and subsequent adjustment, how far off was Einstein?
Isn't it apples and oranges? Why is it that no one is changing public policy based on the Theory of Relativity? It seems you are saying it is because there are still "fudge factors to figure out."
Bad analogy.
It's like parking your car under a tree limb that is partially broken. It's gonna fall. But when? Could be years. Could be while you're in your friend's house getting high. Or maybe it won't fall in your lifetime. There are some factors to consider but all you don't know them all. And, until you know all of the factors it makes no sense to change your behavior regarding parking under the tree. Right?
And speaking of bad analagies, all analgies are bad when either taken out of context or when the main point of the speaker is not understood, as appears to be the case with your understanding of my relativity analogy. Let me modify your broken limb analogy to appropriately represent what I was saying, even though it still has flaws.
What I say warming alarmists are doing is taking note of the broken limb and blaming its existence on man's warming of the environment. (Mosquito situation is a perfect example of this.) Then they go and try to pass legislation to keep us from ever breaking limbs off trees again due to warming. Warming proponents will dance around singing the praises of the legislation that will now save so many limbs from breaking without ever seeing the wealth that is transferred from the subjects to the lawmakers with the same policy. But guess what? Some tree limbs are still going to break because it has nothing to do with warming. Politicians do not care about the environment or you. They don't care if the science that backs their claims has some flaws in it. They only care if it will forward their agenda (read $$$) and be used to get something done fast.
And I do understand you believe this stuff. I don't think this belief and intelligence are mutually exclusive. But I need more than is currently available before I can go there. Some emails taken out of context and denying the 16th amendment exists (or something like that) doesn't help.