Scientists: "Carbon Emissions Reductions a Dumb Idea"
Even If Such Things Were Needed, They Would Never Work
What he's talking about is twofold.
First off, he's talking about the increasingly popular idea among a pretty good number of scientists, himself included, that the only cost-effective, humane, and realistic way to curb global warming is through some type or combination of types of "geo-engineering": that is, literally altering the Earth and/or the Earth's climate so that the disasters predicted by global warming activists don't come to pass.
Benford's personal idea is to suspend trillions of itty-bitty sun-reflective particles in the Earth's stratosphere (thereby tacitly admitting that the Sun is a significant factor in causing global warming, although Benford gives lip service to the idea that it's increased spew-ups of carbon dioxide). This was an idea that had a precursor in astrophysicist John Von Neumann in the 1950s...um, except that he wanted to do something similar in order to warm the planet and increase the availability of arable land in the northern hemisphere by melting a lot of arctic ice.
But secondly, and to this writer much more salient, just as Benford remarks, geo-engineering is vastly less expensive than government taxation and regulation, and it would not require mass sacrifice and the harming of billions of people in developing and Third World nations where, in some of the latter, areas are so poor and out of touch with what we in the civilized world take to be basic human necessities (and justifiably so) that the lighting up of a place's first electric street lamp literally sets off dancing in the (dirt) streets.
The geo-engineering advocates further make it clear that private industry would ultimately play a larger, more powerful role in aiding the scientists' efforts than any government. And most importantly to them, their efforts would yield real, significant effects in only a few years-unlike those proposed by politicians and the IPCC.
So: Transparency (through simplicity and private initiative), no interference with economic development (indeed, there would be economic stimulus), scientific advancement, and all at a fraction of the cost of the measures proposed by politicians and the likes of Al Gore and all his business cronies and media minions.
Can it be any wonder Al Gore never thought of all this? It causes them to lose vast swaths of their power.
"Global warming is grossly exaggerated. Here I am opposing the holy brotherhood of climate model experts and the crowd of deluded citizens who believe the numbers predicted by the computer models...There is no doubt that parts of the world are getting warmer, but the warming is not global. I am not saying that the warming does not cause problems. Obviously it does. Obviously we should be trying to understand it better. I am saying that the problems are grossly exaggerated...In humid air, the effect of carbon dioxide on radiation transport is unimportant because the transport of thermal radiation is already blocked by the much larger greenhouse effect of water vapor. The effect of carbon dioxide is important where the air is dry, and air is usually dry only where it is cold. Hot desert air may feel dry but often contains a lot of water vapor. The warming effect of carbon dioxide is strongest where air is cold and dry, mainly in the arctic rather than in the tropics, mainly in mountainous regions rather than in lowlands, mainly in winter rather than in summer, and mainly at night rather than in daytime," says another eminent physicist and writer, Freeman Dyson.
But what Dyson says gets even more interesting -- for everyone.
Dyson says that we need to consider "the mystery of the wet Sahara. This is a mystery that has always fascinated me. At many places in the Sahara desert that are now dry and unpopulated, we find rock-paintings showing people with herds of animals...The glaciers that are now shrinking were much smaller six thousand years ago than they are today. Six thousand years ago seems to have been the warmest and wettest period of the interglacial era that began twelve thousand years ago when the last Ice Age ended. I would like to ask two questions. First, if the increase of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is allowed to continue, shall we arrive at a climate similar to the climate of six thousand years ago when the Sahara was wet? Second, if we could choose between the climate of today with a dry Sahara and the climate of six thousand years ago with a wet Sahara, should we prefer the climate of today? [I answer] 'yes' to the first question and 'no' to the second."
None of this answers the questions concerning whether or not carbon dioxide really is playing any leading role in climate change or if we really can effect the climate, which is a vastly complex system, nearly as effectively as even some of our best scientists imagine.
But to this writer, two things are obvious.
One, we shouldn't be so hasty in deciding that climate change that we are now experiencing, if it even does play out roughly as predicted over the next decades, will be for ill and not for good.
Two, even if we do need to try to do something to staunch the growth of climate change, the "solutions" laid on the table by Al Gore and all his cronies and his wild-eyed faithful are closer to suicide.
Published by Brant McLaughlin
I am a Writer driven by endless curiosity and a deep desire to waste time creatively. View profile
- An Inconvenient Fallacy - Why Scientists Are Talking About Global Warming
- Carbon-Based 'Paper' is Strong, Lightweight
- Why Dumb Women Get Promoted and Smart Women Get Left Behind
- Efficient Driving Tips: Reducing Emissions and Saving Money
- The World is Our Idea, the Idea is Our World
- Dumb and Stupid Laws that Are Still on the Books in Michigan
- We shouldn't be so hasty in deciding that climate change is for ill instead of good.
- There are better, faster, cheaper ways to cool the Earth if we need to do so.
- Al Gore's "solutions" really suicide.




5 Comments
Post a Commenti read this.
i just printed this article out and took it into the bathroom with me to read while taking a steaming dump. i enjoyed reading it.. i really did.. but i ran out of toilet paper so i was forced to use this article to wipe my ass. thank you for the extra toilet paper and the good read.
my penis thwarted in many directions while reading this article, it went erect to limp to flacidly loose to erect once again. what i am trying to say is that the article was a good read and had many interesting points. thanks.
Your writings are so much fun.....itty-bitty.....I love it! I am getting an education in all of this. Thank you.
Excelent article. I have always known since I was a kid that the earth warmed and cooled by itself over the millenia, as a perfectly natural part of things. However, maybe some places (like southeast Asia) could stand to reduce their carbon emmissions. I have been overseas plenty, and the US has about the cleanest air of most populous places I have been to. Besides, does anybody really think that Algore and hiscompatriots will actually use less carbon-based fuels after they've forced everyone else to stop? (their attitude will surely be "oh, well. MORE FOR US!")