Comment Re:It *IS* their fault (Score 2) 408
Comment Re:Fast track (Score 2) 355
Comment Re:200 miles underground is really deep! (Score 2) 106
Comment Re:Fast track (Score 4, Insightful) 355
Comment Re:With the best will in the world... (Score 1) 486
Germany actually pays its neighbors to take it when the wind is blowing and the sun is shining as the price of electricity between utility companies goes negative.
citation?
Comment what counts as "an image of the prophet?" (Score 3, Interesting) 228
Comment Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! (Score 1) 719
scientists might find more traction for their beliefs if they could get away from the folks who are peddling 'solutions' for AGW. You know, the activists who want to make energy so expensive that poor people will have to live in dark, cold homes, and gasoline so expensive that they have to stay in those cold, dark homes.
Find me one of these activists for cold, dark homes and hyper-expensive energy. One that's not made out of straw.
Comment Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! (Score 1) 719
Comment Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... (Score 1) 719
Comment Re:Sure (Score 1) 719
Comment Re:Skeptics and Deniers (Score 1) 719
For example, have we excluded the possibility of rising temperature changes are not affected by:
Yes! FFS! Yes, we have excluded those possibilities, or at least found the boundaries of the plausible effect sizes, and determined that they are not where the action is! Stop assuming that climate scientists haven't been thinking about the forces that might plausibly affect climate! That is what climate scientists do!
Comment Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate (Score 1) 719
If CO2 had any significant effect, it would show up in the temperature record.
Which of course it does. Google "temperature CO2 graph." It's glaringly obvious, if you don't truncate the graphs to only show a few years. Or does the AC believe that if the CO2 in the atmosphere disappeared, there would be no impact? (without the greenhouse effect of CO2, the current surface temperature would be about 30C lower)