![]() |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
If that is the case then we still have a lot of problems to face. Whether or not climate change is mans fault or not the next 100 years are going to see sea levels rise and temperatures rising in some places to a point where the land becomes uninhabitable. So where are all the people going to go? Land mass is going to shrink and inhabitable landmass is going to be reduced so the population is going to decrease.
Put that with the bees vanishing and possible problems with crops and food surplies we are in serious trouble whatever the cause. Scientists do say that greenhouse gasses the worst I believe is methane is contributing to temperature increases irrelevent of whether the Earth climate changes on its own anyway |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
This is interesting, James Lovelock suggests that climate change & other factors, lack of food & resources could reduce the human population from the current 6 to 7 Billion down to 1 Billion by the end of the century.
C'est la vie :) http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/sh...-humanity.html |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Quote:
|
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Hmmm, while there is undoubtably some substance to the claims of the catastrophians, the longer this argument drags on with the ineffective but, of course, revenue raising, half baked carbon footprint exchange schemes initiated to combat it, the more I am thinking the whole thing will turn out to another over-hyped scare like Y2K, bird flu and swine flu to name but a few.
Take X daily to reduce cholesterol, NO! Don't take X it causes cancer, take X under medical supervision, it causes cancer but reduces obesity............and so it goes on. We are bombarded with such pseudo science drivel almost every time we listen to the news or read a newspaper. It seems there always has to be some dark foreboding threat hanging over us to shape our existance. In the absence of a real war we lived for ages under the threat of the cold war and communism. As soon as that fizzled out or maybe became unsustainable we are now wallowing in Terrorism and Global Warming. I wonder what the next crisis to club us with might be. :) Certainly food for thought. |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Quote:
For pacifists substitute denyers. The principle remains the same and as effective as it was in the past. |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Mick, Y2K was not an overhyped scare - a lot of work went into making sure the scare did not become reality (for instance, I was in at work at 5am Jan 1st, 2000, and most of my team had been in since 11pm the previous night, and that was after about two years work of a team of 80 staff, not counting all the MS, Novell, Oracle, etc updates, and all the Telecomms/Server/etc firmware updates that were supplied).
|
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
it was
|
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Quote:
Well those that were still sober and gullible enough to give a damn. :D |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Quote:
|
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Global Warming is a myth....
Scientists were lacking Funds many years ago, Global warming just arises from nowhere and Scientists are being funded left right and centre Nothing slightly Fishy there? A hippy and a bong could work this whole thing out |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Oh sure, it's all a conspiracy by the evil scientists.
Which ones, by the way? I mean, exactly which ones? Presumably you know, seeing as it was so simple to work out? |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Quote:
Until then.. Its just a rumour ;) |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
I did hear somewhere that the melting ice caps may result in greater volcanic activity. I think the argument was that the ice caps keep the magma below cooler.
But, hey I'll be alright; I don't live near a volcano |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Quote:
I worked at Worthing hospital and a lot of time was spent updating all the old (486 era) computers with bioses, as well as the servers, which were also DX 100mhz models, heh Not to mention all the windows updates (Windows 95/3.11) I don't think they wanted to take the risk incase the medical systems stopped working come 2000, especially considering how they were based on Access 2.0 databases |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
Quote:
;) |
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:36. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum