Earth has gone through multiple periods of hot and cold even before industrialization and man for that matter. We are not the main culprits that causes something to occur naturally
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[url]http://grist.org/climate-energy/global-warming-is-nothing-new/[/url] [url]http://grist.org/climate-energy/natural-emissions-dwarf-human-emissions/[/url] [url]http://grist.org/climate-energy/the-co2-rise-is-natural/[/url] Keep up that denial.
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Edited by Y SO REACH BETA: 12/26/2013 9:16:52 PMYes and it hasn't had this much Co2 in the atmosphere for a VERY long time.
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http://climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus
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We produce so many emissions, its almost impossible to think we could do so much yet no change nothing at all.
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We don't produce nearly as many emissions as nature does though. I can't remember the study I read or where it was but it did a percentage of natural emissions vs man made emissions and we made little no no impact compared on what naturally happens in the earth. Personally I just think people are getting hyped up and this maybe just a cycle that happens. We wouldn't have a way of knowing for sure since we started tracking weather patterns well fairly recently to be honest. This climate change could easily be a pattern that happens every hundred or so years for us. This was probably one of the most normal Canadian winters we've had in the past decade. We had snow well before Christmas and its still falling. For years we never had snow before Christmas. I'm just saying still a skeptic on climate change.
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Not all of the world is affected the same. Especially when there was no fall and it went straight to the coldest winter he world has seen, especially in Europe. When tons of scientists are saying it's the coldest winter ever, and I notice that there's thin sheets of ice on car windows at night, you can tell something's up. We ARE affecting the climate, whether you believe it or not doesn't really matter since you can't do anything about it.
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http://climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus
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That's absolutely true. I think the argument is that most scientists have come to the conclusion that [i]this time[/i] its possible that the rise in sea level and temperature could be directly connected to the massive amount of co2 released within the last 100 or so years. (Happy holidayz, good sir :)
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You hear all about [u]recent studies[/u] but I'd like to see them compared to historical weather patterns and see if they match up. Of course that never happens and were always given the worst case scenario.
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http://climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus