Don, I went to the link and 1 is true and the rebuttal is bovine excrement.
And 2 thru 6 are not untrue but also not science but paper tigers and also the rebuttals are all bovine excrement
follow the references and see if they have anything to-do with the bovine excrement rebuttal claims. They do not.
Don, I know you are not stupid. If you goto climateataglance.com you will find all matter is explanations and analysis explained with data with links to the sources. IPCC Nasa, Noa, and universities. There is also a link to download a pdf of the book
I do not deny climate change is happening. But the only measurable one I can hang on C02 is greening. Now if millions of acres are becoming more green and less arid, crop yields are setting records year after year. Greening of the Earth is the only True CO2 Green House effect.
So how does that make for more extinctions? A few days ago I bought the paperback of the above book on amazon.
I did try to follow a reference from you link and --- only an abstract. I do not see how that offsets millions of acres of new biosphere. And all exiting is producing more food.
Abstract Most of the policy debate surrounding the actions needed to mitigate and adapt to anthropogenic climate change has been framed by observations of the past 150 years as well as climate and sea-level projections for the twenty-first century. The focus on this 250-year window, however, obscures some of the most profound problems associated with climate change. Here, we argue that the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, a period during which the overwhelming majority of human-caused carbon emissions are likely to occur, need to be placed into a long-term context that includes the past 20 millennia, when the last Ice Age ended and human civilization developed, and the next ten millennia, over which time the projected impacts of anthropogenic climate change will grow and persist. This long-term perspective illustrates that policy decisions made in the next few years to decades will have profound impacts on global climate, ecosystems and human societies — not just for this century, but for the next ten millennia and beyond. |