SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: combjelly who wrote (328085)3/7/2007 4:00:32 AM
From: Taro  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1578238
 
Remains the fact, however, that the elevated CO2 content of the atmosphere trails the temperature increases by hundreds of years or more based on the data now on hand from the latest Antarctic ice cores.

Should be the other way around, shouldn't it?

Taro



To: combjelly who wrote (328085)3/7/2007 8:41:28 AM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578238
 
That's rich
"Al Gore's movie, 'An Inconvenient Truth,' was billed as 'a passionate and inspirational look at one man's fervent crusade to halt global warming's deadly progress in its tracks by exposing the myths and misconceptions that surround it.' But right after the movie won an Oscar for best documentary, America learned that Gore's crusade ends at his front door," San Francisco Chronicle columnist Debra Saunders writes.
A conservative think tank, the Tennessee Center for Policy Research, circulated a press release that showed the Gores spent $30,000 a year on energy for their suburban Nashville home -- and burned 221,000 kilowatt hours last year, or 20 times the national average. The reaction of Gore's spokesperson is instructive. Kalee Kreider told ABC News' Jake Tapper, "I think what you're seeing here is the last gasp of the global warming skeptics. They've completely lost the debate on the issue, so now they're just attacking their most effective opponent."
"Kreider is right, in a way. Gore is the most effective global-warming advocate in America. Yet somehow Gore has little problem doing a lot of the very thing he tells the rest of the country not to do -- that is, burning more energy than is necessary," the columnist writes.
"The message comes across loud and clear: The Gores are rich, and rich people are going to burn a lot of energy. They won't let their belief in global warming crimp their lifestyle.
"That's why 'Inconvenient Truth' producer Laurie David can boast on the movie Web site that she is 'committed to stopping global warming,' denounce people who drive SUVs -- and still fly in private Gulfstream jets. (Having been blasted in the press for her high-flying ways, David told ABC last year that she was cutting back on her private-plane travel. Talk about commitment.)
"And let us not forget two other California pioneers on climate change -- California Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, both owners of multiple SUVs and users of private planes."



To: combjelly who wrote (328085)3/7/2007 1:18:41 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578238
 
"Greenhouse effect is a myth, say scientists"

Those LYIN' hothouse plants have just been growing better to DECEIVE us!



To: combjelly who wrote (328085)3/7/2007 2:07:49 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578238
 
Al Gore's remission of sin

By Tony Blankley
March 7, 2007

Some neuro-scientists see evidence that man is genetically hard-wired to be disposed to religious conviction. If this is so, it might explain why among even the French — the most secular culture on Earth — only 25 percent claim to be atheists and a full 60 percent believe in a spiritual component to life. It might also explain why the environmental movement tends to veer toward a religious, rather than a scientific, sensibility.
This oft-observed aspect to environmentalism in general, and global warmingism in particular, has been shrewdly analyzed in a new book, "The Future of Everything: The Science of Prediction," by former University College London Professor David Orrell. Among other things, Dr. Orrell focuses on the similarity between global-warming advocates' powerful predictive urge and the inherent prophetic nature of the religious instinct.
While I suspect that most global-warming alarmists would be offended if they were called pagan neo-animists, in fact, some leading religious scholars have written cogently on the point. For example, Graham Harvey, professor of religious studies at King Alfred's College, England, has written two approving books on the topic: "Contemporary Paganism: Listening People, Speaking Earth," (New York University Press) and "Animism: Respecting the Living World" (Columbia University Press).
As Mr. Graham writes: "This new use of the term animism applies to the religious worldviews and lifeways of communities and cultures for which it is important to inculcate and enhance appropriate ways to live respectfully within the wider community of [non-human animate and inanimate] persons."
Moreover, there has been a conscious awareness that religious fervor would be needed to energize the environmental movement. As Joseph Brean points out in his recent National Post review of Dr. Orrell's book:
"Forty years ago, shortly after Rachel Carson launched modern environmentalism... a Princeton history professor named Lynn White wrote a seminal essay called the Historical Roots of our Ecological Crises: 'By destroying pagan animism, Christianity made it possible to exploit nature in a mood of indifference to the feelings of natural objects. Since the roots of our trouble are so largely religious, the remedy must also be essentially religious, whether we call it that or not.' It was a prescient claim. In a 2003 speech... Michael Crichton... closed the circle, calling modern environmentalism 'the religion of choice for urban atheists... a perfect 21st century re-mapping of traditional JudeoChristian beliefs and myths."
Now, there is nothing wrong, and a lot right, with the human instinct to try to understand man within a larger transcendental context. The arrogant and monstrously dilated individual human ego is the direct cause of much of mankind's suffering throughout our benighted existence.
And while I have my own religious thoughts, I will not disdain any man's search for the transcendent. But a religion should be understood by both its adherents and others for what it is — a religion. The trouble with global-warming believers is that probably most of them delude themselves into thinking they are practicing science — not religion.
And yet, the signs of religiousness are readily to be seen. Al Gore and his Hollywood coterie have almost comically manifested one aspect of their new religion in the last few weeks — the sense of sin and the search for remission of such sin.
At the Academy Awards last month, their spokesman proudly announced that this year's show was "the first green Oscars." These vast consumers of energy in their 30,000-square-foot houses, their Gulfstream jets and even in their high-energy consumption film-production process — claimed green remission of sin by virtue of driving the last hundred yards to the Kodak Theatre in Priuses, and by buying carbon credits.
Likewise, when Al Gore was revealed to be using high quantities of energy to heat and cool his large home, he claimed it was OK because he had purchased carbon offset credits. Substantively, these offsets are of dubious environmental value (see Daily Telegraph article: "Is Carbon Offsetting a Con"; BBC's "UK to Tackle Bogus Carbon Schemes" and Wall Street Journal's "The Political and Business Self-interest Behind Carbon Limits").
But as, what the Catholic Church calls "indulgentia a culpa et a poena" (release from guilt and from punishment), paying carbon offset fees makes perfect religious sense.
The Christian sinner pays the church for "a remission of the temporal punishment due, in God's justice, to sin that has been forgiven, which remission is granted by the Church in the exercise of the powers of the keys, through the application of the superabundant merits of Christ and of the saints, and for some just and reasonable motive" (Catholic Encyclopedia).
In the animistic church any using or changing of the physical world (such as burning carbon) is a sin against the sacred, holistic, living world (the Gaia hypothesis). But as everyone uses energy (just as every Christian sins), the neo-animist church, too, must provide for a remission of sin (and also, a handy source of profit for the carbon-offset company owners — such as Al Gore who, according to news reports, pays his indulgences to Generation Investment Management, of which he is the chairman.)
In the neo-animist church of global warming, as in all religions, the truth is acquired by faith — not science. And as in all religions, the faithful should be on guard for charlatans.



To: combjelly who wrote (328085)3/7/2007 2:11:09 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 1578238
 
Gore in the balance

By Helle Dale
March 7, 2007

Religious intolerance is associated in the minds of many today with Islamic radicalism. Yet, there is a Western variety on the rise that has to concerns us greatly as well -- and no it is not climate change orthodoxy. Challenge the belief that the Earth is warming dangerously due to human activity, or criticize any of its high priests, and the wrath of true believers will be visited upon you.
This troubling fact was brought forcefully home recently to the Tennessee Center for Policy Research, a smallish think tank dedicated to energy research and located in Nashville, former Vice President Al Gore's hometown. After watching the over-the-top acclaim according Mr. Gore so-called documentary "An Inconvenient Truth" at the Oscars, staff members had the bright idea of checking on the Gore family's energy usage. As it turned out, the Gore mansion interestingly uses 20 times more electricity than the average American home.
Little did the staff anticipate that by posting the facts of the Gore family's bloated and certainly hypocritical energy consumption on their Web site, they would create an international firestorm, become the subject of death threats, vicious verbal abuse and almost see their Web site shut down because of the onslaught. According to the center's spokeswoman, Nicole Williams, a deluge of calls and e-mail have flowed in from all over the world, as far away as Germany, Australia, Turkey and Latin America.
"Conspiracy theorists have made up all sorts of stories about us, who we are and who we are backed by," Ms. Williams says. "Our president once had an internship at AEI, and now they say we are funded by AEI. Personally, I have been asked 'whose whore are you?' I have been called 'a stupid redneck,' 'liar,' [and some profane names]. I have also been told that I 'had better watch out.' People have posted personal information about us individually on the Web." The facts that led to Mr. Gore deserving "a gold statue for hypocrisy" are these: Despite the fact that Mr. Gore in his movie hyperbolically calls climate change "the most important moral, ethical, spiritual and political issue humankind has ever faced," his sentiment has not spurred him or his family to change their lifestyle.
According to data gleaned by the Tennessee Public Policy Center from Nashville Electric Service, which supplies the Gore mansion in Belle Meade near Nashville, the Gores burned 221,000 kilowatt-hours in 2006, more than 20 times the national average of 10,656 kwh. Not only that, but Mr. Gore's electricity consumption increased substantially between 2005 and 2006. And in addition to the nearly $30,000 the Gores pay in electricity bills a year, they pay an average of $1,080 on natural gas usage per month.
According to the theory underpinning "An Inconvenient Truth," the movie that is fast becoming a primary text for the environmental movement -- and which is now mandated viewing in the schools of several European countries, like Great Britain and Norway - it appears that its producer, Mr. Gore, is personally responsible for emitting greenhouse gasses on an epic scale.
Now, readers of The Washington Times will recall that it is not the first time that Mr. Gore has displayed an astonishing gap between theory and practice. Who can forget the image of Mr. Gore floating beatifically in a canoe in New Hampshire in the 2000 election? Inquiries by an enterprising reporter for The Times uncovered that the river had to be dammed by the U.S. Park Service to raise the water table, which produced enough draft to float Mr. Gore's boat, so to speak.
Mr. Gore claims that it does not matter how much energy he burns because he buys Carbon Emission Offsets, a concept that used to be popular with the right and now has been taken up by Mr. Gore and friends. It means that wealthy consumers like Mr. Gore pay a fee to splurge, which is then invested in reducing carbon emissions in the developing world, allegedly a zero-sum game. Mr. Gore's money stays in the family, though. The company he deals with is called Generation Investment Management, LLP. Based in London and Washington, its chairman and founding partner is none other than Al Gore.
"I think of carbon offsets as 'indulgences,' " says Ms. Williams of the Tennessee Center for Public Policy Research, referring to the practice of the medieval Catholic Church selling the forgiveness of sins. What we need in environmental affairs, perhaps, is a reformation that will upend the orthodoxy and bring people back to their senses.