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To: jazzlover2 who wrote (912)10/21/2025 4:02:54 PM
From: LoneClone1 Recommendation

Recommended By
S. maltophilia

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 919
 
Let me extend your reasoning.

If your house is on fire, don't bother to call the fire department cuz it will burn down anyway and you'll just have to pay more taxes. Just huddle in the ashes once the fire is out.

And why prepare for the coming earthquake, since it's going to happen anyway and you'll probably have to pay more taxes. Just huddle in the rubble after it happens.

I certainly wouldn't want to live in your hopeless world. We may be virtually powerless as individuals, but as any student of history will confirm, by acting collectively we can create immense change.

LC



To: jazzlover2 who wrote (912)10/21/2025 4:55:16 PM
From: LoneClone  Respond to of 919
 
There is absolutely nothing that can be done to change the climate

The science is settled. We have greatly changed the climate since the industrial revolution, the same way we trashed the ozone layer. We managed to recover from that by working collectively. We need to do the same with the GHG production that science tells us is doing the damage.

I hope I am right in remembering that you are not so arrogant as to think you are smarter than the scientists.

LC



To: jazzlover2 who wrote (912)10/21/2025 5:29:49 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 919
 
Clone is sad. He completely ignores any evidence that controverts his beliefs...then projects his climate doom on those who try to rationally discuss climate issue. Note below and identify which one is the outlier....

AI Summary


To understand the stability of climate throughout history, consider the following points:

  1. Earth's climate has varied significantly over geological time scales.
  2. Ice ages and warm periods have alternated, indicating instability.
  3. The Holocene epoch (last 11,700 years) has been relatively stable.
  4. Even during the Holocene, there have been fluctuations (e.g., Medieval Warm Period, Little Ice Age).
  5. Human activities are now influencing climate stability more than natural factors.
  6. No period in known history has been completely stable; variability is a constant feature.