UN Climate Conference Begins; CO² Levels Highest in 650,000 Years

November 28, 2005

  • November 28, 2005 at 1:01 am
    Junk Science says:
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    Gee, these \”scientists\” have apparently discovered 650,000 YEARS of recorded readings of the CO2 levels. Amazing. Where do I send my tax dollars??

  • November 28, 2005 at 2:23 am
    Rob says:
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    Agreed… Amazing how they say global warming is a bad thing. Didn\’t the earth have a tropical climate for thousands of years before? must have been those silly industries and cars they were driving!

  • November 28, 2005 at 5:48 am
    Bill says:
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    Easy solution. Grow more trees or just eliminate people. Takes a long time to grow trees, so the quick fix is to eliminate people. Volunteers??? Suggestion: Let\’s start with the phony scientists! Tree-huggers will be next!

  • November 30, 2005 at 10:50 am
    mark says:
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    The preceding comments are so stupid and off-point that I feel compelled to comment.

    The larger point of the article is: There is a documented close correlation between CO2 levels and global temperatures.* It is uncontrovertible that CO2 levels are increasing.* Whether arithmatically or exponentially isn\’t as significant as the fact that the CO2 levels are rising.* We can and should continue arguing about the cause(s) of the increasing CO2, while taking immediate and sustained actions to reduce global CO2 emissions – irregardless of whether our human activities, especially of the past 200 years, is the driving force of increased CO2 levels.* Global weather patterns are changing rapidly – faster than biological and sociological/ political/economic adaptation.* Bad things will happen to our food supplies and our economic systems – to us – if we do not immediately begin adjusting to the changing global weather patterns.* Raindrops washed away the Rocky Mtns twice according ot the geological record. Each of us is like a raindrop in the sense that individually our impact is not much, but as a whole – across the planet, given enough time, humanity has tremendous impact on the global environment.



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