Climate change models- incorrect
General Topic
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From: Beendare
07-Feb-22

Beendare's Link
It seems we have another reason to be skeptical about the science behind climate change. The WSJ [subscription] has a lengthy article explaining why the science behind the dire predictions behind climate change are WRONG. Yep. Essentially when they back tested the dire prediction model, it failed miserably. It turns out that predicting cloud behavior- a huge influence on earths climate- is extremely difficult. [insert a big DUH here]

Zero Hedge excerpted some of the original article here....I will copy a excerpt in the next post

From: Beendare
07-Feb-22
I know this is going to get a bunch of liberal teacher types wringing their hands, but lets stick to the facts. These scientists are saying their original models WERE WRONG- don't shoot the messenger.

From the article; Dire Forecasts Wrong When they ran the updated simulation in 2018, the conclusion jolted them: Earth’s atmosphere was much more sensitive to greenhouse gases than decades of previous models had predicted, and future temperatures could be much higher than feared—perhaps even beyond hope of practical remedy.

“We thought this was really strange,” said Gokhan Danabasoglu, chief scientist for the climate-model project at the Mesa Laboratory in Boulder at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, or NCAR. “If that number was correct, that was really bad news.”

The scientists soon concluded their new calculations had been thrown off kilter by the physics of clouds in a warming world, which may amplify or damp climate change. “The old way is just wrong, we know that,” said Andrew Gettelman, a physicist at NCAR who specializes in clouds and helped develop the CESM2 model. “I think our higher sensitivity is wrong too. It’s probably a consequence of other things we did by making clouds better and more realistic. You solve one problem and create another.”

Because clouds can both reflect solar radiation into space and trap heat from Earth’s surface, they are among the biggest challenges for scientists honing climate models.

At any given time, clouds cover more than two-thirds of the planet. Their impact on climate depends on how reflective they are, how high they rise and whether it is day or night. They can accelerate warming or cool it down. They operate at a scale as broad as the ocean, as small as a hair’s width. Their behavior can be affected, studies show, by factors ranging from cosmic rays to ocean microbes, which emit sulfur particles that become the nuclei of water droplets or ice crystals.

“If you don’t get clouds right, everything is out of whack.” said Tapio Schneider, an atmospheric scientist at the California Institute of Technology and the Climate Modeling Alliance, which is developing an experimental model. “Clouds are crucially important for regulating Earth’s energy balance.”

In an independent assessment of 39 global-climate models last year, scientists found that 13 of the new models produced significantly higher estimates of the global temperatures caused by rising atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide than the older computer models—scientists called them the “wolf pack.” Weighed against historical evidence of temperature changes, those estimates were deemed unrealistic.

Dr. Gettelman, who helped develop CESM2, and his colleagues in their initial upgrade added better ways to model polar ice caps and how carbon and nitrogen cycle through the environment. To make the ocean more realistic, they added wind-driven waves. They fine-tuned the physics in its algorithms and made its vintage Fortran code more efficient.

Even the simplest diagnostic test is challenging. The model divides Earth into a virtual grid of 64,800 cubes, each 100 kilometers on a side, stacked in 72 layers. For each projection, the computer must calculate 4.6 million data points every 30 minutes. To test an upgrade or correction, researchers typically let the model run for 300 years of simulated computer time.

In their initial analysis, scientists discovered a flaw in how CESM2 modeled the way moisture interacts with soot, dust or sea-spray particles that allow water vapor to condense into cloud droplets. It took a team of 10 climate experts almost 5 months to track it down to a flaw in their data and correct it, the scientists said.

much more at the WSJ

From: Beendare
07-Feb-22
BTW,Relevant to the topic of bowhunting when you see how many points you need to draw a good elk tag....it seems we will be OK in the future after all- grin

07-Feb-22
I'm shocked....

From: JL
07-Feb-22
El Rushbo was always skeptical of any scientist(s) who refers to global warming computer models as fact.

From: scentman
07-Feb-22
Climate change = money change, that simple.

From: TRnCO
07-Feb-22
it really is simple, I mean after all, I meteorologist can't pin point the temperature just a week out, so why would anyone think climatologist can predict the earth temp. 10, 20, 30 years out with any certainty.

It's all modeling. Junk in and junk out......but yet they hang their hats on it.

From: KSflatlander
07-Feb-22
If you read the article they are not doubting or debating if man-made climate change is happening or not (like Rush Limbaugh) but rather fine tuning their models. Of course all climate models are inaccurate to a degree because they are not the real world. They are predictive models. Scientists are constantly fine tuning them and correcting to make them more accurate. That’s how science works. They will never stop fine tuning predictive models as technology and our understanding advances.

This is not a denial of human caused climate change. But I agree with the scientist in the article:

“I think the climate models are the best tool we have to understand the future, even though they are far from perfect,” said Dr. Gettelman. “I’m not worried that the new models might be wrong. What scares me is that they might be right.”

07-Feb-22
So my plans for a pineapple plantation in North Dakara are ruined?

I'm screwed.

From: Rickm
07-Feb-22
Bruce,

I think the points creep is way more critical than global warming! If we are talking the new term of climate change, we'll the climate has been changing since we have had a climate. As a private citizen, don't litter, recycle when you can and do your best to keep your truck running.

Stay well.

From: slade
07-Feb-22
The Gorbal Hockyist's will ignore Science Based Science with a squawking of "Conspiracy" laden claptrap........

07-Feb-22
Not all teachers are liberal;-)

Predicting weather change is tough already, and this was written before that massive underwater volcanic eruption.

We still don’t understand all of the non-man made factors contributing to climate change, until we do let’s continue to learn, take a rational approach, and give a hoot, don’t pollute.

From: Beendare
07-Feb-22
Yes, we all know the climate changes....and we all know point creep is an eventuality. grin

The point here is; THEY WERE WAY OFF....and there are massive policy decisions by politicians jumping on the bandwagon based on that junk science.

From: KSflatlander
07-Feb-22
“THEY WERE WAY OFF“

How far off were they exactly?

From: Bowbender
07-Feb-22

Bowbender's Link
"House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has spent over $500,000 on private jets since 2020 despite repeatedly describing climate change as an "existential" threat the U.S. has a "moral" obligation to address."

"For me, it's a religious thing," she said in November after leading a 21-member congressional delegation to the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland. "I believe this is God's creation, and we have a moral obligation to be good stewards."

Spends $500K since 2020 on private jets. It's not about the climate. It's about control. And after the the dems saw how "compliant" the serfs were under COVID, well hell, that was just a practice run.

From: JohnMC
07-Feb-22
flatbrimmer that is the point they got no clue how off they are. Most likely about as far off me picking numbers for the powerball. There is a change I could get it right or close but highly unlikely. And if I did it was dumb luck.

From: JL
07-Feb-22
^....Beendare, you are correct. Science is always learning....we need to be open to that. The problem is global warming alarmists using some junk models to try and set policy decisions. The article at your link names names of some of the perpetrators who tried or are trying to go all in on something that is a modeled guess. Al Gore, AOC and Prez Biden were the alarmist names spelled out in the article. AOC cherry-picked junk to push a catastrophic agenda in the green new deal. She states the earth will end in 12 years is we don't do her green new deal.

IMO....the other moving question is what happened to the ice age when there was no industrialized (ie...man-made) influence? How could it have happened? Could natural dynamics have occurred and was that the influence on the ice age? If we hold that to be true, could it also be true the earth's natural dynamics is causing the temps to rise since the ice age? That seems to get lost in the discussion.

From: KSflatlander
07-Feb-22
It’s apparent that little John didn’t read the part in the article that talked about how they test the models.

“ what happened to the ice age when there was no industrialized (ie...man-made) influence? How could it have happened? Could natural dynamics have occurred and was that the influence on the ice age? If we hold that to be true, could it also be true the earth's natural dynamics is causing the temps to rise since the ice age? That seems to get lost in the discussion.”

Your premise assumes man is the only thing that affects climate. Scientists have never made that claim. But what we do know for a scientific fact is if you add more CO2 (and other greenhouse gases) to the atmosphere then it traps more heat. The amount of CO2 in the atmosphere is rising and we know that the combustion of fossil fuels is the major cause.. Climate scientists are now only debating how much of an effect it will have and the answers are extremely complicated. But someday our kids, grandkids, and/or our great grandkids will find out.

From: 70lbDraw
07-Feb-22
They must be using the same computer they used to count china joes votes!

And these idiots can’t understand why nobody trusts a thing they say.

From: JL
07-Feb-22
"Your premise assumes man is the only thing that affects climate."

No...not at all. In fact I suggest it's just the opposite if you read what I wrote carefully. The issue I believe several here are making is what agenda-driven politicos and alarmists are doing with the data that may or may not be accurate.

07-Feb-22

With Nature 's embedded Photo
With Nature 's embedded Photo
Dr Judith Curry from G Tech is not even covered by Media It’s in my book “”ONE WITH NATURE “ At Amazon 6 decades if bow harvest On 4 Cont

Seminar was JAN 22 at SCI VEGAS AND 3 other requests in Col pending 77 photos and many tips on practice and getting CLOSE

From: JohnMC
07-Feb-22
flatbrimmer I got plenty customers that are about as smart a climate " scientists" that tell me all about their models they have been testing for years to get the correct numbers for the lottery. I've got lots of faith they are equally as good as the global warming models and the best that I seen one of them do in the powerball is win back about eight dollars.

From: KSflatlander
07-Feb-22
What alternatives do you suggest besides past climate data and predictive climate models? Just ignore it all together and hope for the best?

What happens if you are wrong and climate change prediction do actually happen and we did nothing to prepare? What happens if climate scientists are wrong but we did prepared?

07-Feb-22

Glunt@work's embedded Photo
Glunt@work's embedded Photo
This guy says we only have this long until the ice caps are gone.

From: drycreek
07-Feb-22
Aw, I don’t know KS, maybe just leave it to God and let him work it out in due time. See that’s the problem with you libs, you don’t believe in God. You may pretend to, but you’re lying, probably even lying to yourselves. You believe a bunch of so-called scientists that mostly don’t have an ounce of common sense. A perfect example would be Anthony Fauci, the current liberal god. He has been so wrong all the way through this virus track that it’s not even funny yet y’all still place him on a pedestal. Tch, tch, tch……

From: APauls
07-Feb-22
Stop it guys. I sell polar bear tours, and when people think there’s only a couple left it’s good for business.

Then they are happy when they see the overweight rotund healthy polar bears walking the beaches.

From: KSflatlander
07-Feb-22
“See that’s the problem with you libs, you don’t believe in God. You may pretend to, but you’re lying, probably even lying to yourselves.”

Ah drycreek…what does the Bible say about judging others in the eyes of God? There are plenty of versus that discuss the subject.

From: JohnMC
07-Feb-22
Adam can I buy one for about 5 years from now for pennies on the dollars since there won't be any bears left.

From: tobywon
07-Feb-22
You’re wrong Glunt, he was showing how much global warming will help him offset shrinkage when he gets out of the pool.

From: slade
07-Feb-22
1 John 4:1 Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world.

Ie Beware of bowlibs and their false/deceptive diatribes..........

From: HDE
07-Feb-22
The problem with long-term climate models is they are based on recorded observation. Prior data is used to make the model, pretending it to be accurate.

You're taking a relatively small data set and extrapolating into the unknown, untested, and unproven. But hey - an academic has to eat as well, right?...

From: nmwapiti
07-Feb-22
No freaking way. The models preducting the weather 100 years from now are wrong? Well crap.

From: JL
07-Feb-22
"Your taking a relatively small data set and extrapolating into the unknown, untested, and unproven."

^....that's a great point. Our knowledge and technology isn't that old when compared to the age of the Earth. However we're trying to use what we have today to understand what happened in the past and try to predict what will happen in the future. In that context....we don't have a lot to work with.

From: drycreek
07-Feb-22
I wasn’t judging KS, I couldn’t care less about that. I was merely making an observation of fact.

From: scentman
07-Feb-22
Glunt, that pic of AL should be captioned... " I cought one this big" !

From: Jaquomo
07-Feb-22
I'm just thrilled we appear to have more than 10 years left before WE ALL DIE. Might get to draw a CO moose tag in that timeframe!

07-Feb-22
I just wonder back in the 50’s and 60’s if they were arguing about Climate Change! Pretty funny when you see some of the Highs and Lows during those times for weather…Things that make you go hmmm!

From: Inshart
07-Feb-22
Well crap,,,,,,, all this time they kept pounding into us (and spending millions of dollars) that the earth was warming at an alarming rate. YOU MEAN REALLY, THEY (Pelosi and company) WERE WRONG AND THE MEDIA WERE LYING TO US (AGAIN / STILL) ALL THIS TIME.

OHHHHH, now finally it makes sense why we've had almost every day in January and February so far well below zero (sometimes several days in a row in the -20 below range).

07-Feb-22
That quote is going to come back to bite AOC in her future political career. No one is going to let her live it down.

As long as people have been thinking about the future, they've been predicting the end of the world. So far, they're 0 for infinity.

07-Feb-22
Lou if we really only had 10 years left, getting a tag probably wouldn't be of much concern in my moose hunting plans.

From: KSflatlander
08-Feb-22
Maybe Trump can use a sharpie to change the weather LMAO

From: Knifeman
08-Feb-22
And there is the default setting. Oh yeah, so what that were full of shit on the gorbal hockey bs, Trump bad!!

From: TonyBear
08-Feb-22
So I have asked before will ask again of the climate change alarmists. "What is the optimum temperature of the Earth?"

Under 2 miles of Greenland ice are butterfly remains-"How did they get there??"

Warm weather fossils exist under Antarctica. "How did they get there?"

Pelosi takes private jets, so does Gore Obama and all the other alarmists who say the science is settled. But yet they have several heated outdoor pools they don't use, buy shoreland in the very areas they say will be flooded-due to weather change. Must believe in their own theories, right??

It's all about money and control, always has been. Cherry pick research and reports that it the narrative, reject everything that doesn't

By the way folks in my state are scrambling for extensions to their ice augers since the weather has been so cold this year. Probably will be hunting turkeys in the snow too.

From: KSflatlander
08-Feb-22
"What is the optimum temperature of the Earth?"

What a stupid baiting question. Optimum for what and where? For farming in Greenland or elk in RMNP or hurricanes in the gulf? It’s not about a single optimum temperature. It’s about the potential negative changes that may happen with a rise in greenhouse gases.

08-Feb-22
What we do know about climate science that’s undebatable.

CO2 levels have always risen and fallen. Long before fossil fuel. Increased CO2 means there are more plants. Yes, it’s cool to say plants produce oxygen by absorbing CO2. But, the nifty scientists often forget that plants produce large amounts of CO2 at night by respiration. By absorbing O2 out of the atmosphere. Creating CO2 in the process.

The rates at which plants photosynthesis to produce oxygen versus CO2 at night, I cannot remember. But, I’m pretty certain that plants produce more CO2 through respiration then they do O2 during photosynthesis.

I’m not going to go into detail on that. No one listens when you do. So, just research it. Then put that in your personal science book. I’m tired of the constant misunderstanding of these phenomenons.

People quote science models as the dead set truth. It’s like the Covid debate. Science says…. It blows my mind that it’s ok to do this from one side. While they pick apart an opposing hypothesis with every angle imagined. All the while quoting their opinion as science.

From: drycreek
08-Feb-22
At the rate the earth’s population is growing we’re gonna need a little of that greenhouse effect so we can have a longer growing season in the north. Gotta feed those jobless folks until a conservative can get back into the White House. They can’t eat that “smash and grab” merchandise …….

From: timex
08-Feb-22
I honestly don't know what to think. If I had to pick one I'd say natural events in the life cycle of the earth.

Now politicians damn sure aren't scientists & some scientists make very good points.

I will say that in va that weather has changed a lot in the last 40 years. So far this winter we've had 1 day that the daytime high was below 32. These days your more likely to be wearing a tee shirt than a jacket on x Mas day. 30 - 40 years ago single digits for weeks at a time were normal

Iv been on the va coast for 22 years now. Places I hunted in leather boots years ago now ya need knee high rubber & if it's a full moon hip waders the change has been drastic.

On the other hand the edge or continental shelf where I offshore fish 60 miles out was once a dry canyon & on the other extreme the Atlantic shoreline was once as far west as Richmond.

So if ya look at it in that broad perspective the coastal water rise isn't drastic at all....

From: bigeasygator
08-Feb-22
Anyone that works with modeling physical systems knows that all models are wrong. There is no surprise there. It's only a matter of how wrong they are. If you read the article, you'll see that 1) some of the older models are deemed more accurate - mainly due to the fact that as you try and incorporate more complexity (in this case, clouds), you often add more error into the models and 2) the newer models are not "way off" as some have suggested (even the author of the zerohedge article concedes "I admit the models seem better than I expected").

From: Mike in CT
08-Feb-22

Mike in CT's Link
"The rates at which plants photosynthesis to produce oxygen versus CO2 at night, I cannot remember. But, I’m pretty certain that plants produce more CO2 through respiration then they do O2 during photosynthesis."

Actually it's only at night when sunlight is lacking that plants produce more CO2; during the day they produce up to 10 times more oxygen than CO2 and the overall impact is that plants are considered to be a "carbon sink", producing more oxygen than they consume.

What is under debate is what the impact of increased warming could have on the overall ratio; some have postulated that the increase will be negligible while others feel the impact may be significant.

http://scienceline.ucsb.edu/getkey.php?key=4562

From: HDE
08-Feb-22
"changes that may happen with a rise in greenhouse gases."

Finally, you posted something believable, "may happen" being the two words of note.

08-Feb-22
Mike, I actually knew that. I used to be a forester. I know what’s under debate among those in the know too. I also understand that a lot of people quote photosynthesis as a part of their science on temperature change. Throwing out the dangers of C02. While totally dismissing how a lot of it is getting produced.

Thanks for the link. I didn’t have it in me to post anything relating on the topic. There are too many that would suggest it was biased or Inaccurate in comparison to the multi billion dollar climate change scheme they’v e built their life around.

From: Vonfoust
08-Feb-22
Of the overall atmospheric CO2, how much is man credited for?

08-Feb-22
Climate change is like a pandemic. The solutions forced on us don't work and have 2 basic components:

Less freedom and more Government spending. It's not a coincidence.

From: Rocky D
08-Feb-22
Not to derail the discussion but if we really believed that the climate was the number one issue for the security of America then why are we supporting China’s economy and their position as the world leader of greenhouse gases?

To me, that would be the first step in the right direction But no we did the exact opposite we outsourced our production to China and to their economic success to make it appear that we were decreasing our own negative footprint! Thank you very much Bill Clinton! Why are we not boycotting the Olympics?

I don’t have the time, wherewithal, nor the inclination to sit around and try to figure out which test or study is legitimate, inaccurate, or whatever other insufficient criteria that could render it invalid.

IMO, these are the smoking mirrors. This is the misinformation and disinformation used to keep the voters confused and confounded to where they just align with whatever political party of their choosing!

Personally, I have to look at indicators of what people truly believe by their actions! None of the politicians actions have told me that climate change is a near and real danger versus an just another ploy to gain and maintain control of the people.

From: bigeasygator
08-Feb-22

bigeasygator's embedded Photo
bigeasygator's embedded Photo
Of the overall atmospheric CO2, how much is man credited for?

Based on historic CO2 levels, the data suggests that about a third of atmospheric carbon is attributable to man-made sources.

From: 12yards
08-Feb-22
CO2 makes up 0.04% of the atmosphere, and 97% of that CO2 is from natural sources.

I believe man has an impact, but I don't believe it is an existential threat. I have a hard time with it because I'm a biologist and work with data a lot. And adjusting/manipulating data is a big no no. The temperature record has been adjusted and I have a hard time with that. The past has been cooled and the present warmed by climate scientists. Also, the world temperature data record is crap. The U.S. by far has the best temperature record. Australia and Europe is decent. The rest of the world and the oceans is garbage. It's manufactured. Then when you take the best data source, the U.S. and manipulate it, it creates doubt in my mind. Most of us also lived through a very cold period, the 70s. So our perspective is also skewed. We think that was normal. Maybe it isn't. I remember cold winters with huge piles of snow. Well, yeah, that was when scientists said we were headed for another ice age. Remember? Hopefully in my remaining lifetime, we go through another cooling trend and this goes the way of the dodo bird.

As far as converting to more renewables, I'm ok with it as long as our lifestyles don't take a hit and it isn't thrust upon us too fast. It has to be reliable. If we can maintain our current lifestyle without burning fossil fuels, who wouldn't be ok with that? But if we must reduce our lifestyle and live with unreliable energy sources, there will be civil war, if not world war. Also, if renewable energy is thrust on the world too fast, many people that can't afford it will die.

From: HDE
08-Feb-22
"Based on historic CO2 levels, the data suggests that about a third of atmospheric carbon is attributable to man-made sources."

The x axis is wrong. There is no way to know what the real CO2 levels were "800,000" years ago...

From: Rocky D
08-Feb-22
The graph produces more questions than answers.

From: bigeasygator
08-Feb-22
The x axis is wrong. There is no way to know what the real CO2 levels were "800,000" years ago...

Sure there is, in places like Greenland and Antarctica.

From: Bowfreak
08-Feb-22
If the impact of CO2 on the climate were as significant as the alarmist claim, our blood would be boiling at this point based on that chart.

From: HDE
08-Feb-22
"Sure there is, in places like Greenland and Antarctica."

Nope. Ice cores don't show the reality. No way ice sheets have stayed intact that long undisturbed. One volcanic eruption will skew the data. Freeze/thaw cycles followed by build up later on will skew the data. That idiot "Bill Nye the Science Guy" thinks the data is real too...

From: bigeasygator
08-Feb-22

bigeasygator's Link
Nope. Ice cores don't show the reality. No way ice sheets have stayed intact that long undisturbed.

Yep. Yes they do. And any disturbances are also accommodated with the analysis.

The physics is well understood, well tested, and accounts for disturbances like volcanic eruptions and thermal variations (particularly over longer durations when the effects become muted).

08-Feb-22
As stated above, if they really believe then focus on the the places that are a priority.

Karen driving Jayden and Brayden to soccer practice in her Tahoe in the US isn't that.

Just easier to push Karen around than CCP.

From: timex
08-Feb-22
Are humans & fossil fuel emissions affecting the planet & its atmosphere. Absolutely. Don't think so ? Run a hose from Your vehicles tailpipe into the cab & sit in there windows rolled up for 5 minutes. Then consider tens of millions or perhaps even 100s of millions of vehicles running every minute globally. Now the atmosphere is a big place & where all those emotions go I haven't a clue.

I'm sure one mega volcanic eruption can do in an hour what humans took 100 years to do but none the less I do believe we are in deed affecting the planet.

From: scentman
08-Feb-22
Ugh Timex? I hope no one follows your third sentence of your last message... you never know.

From: Rocky D
08-Feb-22
“ The physics is well understood, well tested, and accounts for disturbances like volcanic eruptions and thermal variations (particularly over longer durations when the effects become muted).”

BEG, There’s more to it than just measuring. Measuring doesn’t require physics but modeling does and there’s a lot of modeling in multiple facets of this analysis.

Even though it may be excepted as truth that doesn’t mean that it shouldn’t be questioned.

Below is an excerpt from their site that addresses temporal uncertainty which is only one variable that uses some form of modeling within the overall analysis.

“Temporal Uncertainty

Temporal uncertainty of the EPICA 800,000-year series increases with core depth, but estimates indicate that it is usually less than 5% of the true age and is frequently much less than that. The most recent "EDC3" chronology is based on a snow accumulation and mechanical flow model combined with a set of independent age markers along the core, indicating either well-dated paleoclimatic records or insolation variations. See Parrenin et al. (2007) for more detail. The Vostok time scale is based on the the "GT4" chronology, derived in a similar fashion to "EDC3" with age constraints at 110 thousand and at 390 thousand years ago which are assumed to match known events in marine sediments. See Petit et al. (1999) for more detail.“

What is 5% error over 800,000 years?

08-Feb-22
You know who solves things? People in a strong economy with freedom. If believers want a solution, safeguard those two things first.

From: bigeasygator
08-Feb-22
What is 5% error over 800,000 years?

One, they're describing age, not CO2 or CH4 levels. It's saying that, generally speaking, at any given point, there maybe a 5% error in estimating the age. It will compress or extend the trends of atmospheric content, but not change the measured level of gas. Like I said, models are always wrong...just a matter of how wrong they are. In this case, I'd say the estimated error is pretty insignificant when describing the overall trend.

From: Rocky D
08-Feb-22
BEG, practically every part of their analysis relies on some form of modeling.

Remember, I i’m not saying that it’s wrong but I still think it needs to be questioned.

From: drycreek
08-Feb-22
At the rate the earth’s population is growing we’re gonna need a little of that greenhouse effect so we can have a longer growing season in the north. Gotta feed those jobless folks until a conservative can get back into the White House. They can’t eat that “smash and grab” merchandise …….

From: JL
08-Feb-22
We could be equal opportunity finger-pointers....blame it on the cow farts.

From: Beendare
08-Feb-22
Ks, So the science you based your opinions on was flawed……but you just keep hanging on to that ideology eh?

The point here is not about climate…it about the snake oil politicians you hang your hat on and defend.

Do you realize that the champions of Climate Change are a bunch of hypocrites not concerned one bit about the Climate?

Gore, Pelosi, Kerry, etc, etc generate more CO2 in one flight of their private jet than I will do in a lifetime of driving my truck. One flight KS! These are the folks you choose to believe. If John Kerry was really concerned with CC don’t you think he and his entourage can fly FC on an airline to lessen his carbon footprint.

A thinking man is going to see the hypocrisy of these folks. Gores wealth has skyrocketed due to carbon credit trading….hmmmmmm.

.

From: drycreek
08-Feb-22
Beendare, KS wants to be just like Al when he grows up………;-)

08-Feb-22
I’m not sure which is a bigger travesty. Those getting paid to assume things with untold motivations. Or those that hang onto their every word looking for an idea that suits them.

And, as expected, there was so surprise on who’d be along shortly to set everyone straight on how they need to be looking at this.

From: KSflatlander
08-Feb-22
“These are the folks you choose to believe.“

I could care less what those politicians you listed say or do. I do care about the scientific consensus (+85%) that says man-made climate change is happening and negative consequences are probable.

From: scentman
08-Feb-22
KS, your last paragraph from your last post 85% are causing the world to end basically. What do you do to help eleviate the probable destruction of our planet? Maybe move to a large city with mass transit and apartment dwelling? Your from Kansas. How far do you drive to work or shop? Pic up truck? How do you heat your home? Please enlighten me so I can be a better steward of our planet.

From: LINK
08-Feb-22
The problem I have with atheism and the “science” this liberals push is that I don’t have that much faith. Until then I’ll stick to theism and let God control the universe.

From: KSflatlander
08-Feb-22
“What do you do to help eleviate the probable destruction of our planet?”

Well, for work I help companies minimize impacts to ecosystems. I help get renewable energy projects permitted. I also work with endangered species and ecosystem protection (wetlands). We also do ecorestoration and put native plant habitats on the ground. Personally, I did build a house with energy efficient HVAC, 2x6 walls, along with other energy efficient materials. I’ve never calculated it but I’m guessing my carbon footprint is way negative. Oh yeah, I work from home mostly.

How about you scentman?

From: LINK
08-Feb-22
Renewable energy. Man those wind turbines sure don’t put off any carbon….

From: BC
08-Feb-22
Let me know when China, India and the other industrialized nations start kicking in.

From: KSflatlander
08-Feb-22

KSflatlander's Link
And all this time I thought they were perpetual motion machines.

Relative to any fossil fuel…they don’t.

“amortizing the carbon cost over the decades-long lifespan of the equipment, Bernstein determined that wind power has a carbon footprint 99% less than coal-fired power plants, 98% less than natural gas, and a surprise 75% less than solar.”

From: scentman
08-Feb-22
KS, impressive.. I live in a 1500 square cape cod on 25 acres of hardwoods... I heat with firewood which I processed and am currently retired... I mostly plow driveways at the moment, but my employment was usually less than 20 miles from home. With your background and education I'm guessing some travel and business, schooling, motels ,hotels, air travel? You will never make up your carbon footprint from when you started till present.

From: JSW
08-Feb-22
Man made "catastrophic" climate change is the greatest hoax in the history of the world. Everything they've ever predicted has been wrong, yet they demand we spend $2 trillion a year and admit that it will have almost no impact whatsoever.

But, but, but, it's going to kill us all!!! Give me a break.

From: Snag
08-Feb-22
Follow the $$$. It’s a political game that is/will benefit some on the backs of the rest of us. Nothing ever changes. Just the game.

From: drycreek
08-Feb-22
I keep my carbon footprint low by not flying my personal jet to climate change summits. I’m thinking there are others on here that do the same. Together we beat the hell out of the Al Gores, Nancy Pelosis, AOCs, ad nauseum in reducing carbon footprints. Oh yeah, I don’t own four mansions like Obama does either.

From: azelkhntr
08-Feb-22
If the Govt was truly concerned about 'climate change' you'd think they would have passed a Law where all new construction has to be 100% carbon neutral. All new houses being built should be coming with solar already installed and ready to go; but none are. They want to force you to retrofit instead at the taxpayers expense. It's all horseshit designed to separate your monies and redistribute it to those above. Kind of the same thing with drunk driving. Your car comes with every safety feature imaginable most of which probably aren't necessary, but a breathalyzer? Nah; too much moola to be made off the DUI's.

08-Feb-22
I’d venture to say that the heat produced by the sheer amount of asphalt and concrete found all over the world, likely has a bigger affect increasing earths temperature, then any form of fossil fuel emission created in this country.

Yes, I did compare world wide temps with only America’s CO2 production. I did so because In no other country are people so dumb to insist the things only entitled Americans get entrenched in.

It’s also just my guess that Glunt hit the nail on the head when he pointed out these same people refuse to correlate why the push is on America to change. While blindly giving other countries a free pass on it. It’s so blatant it’s consideration was present in pre Trump trade deals.

Just sayin’.

From: Bowbender
08-Feb-22
“amortizing the carbon cost over the decades-long lifespan of the equipment, Bernstein determined that wind power has a carbon footprint 99% less than coal-fired power plants, 98% less than natural gas, and a surprise 75% less than solar.”

National Renewable Energy Laboratory - NREL advances the science and engineering of energy efficiency, sustainable transportation, and renewable power technologies and provides the knowledge to integrate and optimize energy systems.

Vestas - Vestas Wind Systems A/S is a Danish manufacturer, seller, installer, and servicer of wind turbines that was founded in 1945.

Siemens Gamesa - Siemens Gamesa is a leader in the renewable energy industry, working to provide the world's best offshore and onshore wind turbines and services.

Not exactly "unbiased" data, my friend.

From: Bowbaker
08-Feb-22
Dammed oil and natural gas. I say we go back to burning whale oil. Climate change have some merit but the politicians pushing it are anything but trustworthy. Therefore I don't put much stock in what they say. I hate seeing the wind turbines on every hill. Wonder what's going to happen to them at the end of their lifespan?

From: Norseman
08-Feb-22
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2020-02-05/wind-turbine-blades-can-t-be-recycled-so-they-re-piling-up-in-landfills

08-Feb-22
I fought a wind farm that was going next to a ranch I hunted for antelope. We lost. 18 years later I noticed some weren't spinning every time I drove by. Turns out they were done, completely. That was their life span. Now sitting dormant for few years waiting to be dynamited and dismantled last I heard or possibly sold and repowered but a lot of red tape.

From: Thornton
08-Feb-22
I never know who or what to believe on this. One Antarctician claims the polar bears are moving inland due to lack of ice, and another site shows there's more ice this year than ever. A buddy of mine stopped to ask permission to hunt a big ranch in Colorado once and encountered the 95 year old owner still alive and ranching. 45 minutes later, the conversation came to this very topic and the old man said he hadn't noticed anything different than the usual warm/cold variations that were common in his nearly 100 years.

08-Feb-22
"One Antarctician claims the polar bears are moving inland..."

If there are any polar bears in the Antarctic, maybe I have to rethink my stance on climate change :^)

From: JohnMC
08-Feb-22
“Well, for work I help companies minimize impacts to ecosystems. I help get renewable energy projects permitted. I also work with endangered species and ecosystem protection (wetlands). We also do ecorestoration and put native plant habitats on the ground. Personally, I did build a house with energy efficient HVAC, 2x6 walls, along with other energy efficient materials. I’ve never calculated it but I’m guessing my carbon footprint is way negative. Oh yeah, I work from home mostly.”

Prove many will believe anything if they can profit from it.

From: azelkhntr
09-Feb-22
Antarctician? Is that someone who gives you the cold shoulder?

From: Orion
09-Feb-22
I'm trying to have the biggest carbon footprint as possible so I can cancel out ksflatlanders effort.

From: KSflatlander
09-Feb-22
“Prove many will believe anything if they can profit from it.“

Spoken from a guy in finance…you’re projecting lol. What a tool.

From: t-roy
09-Feb-22
KS……much as I HATE to admit it, you & I do have a few things in common.

I own a company that ALSO helps to minimize negative impacts to the ecosystem, by locating underground water leaks in cities/utilities domestic water distribution systems, which helps to minimize and reduce their water loss, along with several other potentially negative impacts to the ecosystem. (I threw in “potentially” cuz I know much you like that word)

I’ve ALSO done eco-restoration projects on my farm, that “potentially” help “possible” endangered or threatened species (mostly deer) in my area. AKA- Wetlands restoration and CRP. Lots of native plant habit in those babies! (Pays pretty well, too) and is awesome deer habitat.

I ALSO built an energy efficient house and installed a geothermal heating/cooling system in in. I’ll even go ya one better. There are plans in the works, here in Iowa, to run a carbon sequestration pipeline through much of the state, then to the final underground storage site in Illinois. The proposed route will “potentially” go through my property. I’m all for it, mostly because they will “potentially” pay me a pretty decent chunk of change. Another “potential” benefit of it is, that it will run roughly parallel to an existing natural gas pipeline on my property. My hope is, that somehow the two opposing pipelines will somehow cancel each other out. Heck, I might even get a few carbon credits out of the deal!

This “climate change” crap is one of the biggest hoaxes ever perpetrated on mankind. It was the next big ice age coming, when I was in high school, then they changed it to global warming when the narrative changed. Now, it’s climate change, so they could go either way and still claim to be correct. The climate certainly does change, and has for thousands of years, and will continue to do so, long after we’re gone. I’m all for being a responsible steward of the land, but until China and all of the other biggest offenders are forced to comply with similar standards as the U.S. it won’t matter much what we’ve done here, in the grand scheme of things. I wonder how many bazillions of tons of carbon emissions were released by that single volcanic eruption near Tonga?

From: Mad Trapper
09-Feb-22
I have been doing a fair amount of research on the polar bear situation for a possible article. It turns out that the climate change models upon which USFW based its decision to list the bears as threatened in 2008 were flawed. USFW estimated that the polar bear populations would decrease by about 67% when the polar ice conditions decrease to the mounts predicted for 2050. As it turns out by 2018, the polar ice conditions already declined to the amounts predicted for 2050 AND the polar bear populations actually increased!. Although the amount of the increase is currently being debated, using the population estimating metrics that were used in 2008, the population increased by at least 20% during that time frame and they continue to increase. The polar ice formations are declining. The reasons for such decline are up for debate. The LIBS on the cite will claim it is human caused and we are all going to die (unlike the polar bears) unless we buy into the New Green Deal. Doing my research, I came across the Politically Incorrect Guide to Climate Change by Marc Morano. It is an interesting read and provides a lot of context the climate change debate. I am sure that the constitutional experts on this cite will be quick to find fault with it. Just wait for it...

From: Beendare
09-Feb-22
KS quote,” I could care less what those politicians you listed say or do. I do care about the scientific consensus (+85%) that says man-made climate change is happening and negative consequences are probable.“

As that article I posted points out, the science on this is wrong…thus many of these folks pushing the “SKY IS FALLING” are basing it on junk science.

I doubt there is one person here that disagrees with trying to do better when it comes to a better environment-Thats not the problem. The problem is the current politicians running the show.

Renewables are part of the solution but a back of the envelope calc shows its not enough..and we see it here in CA with rolling blackouts and PGE telling us power prices are going up big at night. That is the solution from the Dems that have been running our state forever, dont wash clothes at night.

We currently have clean nuclear technology- Small nuclear reactors- that don’t melt down and can be used as a spiderweb interconnecting renewable sources and cities across the country making for not only clean power but a solid power grid that could be shifted where needed. The current Dem regime won’t entertain this due to their fringe elements. Right now 10 well placed bombs would blackout 1/2 the country. Its not just an energy issue, its a security issue.

The current Dems think E cars is the total answer. I’ve seen comments by the SoCal grid operators that their grid is stretched to the max ( they buy power from other states) and that another 250,000 E cars would topple them.

Its a multi faceted solution. Did you know that diesel exhaust run over a catalyst comes out pretty clean? E cars, solar, wind, nuclear and even diesel and gas are part of the solution.

We all want better but will never see a common sense solution from the current crop of Democratic politicians- maybe a Manchin or Sinema…but not these other knee jerk clowns.

.

From: bigeasygator
09-Feb-22
As that article I posted points out, the science on this is wrong

When it's based on models, the science is always wrong. The article you posted says, on the whole, they aren't that wrong.

From: 70lbDraw
09-Feb-22

70lbDraw's Link
Y’all better be careful trying to quote science. According to CNN the science of COVID has suddenly changed. And just when you thought you knew what you talking about…POOF!…the science of global warming will be next!!! Lol! Soak in’ it up like a sponge!

From: 12yards
09-Feb-22
"I could care less what those politicians you listed say or do. I do care about the scientific consensus (+85%) that says man-made climate change is happening and negative consequences are probable."

I see these percentages floating around. The famous one is 97%. Not sure where the 85% came from. But my question is, are they in consensus that there is man made warming? Or that there will be negative consequences? Because most of the negative consequences haven't really materialized. In MN, it seems our winters have gotten a bit warmer, our summers are wetter, and our minimum summer temps (nighttime temps) are a bit warmer. Our summer highs have actually not changed much and, looking at data, may actually be declining for the last 90 years. We definitely have fewer 90 degree days than in the past. I'm a fisheries employee, and in the land of 10,000 lakes, there has to be a Walleye in every lake. So we produce a lot of them for stocking. We haven't been able to produce as many because our shallow lakes don't winterkill as often, and we need winterkill so there is no competition for the fry we dump in them. If there is competition, we don't produce as many. So I guess that might be deemed a negative effect. Shallow lakes that winterkill are also better for ducks as there are more invertebrates in lakes without fish. But these negatives are not existential threats to mankind. Although angry fisherman may want to kill me because they can't catch a walleye. But we have more bass now! So there's that.

Sea levels are rising!! Yeah, they've been rising at the same rate for as long as they've been measured.

Hurricanes are more intense!! Nope, not happening.

More weather extremes!! Nope! Even the IPCC says that isn't happening.

Food shortages!! Nope, crop yields continue to increase and we produce 25% more food in the world than the world needs.

Pacific Islands (Maldives) disappearing!! Nope, many are actually getting larger.

All the media alarmism is based on worst case scenario models that haven't even been close to right. In fact, the most conservative model is overestimating temperatures.

From: azelkhntr
09-Feb-22
There are now over 50 active volcanoes around the world and some are erupting in spectacular fashion. The amount of greenhouse gases emitted by the Tonga eruption exceed manmade contributions of all time. Just that one.

From: Beendare
09-Feb-22
"When it's based on models, the science is always wrong. The article you posted says, on the whole, they aren't that wrong."

There funny part, when you think about it........how do they know how wrong they are?

>

From: HDE
09-Feb-22
"Yep. Yes they do. And any disturbances are also accommodated with the analysis.

The physics is well understood, well tested, and accounts for disturbances like volcanic eruptions and thermal variations (particularly over longer durations when the effects become muted)."

Wrong again. Assumptions are made that each layer, or freeze/thaw cycle, accounts for one year. Nothing could be further from the truth because they have NO idea what the true conditions were. Depositional layers are individual storm events, not a counted time duration. Their models are based off of observed data in our day (200 year or so time span). That's the problem with models. Data generated by models for future or past events are merely guesses based on a very small fragment of reality.

From: bigeasygator
09-Feb-22
There funny part, when you think about it........how do they know how wrong they are?

Well, you never know for certain going forward because you're always using what has happened as a proxy for what will happen. But typically you will history match a model to get a sense of how accurate the model is in predicting reality and that is how you measure how wrong or right your model is. This is exactly what the article you posted discussed ("In an independent assessment of 39 global-climate models last year, scientists found that 13 of the new models produced significantly higher estimates of the global temperatures caused by rising atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide than the older computer models—scientists called them the “wolf pack.” Weighed against historical evidence of temperature changes, those estimates were deemed unrealistic.")

It's worth noting, you can also get a good history match and still incorrectly weight all the variables in your model.

From: bigeasygator
09-Feb-22
Wrong again. Assumptions are made that each layer, or freeze/thaw cycle, accounts for one year. Nothing could be further from the truth because they have NO idea what the true conditions were

Wrong. They have all kinds of ways to estimate the age (geochemical, radiometric, geological, etc). And scientists have plenty of idea what conditions were like as we step back in time.

From: DanaC
09-Feb-22
Simply put, models *evolve* as more data is collected and added to the database.

From: KSflatlander
09-Feb-22
“KS……much as I HATE to admit it, you & I do have a few things in common.“

Kudos to you t-Roy for “potentially” having a positive effect on climate change.

From: Orion
09-Feb-22
Funny how ksflatlander who is so worried about the climate and environment comes out here and has an illegal campfire because he "didn't know" there was a fire ban

From: Matt
09-Feb-22
So now the conservatives are supporting government mandates that infringe on our personal freedoms? I just can’t keep up with the back and forth.

From: KSflatlander
09-Feb-22

From: KSflatlander
09-Feb-22
Orion…LMAO…from 3 years ago. I’ll be sure to ask forgiveness at the pearly gates.

From: SB
09-Feb-22
So are they cramming catylitic converters down the throats of these volcanoes when they erupt....you know to stop the release of these harmfull "greenhouse" gasses? Human activity can't hold a candle to the effects of a volcanoe...and there's always one or several erupting!

From: bigeasygator
09-Feb-22
https://www.usgs.gov/programs/VHP/volcanoes-can-affect-climate

“ Do the Earth's volcanoes emit more CO2 than human activities? No.”

https://www.climate.gov/news-features/climate-qa/which-emits-more-carbon-dioxide-volcanoes-or-human-activities

“Human activities emit 60 or more times the amount of carbon dioxide released by volcanoes each year. Large, violent eruptions may match the rate of human emissions for the few hours that they last, but they are too rare and fleeting to rival humanity’s annual emissions.”

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/earthtalks-volcanoes-or-humans/

“ According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the world’s volcanoes, both on land and undersea, generate about 200 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually, while our automotive and industrial activities cause some 24 billion tons of CO2 emissions every year worldwide. Despite the arguments to the contrary, the facts speak for themselves: Greenhouse gas emissions from volcanoes comprise less than one percent of those generated by today’s human endeavors.”

https://climate.nasa.gov/faq/42/what-do-volcanoes-have-to-do-with-climate-change/

“Volcanic eruptions are often discussed in relation to climate change because they release CO2 (and other gases) into our atmosphere. However, human contributions to the carbon cycle are more than 100 times those from all the volcanoes in the world - combined.

In comparison, while volcanic eruptions do cause an increase in atmospheric CO2, human activities emit a Mount St. Helens-sized eruption of CO2 every 2.5 hours and a Mount Pinatubo-sized eruption of CO2 twice daily.“

From: Grey Ghost
09-Feb-22
BEG,

Without Googling it, do you know what the largest source of greenhouse gases is? And what approximate percentage of all greenhouse gases does it represent?

Matt

From: TD
10-Feb-22
"climate models get it wrong"

That's not news. Over the last 50 years I don't recall them ever getting it right. Ever. Spectacularly wrong at times. No shame. No apologies. Just move on to predicting the next crisis. Ever wonder.... why?

Very telling when they DO get caught fudging the numbers, or Hockey Sticks. And clearly do so for economic reasons, more grants, more control. Cannot really trust anything that comes from them again.

This is about control, money, power. Financing One World Globalists. Fear being the biggest player, not climate. Instill fear in a population and they become controllable. They will give up anything for "security". Anything. And will follow and carry out the whims of evil people without question. It's happened over and over in history. Have to be blind not to have seen that in play for near the last two years.

Think most folks have seen that. They will no longer sit and quietly take it. And there will be a reckoning. Soon. Watching it unfold right now.

From: DanaC
10-Feb-22
GG, I'm going with 'cow farts'

From: bigeasygator
10-Feb-22
Without Googling it, do you know what the largest source of greenhouse gases is?

Good question. Without googling it, I don’t know the answer. I would guess big sources to be natural respiration, decomposition, and venting (volcanoes, seeps, etc). Haven’t really a clue what the percentage breakdown is or if those are even right.

From: Grey Ghost
10-Feb-22
BEG,

The answer is water vapor. Approximate;ly 97% of all green house gases is naturally occurring evaporation of water. Carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide represent the other 3% of green house gases. Of that 3%, man-made CO2 is only a small fraction.

Just something for you to chew on.

Matt

10-Feb-22
Largest source stated from Siri is burning fossil fuels for heat, electricity and transportation.

From: timex
10-Feb-22
Yall really humor me with this stuff.

I'm just an old country boy. I'm not into politics or science. I'm into hunting & fishing & in my brief 60 years on this planet the changes I've experienced while in the outdoors hunting & fishing have been pretty drastic.

40 years ago frost & occasionally snow in Oct were normal now 80s &even 90s is the norm in Oct.

I remember the first day rifle season the 3rd sat in Nov. one year in the early 80s the high was 5 degrees.

I remember another incident when I had several deer hanging that I killed the last week of the season which is the first week of Jan. We'll those deer froze solid & stayed froze solid for a month. I had every stray dog for a mile around my house. It's forecasted to be 60 here on Sat.

Natural events in the life of the earth. Or caused by humans ??? I'm not a scientist

In va the changes in the weather have been pretty extreme over the last 45 years this I do know.

From: Grey Ghost
10-Feb-22
Frank,

Siri is wrong, or you asked the wrong question. Heat, electricity, and transportation *may* be the largest sources for man-made CO2, but they are certainly not the largest sources for all greenhouse gases.

These facts stem way back to the great Genejockey vs Jim Johnson global warning debates over 20 years ago. Jim Johnson, as you know, was wicked smart. He was the one who opened my eyes to this often overlooked tidbit of information.

Matt

From: 12yards
10-Feb-22

12yards's Link
Here's a write-up regarding the 97% consensus.

From: bigeasygator
10-Feb-22
The answer is water vapor. Approximate;ly 97% of all green house gases is naturally occurring evaporation of water.

I misread the question to mean sources of carbon dioxide. There is indeed far more water vapor in the atmosphere than CO2 (and it is a greenhouse gas). With that said, C02 and water vapor act in different ways with respect to the greenhouse effect and their ultimate effect on things like surface temperatures are not simply a function of their atmospheric mass or volume fractions.

From: Grey Ghost
10-Feb-22
Jason,

I think a lot of people mistakenly think CO2 is the only greenhouse gas, because that's all you hear about. In reality, CO2 is a very small fraction of greenhouse gases, and man-made CO2 is an even smaller fraction of that. In that context, it's very difficult for me to believe that humans are having much of an impact on global climate change.

Matt

From: Orion
10-Feb-22
Ksflatlander doesn't matter how long you broke the law. Too bad you didn't start a forest fire

From: bigeasygator
10-Feb-22
Like I mentioned, there are other factors driving the greenhouse effect and it isn't as simple as just looking at their atmospheric fractions. Some links describing some of the physics:

https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2019/07/30/co2-drives-global-warming/

"CO2 makes up only about 0.04% of the atmosphere, and water vapor can vary from 0 to 4%. But while water vapor is the dominant greenhouse gas in our atmosphere, it has “windows” that allow some of the infrared energy to escape without being absorbed. In addition, water vapor is concentrated lower in the atmosphere, whereas CO2 mixes well all the way to about 50 kilometers up. The higher the greenhouse gas, the more effective it is at trapping heat from the Earth’s surface."

https://www.forbes.com/sites/marshallshepherd/2016/06/20/water-vapor-vs-carbon-dioxide-which-wins-in-climate-warming/?sh=7e0f52193238

"Saying water vapor is a more important greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide is like saying the amplifier in a sound system is more important than the volume dial for producing the sound. It's true, in a literal sense, but very misleading. CO2 and other long-lived greenhouse gases are the volume dial on the climate, and the water vapor amplifies the warming that they produce."

From: Mint
10-Feb-22
While we are worrying about manmade climate change scientists are messing around with nature and killed over 5 million people with Covid-19. I sure hope the next one isn't as bad, we got extremely lucky with the SARS outbreaks.

From: Grey Ghost
10-Feb-22

Grey Ghost's Link
BEG,

In my very uneducated opinion, until scientist can accurately model the patterns and effects of clouds, which can have different and opposite effects on global warming depending on which type of clouds are produced and where, the science of climate change will remain unsettled.

Heck, just look at how meteorologist struggle to get local daily weather forecasts correct. Hurricane models often predict paths that vary by hundreds of miles. I think it's rather naive to think scientist can accurately gauge and predict human's effects on global climate change over decades.

Matt

10-Feb-22
Who could have guessed...

There isn't huge $ in status quo, so the alarmists/leftists/socialists/dems just pull out their bag of magic trick BS to convince most of the people that the polar bears are dying off, weather patterns are irreversibly shifting, cows are farting too much, lawn mowers and chainsaws have to be full electric, eating meat is racist ETC ETC and the people incapable of thinking for themselves just eat it up.

Not to worry, the bUiLd BaCk BeTtEr clan has an outrageously expensive plan to fix all of it!

From: scentman
10-Feb-22
What about jet streams? What gives a jet stream a certain route? Are they effected by warming? Maybe in near future Montreal will be the Miami of the north and vice versa for the south. Than the snowbirds will head nort for de winter ehe?

From: HDE
10-Feb-22
"Wrong. They have all kinds of ways to estimate the age (geochemical, radiometric, geological, etc). And scientists have plenty of idea what conditions were like as we step back in time."

Those same scientists that claim they know through radiometric dating have no idea what the starting amounts of parent ions were present against the existing amounts of daughter ions.

Also, there are many examples showing error such as when a tree that was embedded in rock that carbon dated to "50,000 years" and the surrounding rock dated to "millions of years" was discovered while drilling test holes. The sedimentary rock was deposited the same time the tree was.

When metamorphic rocks form, geochemistry changes. Another example is the eruption of Mount St Helens where a rock formed from the eruption that dated one thing, yet separate components dated other things at "younger" ages. None were in agreement with each other so there are errors that can exist in the guessing game.

Conventional academia has decided to all agree on certain things that takes thousands and millions of years to explain, because given enough time, anything is "possible". Conventional academia really doesn't know, but they all agree so it must be true. Never mind everything we know is limited to what we have observed only...

From: TD
10-Feb-22

TD's embedded Photo
TD's embedded Photo

TD's Link
Solar activity is yuge. You know.... the actual stove heating everything up? Well, externally anyway. Internally we sit on vast amounts of literally molten rock (minerals, etc, whatever). Ever TRY to melt a rock? Stuff going on in there we have barely scratched the surface so to speak. Even theories coming out that "fossil fuels" are not static and finite.... may be continually created through ongoing internal processes on a far greater scale than imagined.

Want to really twist your head..... just wait until the north and south poles magnetically flip....... that's been happening for some time. Our magnetic fields protect us from a great deal of solar effects that work to literally strip our atmosphere, cosmic radiation, solar particles.... and has been moving at an ever faster pace, from about 10 miles per year when first able to measure to roughly 34 miles per year, has moved over 600 miles in less than 200 years.

Add in that we are way overdue for major eruptions (such as in Yellowstone) and other geological events, meteor strikes (SMOD....) stuff happens. Only man's ego and vanity thinks they can control "changes" on this planet screaming through space. Some think we can control the very weather. When these same people are wrong pretty much every time they even try to predict it's dire future.

No worries though. Man has adapted though massive climate changes before. Ice ages even. Edens turned to deserts. Hopefully will again. If we don't kill ourselves off in a Nuclear Winter or man made bio-weapons first......

Have a great weekend. Enjoy it. Relax......

10-Feb-22
Don't give them any ideas. I don't want to be 70 hearing about AMF (anthropogenic magnetic flip)

From: bigeasygator
10-Feb-22
Those same scientists that claim they know through radiometric dating have no idea what the starting amounts of parent ions were present against the existing amounts of daughter ions.

They have plenty of idea of how much of a given isotope was present. Saying they have "no idea" isn't remotely true.

Also, there are many examples showing error such as when a tree that was embedded in rock that carbon dated to "50,000 years" and the surrounding rock dated to "millions of years" was discovered while drilling test holes. The sedimentary rock was deposited the same time the tree was.

Just because there are examples of unexplainable phenomena doesn't mean the base science is not usable or untrue in every case. Just because Newton's laws were superseded by Einstein's general theory of relativity, and just because Einstein's laws break down at the quantum level doesn't mean they should be completely disregarded.

Conventional academia has decided to all agree on certain things that takes thousands and millions of years to explain, because given enough time, anything is "possible". Conventional academia really doesn't know, but they all agree so it must be true. Never mind everything we know is limited to what we have observed only...

They don't agree on things because "anything is possible." They agree on things because theories and hypotheses have been tested and challenged based on available evidence per the scientific method and that is how we have arrived at these conclusions.

10-Feb-22
We have absolutely zero evidence to say with certainty, what we do or don’t know about the science of dating things, as being correct. Zero. It’s just a hypothesis. That they’ve built their model around. Saying different is not only being disingenuous. It’s out right lying.

You can’t argue any different then that and then defend it as anything is possible. From a perspective meant to be anything but an opinion. Period. No further discussion needed.

From: bigeasygator
10-Feb-22
We have absolutely zero evidence to say with certainty, what we do or don’t know about the science of dating things

That’s categorically false. It’s far more than just a hypothesis. Saying different and ignoring the mounds of experiments and data that go far beyond hypothetical is some combination of naïveté, intellectual laziness, or just “outright lying.” You can decide what it was.

10-Feb-22
No it’s not. It can’t be. Could it?

Plainly, It’s doing what you do. Ignoring the details that hurts your opinion’s legitimacy. You argue the way models are created. As being the best information that we have. Yet dare not even whisper they might be blatantly wrong. Based only on what we know?

Well, That’s changed leaps and bounds over time. And, I don’t expect that to stop.

See my point?

From: bigeasygator
10-Feb-22
Well, That’s changed leaps and bounds over time.

And that’s exactly how science works. So, again, to suggest as it pertains to any of these topics - be it dating things, be it climatology, or anything else - that “we have absolutely zero evidence” and it’s purely speculation on how any of these things work is a result of naïveté, ignorance, or dishonesty. You decide.

From: HDE
10-Feb-22
BEG, you're completely missing it. What we know about the physical world is what we have observed. We cannot say definitively the same conditions existed several millennia or "millions" of years ago.

Through testing and experiment, we have observed outcomes and "theorized" what those laws are forward and backward through time. Had the tree not been tapped, every geologist would have said through "peer review" the lithology at that point was millions of years old.

Do some research when you get a chance. A gentleman did his dissertation in geophysics on rapid plate subduction and continental drift that completely debunks "peer reviewed" theory on the subject that also lends explaination to the phenomena that caused massive evaporation of water, followed by massive amounts of rainfall, planet cooling, and ice ages. And, it didn't happen over tens of millions of years either.

And, since we're being scholastic, he's published extensively. We can continue trying to explain it to you, but we can't understand it for you...

From: bigeasygator
10-Feb-22
BEG, you're completely missing it. What we know about the physical world is what we have observed. We cannot say definitively the same conditions existed several millennia or "millions" of years ago.

No, I’m not. Sure, we can never say definitively what was happening millions of years ago, but that doesn’t mean we don’t have mounds of evidence to describe things. And until someone has proved that the laws of physics, the processes of chemistry, the forces of geology, etc behaved drastically different in the past (which no one has done, even this geophysicist you’re referencing whose work I’m sure I can find plastered over creationist websites), that evidence remains pretty compelling.

10-Feb-22
I don't mind science being wrong and changing. I do mind the low level of certainty being reached before enacting policy restricting people's freedoms and spending billions of their dollars.

10-Feb-22
Dang it man. Glunt has been on a roll lately.

From: TonyBear
11-Feb-22
A few more words to consider. Krakatoa eruption-no summer that year. Solar flares-it gets hot. Just two forces much stronger than human influence. Again global climate fear mongers what is the optimum temperature of the earth??

From: timex
11-Feb-22
Yall are whooping the guts plum out of this dead horse.

As I previously said the changes iv witnessed in va my brief time on is planet have been fairly significant. Overall much warmer & sea level rise on the coast.

However if ya consider that a very long time ago the the ocean shoreline was 60 miles to the east & even longer than that it was 100 miles to the west. So a curred day rise of a few feet is rather insignificant in those terms.

But than again if ya have to spend 50k + to raise your waterfront house to keep it insured that 2' sea level rise is pretty damn significant

From: DanaC
11-Feb-22
The problem isn't having 'zero evidence', its having SO DAM' MUCH evidence, and no way of proving how each piece matters and interacts with the rest. Modeling tries to do so, but even with all they can weigh and calculate, the best computers and their predictions are educated guesswork. And as said before, trashing the global economy based on a guess, even a very refined one, is imprudent at best.

In the end, individual actions will matter more. Some people will smarten up and not build in flood plains. Some will invest in better insulation or more efficient vehicles. And some will go blithely to ruin. But governments will dither, because getting re-elected is Job 1.

From: 12yards
11-Feb-22
timex, sea level is rising about 4-5 mm/year in VA and has been doing that for over 100 years. Tide gages show between 1.5 and 1.8 feet in 100 years. There is no acceleration in sea level rise there. Nor is there acceleration anywhere else. And then there's that whole land sinking thing too.

11-Feb-22
Timex, less the a decade ago, I remember hunting in VA the first part of November when it was below zero at daylight. I agree things are changing. Like they always have. And, will continue too.

From: 2Wild Bill
11-Feb-22
KSflatlander,

"There are plenty of versus that discuss the subject."

Name two, please.

From: timex
11-Feb-22
12 yards. I'm no scientist but I'm gonna have to contest your numbers. I moved to the eastern shore va in 2000. Places I hunted in leather boots 20 years ago now you need knee high rubber boots for a normal high tide & hip waders on a full moon high tide & if there's a coastal storm just forget it. Places years ago that only flooded during major storms now flood on a full moon high tide. I live here I'm not making this stuff up or speculating.

From: bigeasygator
11-Feb-22
timex, there's plenty of data that shows the ocean level is rising, and the rate at which it is rising is increasing. Data from satellites, tidal measurements, etc. The claim that "there is no acceleration in sea level rise there. Nor is there acceleration anywhere else" is not backed up by the data.

From: timex
11-Feb-22

timex's embedded Photo
timex's embedded Photo
This is photos of wachapreague va the town I offshore fish out of. These photos are not from a storm this is full moon high tide 20 years ago only a major storm would do this.

From: bigeasygator
11-Feb-22
A few key metrics from NOAA (some speak directly to what you are seeing timex):

Sea level has risen 8–9 inches (21–24 centimeters) since 1880.

In 2020, global sea level set a new record high—91.3 mm (3.6 inches) above 1993 levels.

The rate of sea level rise is accelerating: it has more than doubled from 0.06 inches (1.4 millimeters) per year throughout most of the twentieth century to 0.14 inches (3.6 millimeters) per year from 2006–2015.

In many locations along the U.S. coastline, high-tide flooding is now 300% to more than 900% more frequent than it was 50 years ago.

From: Grey Ghost
11-Feb-22

Grey Ghost's Link
Todd,

I'm reading that the rise in water level on the VA's coast is more due to the land is sinking, than the water rising.

Matt

From: 12yards
11-Feb-22

12yards's Link
timex, scroll to VA toward the bottom of the page.

Click on one of the VA stations.

Click the Tide/Water level tab

Click Sea Level Trends

All stations that have Sea level trends show no acceleration of rise.

Have a great weekend!

From: bigeasygator
11-Feb-22

bigeasygator's embedded Photo
bigeasygator's embedded Photo
Plenty of stations show an increasing trend if you break down the data.

From: 12yards
11-Feb-22
Well, VA is also sinking around 3-3.5 mm/year.

11-Feb-22
No worry, the Army just took some time away from going woke on diversity and sensitivity projects to unveil a new climate change strategy.

From: timex
11-Feb-22
12 yards perhaps the land is sinking. I didn't look at your link I don't need to. For the 3rd time land I hunted 20 years ago wearing leather boots now require knee high rubber boots during normal tides & hip waders on full moon tides. 20 years ago it took a hurricane to flood this land & now it floods on a daily basis. Not sure what else I can say to get it through your head.

I don't give a damn about the politics on the issue & perhaps I should. All I know is my real life experiences.

By the way it was 65 here today & forecasted to hit 68 tomorrow & 30 years ago ice breakers stayed busy keeping the shipping channels open in the Chesapeake bay. Another real life experience that doesn't need a graph or link to show the change

From: Beendare
11-Feb-22
My guess is that back testing is going to be about the same as using past performance as a guide for your investment portfolio....

I don't know the answer...I do know that building a bunch of E cars and hoping we have enough power to run them is not working here in CA where they cannot keep up with demand. I'm tired of stupid solutions like Battery farms to store Solar energy. The stat I saw was it would take the biggest battery factory in the world [Teslas giga factory] over 1,000 years of battery production to store enough electricity for 8 hours of demand in the US. These stupid pie in the sky ideas need to stop.

I'm tired of knee jerk solutions by hypocrite politicians. I remember them talking about developing an energy policy back in the 60's....and that can has been kicked down the road ever since. How many bombs would it take to tank our grid and put 1/2 the country in the dark?

>

From: bigeasygator
12-Feb-22
Well, VA is also sinking around 3-3.5 mm/year.

Which will amplify any effects that come from a mean sea level change.

From: Two Feathers
12-Feb-22
"While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease." Gen 8:22 I'm going with what God has to say.

From: scentman
12-Feb-22
Timex, wound up tighter than a 2 dollar watch... little humor with all this seriousness. Not making fun of you timex... as my dad would say "your a cool dude". scentman

From: 12yards
13-Feb-22
Timex I don't dispute what you personally experience. I'm just pointing out what the data is saying. I believe what you say. My question is would you be experiencing the same thing if mankind had never released a single CO2 molecule. Maybe, maybe not. But I'm betting it would still be higher than 20 years ago.

From: Jaquomo
17-Feb-23

Jaquomo's embedded Photo
Jaquomo's embedded Photo
From the Washington Post, November 2, 1922. All those Model Ts were already killing the planet.

17-Feb-23
“lets stick to the facts. These scientists are saying their original models WERE WRONG- don't shoot the messenger. From the article; Dire Forecasts Wrong When they ran the updated simulation in 2018, the conclusion jolted them: Earth’s atmosphere was much more sensitive to greenhouse gases than decades of previous models had predicted, and future temperatures could be much higher than feared—perhaps even beyond hope of practical remedy.

‘We thought this was really strange,’ said Gokhan Danabasoglu, chief scientist for the climate-model project at the Mesa Laboratory in Boulder at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, or NCAR. ‘If that number was correct, that was really bad news.’

The scientists soon concluded their new calculations had been thrown off kilter by the physics of clouds in a warming world, which may amplify or damp climate change”

That right there is why Science works: People who are prepared to sniff out inconsistencies and challenge their own beliefs, rather than clinging to them regardless of what is comfortable, convenient or profitable.

Of course, strictly speaking, in Science there are no Beliefs - only understandings/interpretations of the data, always subject to review in light of fresh evidence….

From: timex
17-Feb-23
75 on the coast of VA yesterday. So far this winter 2 days with a daytime high below 32 degrees. Things are changing, is it due to us humans and our pollution ????? I don't know, but I do know that things are changing rather quickly, or at least in my neck of the woods they are.

From: Jaquomo
17-Feb-23
Timex, they tell us to not confuse weather with climate, unless the weather fits the narrative. Then it's all about the weather.

Where I live, temps are normal for a mountain winter, but our snowpack is 150% of normal. So much for snow "becoming a thing of the past".

From: 12yards
17-Feb-23

12yards's Link
Man-made global warming.

From: bowyer45
17-Feb-23
What gets me is the people pushing this climate change "agenda" think this will actually work? Another words, they think they can control the weather of the whole planet. What if it doesn't work? How about a plan B to cover our butt! Energy was and always will be the answer and their policies are doing away with energy. We need more energy for cooling in the summer and heating in the winter. They are putting us in a very tight spot.

From: Jaquomo
17-Feb-23

Jaquomo's Link
Public support for green energy conversion will be inversely proportional to the amount of discomfort suffered as the power grid demand fails to keep up, and fuel and energy prices increase (increasing overall inflation).

Renewable energy is a good idea if it includes nuclear and isn't rushed ahead of the technology and infrastructure. But that's not part of the "green deal" currently. When it's forced on the public before it's ready, simply for religious/ideological reasons, people are going to start saying, "Hey, wait a minute! You (media and climate alarmists) didn't tell us our entire way of life would be compromised!"

17-Feb-23
The religion of climate change is leading us to an over-regulated society with a weak economy.

Guess who solves giant challenges? Free people that are prosperous.

From: Bigdog 21
17-Feb-23
Claimant change is in motion no way to change it. The ice reflects sun keeping earth cooler . Melting ice, raise the sea leaves making more water. The water absorbing the sun light and becomes warmer. Heating the earth. More ice melts more water more heat. The ice also has trapped air bubbles in it give of more gases as it melts. Can't stop that. Are slow it. Earth being earth. How it got started? But it started a long time ago. Ice Berges floating years ago were from melting ice. Shelves breaking off .

17-Feb-23

From: HDE
17-Feb-23

HDE's Link
Natural-made climate change.

What makes anyone think that polar ice caps are even supposed to be there?

From: Orion
17-Feb-23
Soccermom coming in 3.2.1....

From: bowhunt
17-Feb-23

bowhunt's embedded Photo
Can anyone find the time frame when the climate has NOT been changing?
bowhunt's embedded Photo
Can anyone find the time frame when the climate has NOT been changing?
Oldy, but a goody

These threads are always interesting.

From: KSJHawk
17-Feb-23
Offset carbon emissions are a joke. A farmer buddy of mine just had to purchase a quarter section of CRP that boarded the ground his house is on. This ground was going to be used by a 3 oil refineries to pump carbon dioxide into the ground.

It is approximately a one hour drive from each of these refineries to this piece of ground they were going to use. They would have to drive tanker trucks with the carbon dioxide until a pipeline was built. Your telling me all the emissions from the trucking and building a pipeline is better than carbon dioxide? I don't believe it, but they get some stamp that says they are.

From: Bigdog 21
17-Feb-23
Well at least we are keeping Americans working. Build the climate saver. :)))

From: 70lbDraw
17-Feb-23
At least we can all breathe easier. I figured the Palestine OH train derailment would be a hazardous situation for everyone. The climate alarmists haven’t even mentioned it, therefore, we can trust that it isn’t a problem. Plus, China joe has no intention of sending support, if that doesn’t say it’s totally inert, I don’t know what does!

From: Bigdog 21
17-Feb-23
Bill Gates says he will keep flying around in his private jet, says he deserves the right to because he does so much for the climate.

From: HDE
17-Feb-23
^^^ bill gates is a worthless freaking moron.

From: bowyer45
19-Feb-23
a very selfish one.

From: bowyer45
19-Feb-23
yes, Nuclear power is the answer right now, but truth is the powers at be , don't want to solve the problem, they are just using the problem to meet their sick agenda. In the future we may have another answer, but for right now to meet the power demands and also the clean air goals it is the way. I have been in the Nuclear field as a reactor operator and also worked in coal plants for many years before retiring and I know this to be true.

From: HDE
19-Feb-23
The right answer for quick install and use is natural gas.

From: timex
19-Feb-23
I find the various opinions about climate change humorous........

First off, I'm uneducated, 1/2 way through the 9th grade to be exact.

Here are a few of my observations in my 61 years on this planet. The majority lived in NW & eastern VA

The winters were much colder in the 60s through the 90s like Jan & Feb rarely above the 30s and these days Jan & Feb rarely below the 40s. It's predicted to hit 80 degrees this coming Thursday and certain flowers & trees are already blooming here. Imo this is a drastic change......in a relatively short time

Water level along the coast...,...in the 23 years I've lived here places that only flooded during MAJOR STORMS now flood during the full moon......again a drastic change in a relatively short time.

I recently drove to Georgia to pick up a hound dog and from VA to GA EVERY BODY OF WATER I crossed was evidently way down with floating docks and long walkways leading to them, old wooden docks high & dry some 20- 30' or more from the waterline. Again this is a drastic change in a relatively short time.

Barges not able to navigate the Mississippi,,, none or very limited ice fishing in the north this winter.

I could go on& on but my point is these recent events have occurred in an extremely short amount of time comparatively speaking in the life of the planet. Yes the planet has gone through extreme changes in the past but most spread out over huge amounts of time.

It humor's me that the majority of sportsman whome tend to be conservative, republican, tend to take a head in the sand bullpoop point of view on the subject. In light of some of the recent changes mentioned above.

Now I'm not in agreement of our government's approach to the situation. But I'm also not gonna let my political views blind me to what's right in front of my face either.

Folks, things are changing quickly.....and out of all the folks on this planet the sportsman whome spend the most time out in nature should recognize this , but for whatever reasons the sportsman seam to be some of the biggest deniers.

I just don't understand .....

Basically, you don't like any of the possible solutions to the problem so your just going to pretend that the problem doesn't exist.

From: shade mt
19-Feb-23
i'll be the first to admit i haven't spent a lot of time actually studying the real facts. I did however look up the average temps from clean back in the 1800's till 2022.....ya know what? it kinda overall stayed the same.

Way back when we had warm years...then cold years...then warm years..then cold or average etc..etc

Storms more severe? dunno ask somebody that got flooded out in 72 by Agnes if that wasn't severe.

So here in PA we are experiencing a warm year.....but ya know the world is a little bigger than PA, ....seems just a few weeks ago the NE broke some cold records, snow records etc...

One thing i do know though is ya just can't look at the climate change opinion alone...look at these peoples whole mentality and way of thinking. And..........if they seem to struggle with other common sense stuff, ya know, like?....yea you know ,normal stuff, (without going into detail)....what on earth makes ya think you can trust their opinion about climate change?

lets face it folks.......liberalism etc....is a mental disorder, a few bricks short of a full load, and a bit wacky.

does the climate change?.....more than likely.....Do these educated people have it all figured out?....don't be so gullible.

From: 70lbDraw
19-Feb-23
“Basically, you don't like any of the possible solutions to the problem so you’re just going to pretend that the problem doesn't exist.”

Basically, I don’t like having to pay more money for combating something we have little to no historical data on. Especially when the Democrats think they have all the answers, yet aren’t concerned about the countries that don’t make the same efforts we are forced to!

19-Feb-23
The loss of freedom and quality of life & health required to get human activity at or close to net zero isn't a possible solution. It's dystopia.

It also wouldn't "fix" or significantly change the climate, so theres that.

The best plan to deal with climate fluctuations is to spend our time, energy and resources adapting and preparing instead of pretending we can steer it. Part of that is having a strong, healthy economy.

Big difference when a distaster hits an isolated, poor, third world civilization vs a modern prosperous one.

No one I know opposes cleaner energy. The path to get there is to have a society that has the fuel, freedom and prosperity to dream, invent, risk, create and profit from solutions.

From: Jaquomo
19-Feb-23

Jaquomo's embedded Photo
Jaquomo's embedded Photo
"Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past," said Dr. David Viner, Senior Research Scientist at the famous Hadley Climate Research Center, March of 2000. "Within a few years, Viner declared, winter snowfall will become “a very rare and exciting event”, adding that, “Children just aren’t going to know what snow is”.

From: bowyer45
19-Feb-23
The main problems we face can be solved "if" we listen to the people who have experience as well as training in the problem area. POLITICIANS HAVE LITTLE IF ANY PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE PERIOD. Politics ignores common sense and past experience. Science and sound engineering principles work together to solve problems not short sighted regulations by the electorate.

From: Orion
19-Feb-23
Did we lose soccermom and the flatlander?

From: bowyer45
19-Feb-23
we hired them to protect our way of life! How are they doing???

From: HDE
19-Feb-23
bowyer - except nobody alive has experience reversing or controlling the changing climate. The "experts" are guessing too.

We listened to "experts" 2020 - 2021 as well, remember?

From: Mike B
19-Feb-23
Russia, Iran, North Korea, Comets, Solar flares, Coronal Mass Ejections, Asteroids, Yellowstone volcano, Diseases, Pestilence, Religion, Earthquakes etc. etc.

There's all kinds of things that could wipe humanity and all life off the planet. No need to invent new reasons.

From: Grey Ghost
19-Feb-23
Is there anything in you chicken little’s lives that you look forward too? Try to find one, for God’s sake.

Matt

From: Mike B
19-Feb-23
"Is there anything in you chicken little’s lives that you look forward too? Try to find one, for Gods sake."

I look forward to waking up tomorrow. Does that count?

From: Grey Ghost
19-Feb-23
Ohiohunter, I’ll take that as a “no”, I figured that. Find something to look forward to. Life is so much better when you do.

Matt

From: HDE
19-Feb-23
^^^ who you talkin' to? Don't see any recent posts from him...

From: Grey Ghost
20-Feb-23
His post was moderated. Not my call, but I don’t disagree with it.

Matt

From: fuzzy
20-Feb-23
Climate change is real, climate change is natural. Whether mankind can or has influenced (global) climate change is uncertain. What is obvious to me is that once a cycle is initiated, we do not have the power to meaningfully abate or reverse it. Think about triggering a landslide. All that stored energy is released and the inertia is immeasurable.

From: bowyer45
20-Feb-23
Yes climate change is real, and yes we have, some say, millions of years of experience with it. But that's not the experience I'm referring too. what made our country great was the system of living we used since the country was settled. The freedom to invent, explore, and study and not be told what to think or else. the planet survived climate change before it can do it again, without our help. Our help may only make things worse for ourselves, and that is my concern. Meanwhile we need to look at what could happen and start preparing for it based what happen before. History repeats itself unless you learn from it.

From: 70lbDraw
20-Feb-23
“Climate change is real”

Then why is it that the biggest proponents for fixing it are nowhere to be found when a chemical Armageddon is killing a small town in Ohio? I haven’t heard much about finding and condemning the saboteurs of the NORD pipeline either. At least not since they started to push for banning lawnmowers and weed eaters.

I think the important question that needs to be asked is; where does the emergency really lie? Is it to save the world from ALL environmental disasters, or to simply fatten up the federal coffers as we concentrate solely on doing away with the evil fossil fuels?

From: TGbow
20-Feb-23
I know I'm older than a lot of you on this site..but I remember 40 years ago every magazine I picked up mentioned the "coming ice age". So which is it? I'm for common sense environmentalism, but I wouldnt trust these quacks to tell me what time it is.

The earth has always gone thru cooling and hotter periods, ever since the recording of the weather has existed.

It's all about control and money. It's always under the banner of The environment, National Security, or Saftety. If you think extreme environmentalism works..what happen to California? We have enough gullible folks in this country to believe whatever some professor says..or some politician

From: Bigdog 21
20-Feb-23
Tell people something long enough they will believe it.

From: Rocky D
20-Feb-23
We’re going to insert ourselves into a natural process and we think we can actually help the situation, really…

From: DanaC
20-Feb-23
I'd pay cash money for a detailed look at Al Gore's stock portfolio.

From: TGbow
20-Feb-23
Dana, that reminds me of one time Al Gore was flying in NYC to speak on global warming but the plane couldn't land because of all the ice..lol Kinda like Bush's weapons of mass destruction...something else is going on behind the scenes

From: DanaC
21-Feb-23
TG, no mystery. Remember when the Obama admin was trying to cherry-pick all those 'green' companies? Who were the 'insiders'?

Can't find good investment? Make one up!

There's an old saying that people keep forgetting - "Follow the money!" My corollary to that is, "Who's getting rich? Never mind the philosophy, who's making a profit?"

Al Gore's net worth was less than $2 million when he ran for President, today it's around $300 million. Heckuva Plan B.

From: Rut-N-Strut
21-Feb-23
If the Obama and the Gores were so scared of the climate change and the oceans rising, why would they’d spend millions on homes just feet from the ocean. Good for me not for thee

From: TGbow
21-Feb-23
Yep, follow the money.. and the power seekers

From: scentman
21-Feb-23
Must be warming, there is a town near Buffalo, NY that has Pink Flamingos popping up all over their lawns ;0)

From: soccern23ny
21-Feb-23
I've been summoned. Yup the models are all wrong even though we are experiencing record warm winters... again.

Fyi most models have a "best, most likely, and worst case" scenario prediction to them

From: timex
21-Feb-23
We are going to insert ourselves into a natural process and we think we can actually help the situation, really...

Rocky D.... I honestly don't think extracting billions of tons of fossil fuels from the planet & then burning them for energy is a "natural process"

I absolutely believe that humans and the industrial revolution have affected the planet-climate.

I do agree with you that's there's little were gonna do to change it, or at least in "our lifetime" ........

From: bowyer45
21-Feb-23
You have to realize that the earth is a part of the solar system, even the moon effects what the earth is doing, Like an atom the solar system is in perfect balance, I wonder how it got that way? Chance they say? then there is the second law of thermo dynamics, that says everything is in a process of decay. of course, we can overturn that right? No we would be smart to prepare for the inevitable.

From: fuzzy
21-Feb-23

fuzzy's embedded Photo
fuzzy's embedded Photo

From: Rocky D
21-Feb-23
“I absolutely believe that humans and the industrial revolution have affected the planet-climate.”

Timex, I don’t disagree but we have been keeping records for basically 100 years which is minuscule amount of time in the grand scheme of things and everything else is based on modeling.

Most modeling that I have worked with is at best around 95%. So what degree of error could there be when you look at hundreds of thousands of years.

From: TonyBear
21-Feb-23
Expected to get 9-24 inches of snow in the Midwest next 2-3 days. Snow was supposed to be a special event that kids wouldn't know about.

Yeah kinda like the ones I remember from 2013, 2000, 1996, 1991, 1983, 1971-72, 1965-66, and my parents who dealt with it in 1940...Oh yeah a rare occurrence indeed.

I expect to be bowhunting turkeys in the snow (again) this spring, due to global warming, climate change, blah, blah, BS.

From: Jimmyjumpup
21-Feb-23
When the good Lord has had enough he will put an end to it.

From: HDE
21-Feb-23
"I honestly don't think extracting billions of tons of fossil fuels from the planet & then burning them for energy is a "natural process"

I absolutely believe that humans and the industrial revolution have affected the planet-climate."

To refer fossil fuels as billions of tons means you have no idea what fossil fuels really are and you believe in too many fairytales...

From: Murph
21-Feb-23
We’ll guys love it or hate it fossil fuel runs the world always have always will, their will never be a net 0 carbon footprint and for you that think their will sorry some day you will wake up too, however in the mean time sure explore green options but they will always be a subsidiary source the wind don’t blow everyday, nor does the sun shine, energy consumption will continue to go up and oil will run the world whether you like it or not yeah maybe humanity will ruin it for all someday but if not for humanity what’s the cause, cuz we can’t go without it so quit talking about it cuz you all have no answer

From: Bigdog 21
21-Feb-23
On thing good when the water levels raise. It won't be as far to go to the beach.

From: fuzzy
22-Feb-23
Murph "always have " is a stretch

From: timex
22-Feb-23
Hde........ You are somewhat correct in that I haven't a clue how much coal, crude oil, natural gas, in tons is extracted from the planet and burned on an annual basis.

I also will admit that I heat my house with wood, drive a diesel truck, both personal and for work, and burn between 80 and 100 gallons of gas on an offshore tuna fishing trip in my boat. I'm absolutely not innocent when it comes to burning fossil fuel.

I do believe that in doing so we are affecting the planet- atmosphere. To what extent ???? That I don't know either

I absolutely don't believe in ferry tails. And I'm fully aware that the science can be manipulated to fit a variety of narratives, Covid for example,,,I'm proudly unvaxed. And in fact never had a flue shot either.

My days are limited on this planet...... I'm 61 with 3 stints in my heart. I'll be very surprised if I live another 20 years.

But what about our grandchildren's, Children's, children, even if the science is only partially correct.

For us to live today with a "screw it attitude" with complete disregard of our future generations is kind of a selfish attitude don't ya think !!!!!

From: Rocky D
22-Feb-23
“ For us to live today with a "screw it attitude" with complete disregard of our future generations is kind of a selfish attitude don't ya think !!!!!”

Timex, no one said screw it but on the other hand to focus your energy strictly on a plan that is unsustainable with no win in sight is strictly a power grab.

This is as obtainable as equity and a bigger distraction than diversity!

A whole lot of this shite means nothing except to manipulate the people to serve those in power!

From: scentman
22-Feb-23
Hold your breath and don't fart.

From: Rocky D
22-Feb-23

From: HDE
22-Feb-23
"Timex, no one said screw it but on the other hand to focus your energy strictly on a plan that is unsustainable with no win in sight is strictly a power grab.

This is as obtainable as equity and a bigger distraction than diversity!

A whole lot of this shite means nothing except to manipulate the people to serve those in power!"

Well said.

From: Murph
22-Feb-23
Fuzzy your right always have is a stretch kinda splitting hairs, but unless we’re going back to hunting with spears and wearing a loin cloth over our pecker, we will all rely on fossil fuels

From: Basil
22-Feb-23

Basil's embedded Photo
Basil's embedded Photo

From: TGbow
22-Feb-23
Don't worry, between the Democrats n Republicans we will be told how often we can flush our toilets before it's over with..and the American people will fall in line

22-Feb-23
We have constantly became cleaner and more efficient with coal and petroleum. Everyone likes the idea of cleaner, cheaper energy.

The loss of freedom and well-being that comes with worshipping man-made climate change ideology is immeasurably more dangerous to future generations than a common sense, market based transition to new sources as we figure out how to harness them.

From: timex
22-Feb-23

timex's embedded Photo
timex's embedded Photo
timex's embedded Photo
2 or 3 more dead in the last week Now I'm not a tree hugging whale lover, but as long as it fits the narrative our government is gonna push offshore wind farms down our throats.
timex's embedded Photo
2 or 3 more dead in the last week Now I'm not a tree hugging whale lover, but as long as it fits the narrative our government is gonna push offshore wind farms down our throats.

From: Rocky D
22-Feb-23
“ The assumption that high jet steam wind speeds in the upper atmosphere correspond to high wind power has now been challenged by researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry in Jena, Germany. Taking into account that the high wind speeds result from the near absence of friction and not from a strong power source, Axel Kleidon and colleagues found that the maximum extractable energy from jet streams is approximately 200 times less than reported previously. Moreover, climate model simulations show that energy extraction by wind turbines from jet streams alters their flow, and this would profoundly impact the entire climate system of the planet.” Science Daily 2011

Hmm, off by 200% from the same people that say the sky is falling!

Timex, I was just wondering the effect on your whales but this also validates my previous statement about potential for error when using modeling.

From: 12yards
22-Feb-23
If nuclear isn't THE major part of the solution, I question the true motives of the green movement.

From: HDE
22-Feb-23
^^^ to control when you can and cannot have power...

22-Feb-23
I’m just trying to figure what caused that mile thick glacier to melt off of the Midwest, a few years before the internal combustion engine was invented and the use of fossil fuels was nonexistent

From: Saphead
23-Feb-23
I'm no scientist but have been thinking about the iceman and the arrow found in Norway recently. The glacier melt reveled both of these. When they were laid there had to be the same conditions as now I would think. Buried under glacier for a long time. Thoughts?

From: bowhunt
23-Feb-23

bowhunt's embedded Photo
From Geology.Utah.gov
bowhunt's embedded Photo
From Geology.Utah.gov

bowhunt's Link
Saphead, here is a link to an article about different glacial periods. In the article you can read about how we are in an interglacial period, that is similar temperature wise to multiple other ones. So what your saying is probable.

The earth had cooled( froze over, and covered with glaciers), and then warmed(thawing the glaciers) 5 times in the last 450 million years.

The climate is, and has always been changing. I don’t believe anyone with half a brain denies that.

That isn’t the debate. The debate is wether or not it is caused by man. Like everything else, there is no debate allowed. If someone thinks it’s a natural cycle, just like the earth has gone through several time they are a climate change denier.

The man made climate change advocates don’t claim the earth hasn’t froze and thawed several times. Their current claim is that this warming period is happening at a faster rate than ever before.

To measure historical temps before the 1900’s, scientist use models to estimate.

So the argument is comparing models/estimates from the last 450 million years, to the observed measured temperatures since 1880(the last 143 years).

So we are arguing about a possible less than 1 degree rate of change difference between known numbers over 143 years, comparing them to models/estimates over 450 million years.

From: HDE
23-Feb-23
^^^ I would like to see the data set that made the trendline. Must've been a pain in the ass to have written it all down, keep it intact over the many millenia, and then input it all by hand into a program.

From: Basil
23-Feb-23
Likely burried at some point in/on the glacier. Ever lose something in the snow only to find it in the spring? Does that imply it was there before the snow?

From: bowhunt
23-Feb-23

bowhunt's Link
HDE, here’s an article from the Smithsonian on how these historical temperature estimates are made.

From: HDE
23-Feb-23
^^^ the word "estimates" is all I need to know to not waste my time reading an article from the narrative controlling agency.

From: Saphead
23-Feb-23
Basil I know an arrow can settle in snow. Not sure about penetrating thru a frozen glacier tho. Maybe but i doubt it.

From: Basil
23-Feb-23

Basil's embedded Photo
Basil's embedded Photo
I was in Norway on a Reindeer hunt several years ago when most of the glaciers melted for the 1st time in recorded history. Lots of artifacts were being discovered. One was a set of horse snowshoes. Surely they were used to travel on the ice& snow. Recovered when the glaciers receded. Not lost before the glacier as there would be no use for them. Any thing lost in the history of a glacier will be revealed when the ice is gone. Doesn’t have to penetrate. People have hunted the reindeer on the glaciers for years. My hunt was unsuccessful mainly due to change of habits. Typical hunt was to locate the animals lying on the ice during the heat of the day. No ice no pattern. The picture is a spear point recovered when a glacier melted.

23-Feb-23
Don’t you also have to take into account the accuracy of the mercury thermometer in use 100 years ago compared to the digits thermometers used now. When the climate alarmists think the temperature has risen by 2/10ths of a degree when it actually could be dropping by a tenth just do to the inaccuracy of the old thermometers

From: timex
23-Feb-23
80+ on the coast in VA today. That's more than a 10th or two unusually warm for February.

23-Feb-23
-13 here in CO today.

From: bowhunt
23-Feb-23

bowhunt's embedded Photo
bowhunt's embedded Photo
6 inches of snow at my house today in Oregon

I think it was the coldest February 23rd here in history.

Snow all the way down to sea level.

Seaside Oregon, Newport Oregon, and Lincoln City Oregon are all beach towns, and we’re all white this morning.

Very rare weather event here.

From: Bowaddict
23-Feb-23
LA was more than a tenth or 2 colder than average for this time of year , as well as many other areas around the country. -18 this morning on truck temp. in CO foothills.

From: timex
24-Feb-23
Well there ya go folks. Unusual to even extremely unusual weather seems to be the norm, more & more these days. Are we gonna change it ....nope.... But I'm not gonna deny that things are changing rather quickly either.

From: 12yards
24-Feb-23
"Unusual to even extremely unusual weather seems to be the norm, more & more these days."

Is this true? Or is the media just ultra focused on it now? The media keeps saying weather is more extreme, but when scientists actually speak, they say no, there is no clear trend in extreme weather events. Their models say there will be eventually. But they haven't happened yet and their models haven't been very good so far at predicting the future.

From: bowhunt
24-Feb-23
Timex, you seem very passionate that it is all “our” fault, but “we” won’t do anything to stop it.

I’m curious what personal sacrifices are you making on a daily basis to fight climate change. What financial “investments” have you made in your home,vehicles, and other things you need/use a lot to fight climate change?

From: DanaC
24-Feb-23
Bowhunt, sorry, but until China - the entire country - goes 'green' there isn't a dam' thing the entire US population can do to move the needle. My next vehicle will have a bigger engine that burns gasoline, still.

From: Murph
24-Feb-23
6’ of snow so far here in NC Nebraska and -15° this morning, unusual not necessarily, temp definetly not, snow more then we’ve seen since the 80’s everything trends glad to see it personally we’ve been in a 2 yr drought

From: HDE
24-Feb-23
12yards - it's because the models are excellent in showing what has already happened because that's the data set used to construct the models. Humans are proven over and over just how insignificant and extremely inaccurate they are at predicting long term future events.

Funny really.

From: 12yards
24-Feb-23
HDE, I don't trust their historical data either. They've adjusted all of the observed data, and then it's all proxy data from tree rings and ice cores before that. You telling me they can tell historical temps from those things down to the tenth of a degree? Seems a stretch. Seems like more art than science. Actually more activism than science.

From: Murph
24-Feb-23
Is this like the term a Doctor “practiced medicine” HaHa!!

From: scentman
24-Feb-23
What's another name for a doctor that tells a fib? Pathological liar.

From: HDE
24-Feb-23
12yards - precisely why their models show prior events the way they do. They made it up as they went along, just like a 5 year telling a story.

From: Rocky D
25-Feb-23
“ Bowhunt, sorry, but until China - the entire country - goes 'green' there isn't a dam' thing the entire US population can do to move the needle. ”

Absolutely!!!

From: timex
25-Feb-23
Bowhunt........ I'm not passionate about what's happening. I'm passionate about fellow sportsman, woodsman, outdoorsman, denying it's happening,

I absolutely admit that I'm a hypocrite when it comes to the subject, I burn wood for heat , drive an old diesel truck, burn lots of gas offshore fishing etc.

All I know for sure is that in (my lifetime) living in Virginia the weather has changed significantly

It just completely dumbfounds me when folks for whatever reason deny what's right in front of their face.

From: HDE
25-Feb-23
^^^^ nobody ever said the climate hasn't been undergoing changes and cycles we're not used to. What dumbfounds logical people is that a [large] group of zealots think they can actually control the changes as though they wield the very power of the cosmos...

From: Saphead
25-Feb-23
I think the climate changes, as it always has. Too much data that can be spun one way or the other.. If you look deep for it.

From: Rocky D
26-Feb-23
“ What dumbfounds logical people is that a [large] group of zealots think they can actually control the changes as though they wield the very power of the cosmos...”

Worth saying twice!

26-Feb-23
The high priests of the man-made climate change religion could care less about controlling the climate, just about control.

From: Bigdog 21
26-Feb-23
They want to say fossil fuels is a big problem. Do you ever think they thought about all the trees that are gone. Loggers , forest fires, farmers clearning more ground every day. In the last 100 years we have lost a lot of trees on the hole planet.

26-Feb-23
Actually there are more trees now than 100 years ago. Still less than when man first came on the scene but we are gaining back.

From: fuzzy
27-Feb-23
Murph prior to 1830 fossil fuels were only a small part of the global energy,commerce and lubrication scene. Before 1750 their use hardly even registered. Hardly caveman days

From: azelkhntr
27-Feb-23
Until the rise of modern metallurgy via the industrial revolution, there was no way to effectively use crude oil on a massive scale. Coal is arguably a 'fossil fuel' but oil is not.

From: Single bevel
27-Feb-23
I believe it was 1904 when Scott made his Discovery expedition to find the South Pole. He was able to sail as far south as Ross Island. Where he anchored is now the location of McMurdo Station. I was at McMurdo station 2007-2010 and we had to break ice 30 to 40 miles every year to get shipping to the station for re-supply. Doesn't sound like warming or melting.

From: bigeasygator
27-Feb-23
Coal is arguably a 'fossil fuel' but oil is not.

Huh?

From: Murph
27-Feb-23
Whatever fuzzy we will agree to disagree, if it makes you feel better go green go off grid live in only a way that fits the green agenda, good luck with that!!

From: azelkhntr
27-Feb-23
From: bigeasygator27-Feb-23 Coal is arguably a 'fossil fuel' but oil is not. Huh?

^^^^ Oil is created like coal via time and pressure. Coal is from decaying ferns, plants and trees whereas oil is derived from the decomposing remains of billions of years of the accumulation of diatoms and planktons deposited on the oceans bottoms. As the continents drift over these deposits, they are rolled up and submerged under them. The great pressures of the overburden and the heat generated by the sublimation converts the diatoms, planktons and other microorganisms into oil. So, in theory the earth will never ever run out of oil. In essence oil is a renewable resource and the earth can never run out of it. This theory began to be explored when the oil industry went back and began pumping from wells that had long since run dry. The reservoirs had been refilling in the interim.

From: Bowbender
27-Feb-23
Y’all argue models this models that all while we’re being played. And yes, we ARE being played.

Wise words from Pete Buttplug.

“The climate crisis is here today, threatening Americans’ lives and livelihoods, our homes and businesses, and even the way we travel and operate our federal agencies,” Secretary Pete Buttigieg said. “

Buttplug is being investigated for his constant use of private jets.

From: Bigdog 21
27-Feb-23
How about carbon credits. Industries buy credits so they can put more carbon dioxide back in the air ?

From: Bowbender
27-Feb-23
Carbon credits are like the Roman Catholic Churches sale of indulgences. Drop some coin to the bishop, Monsignor or priest on Monday…sin all week. It’s covered.

From: HDE
27-Feb-23
^^^ think what you want. NOAA is the most accurate 72 hour source for weather I've ever used and will continue to use it.

From: Bowbender
27-Feb-23

From: Bigdog 21
27-Feb-23
This could be Why Bill Gates is buying so much farm land to earn carbon credits.

From: timex
27-Feb-23
SaxtoN........ Interesting, not sure where your stepping off the lava rocks. Hawaii or California ?

I'm on the coast of VA and land that only flooded during a major storm 20 years ago now floods every full moon high tide. Record breaking 82 degrees in VA beach the other day & at the same time record breaking cold & snow on the west coast.

Yes absolutely things have been changing for an extremely long time in the life of the planet.

They just seem to be changing a bit more quickly recently.

From: 70lbDraw
27-Feb-23
Have you guys ever looked at a map of the world’s landmass, how it was, how it is now, where it’s going?

I can see the liberals scrambling to keep the continent together back then. Blaming white folks for causing the land mass to separate.

From: bigeasygator
28-Feb-23
Coal is from decaying ferns, plants and trees whereas oil is derived from the decomposing remains of billions of years of the accumulation of diatoms and planktons deposited on the oceans bottoms.

These are all considered fossils. They have all been buried, decayed, and transformed by temperature and pressure over billions of years.

From: shade mt
28-Feb-23
I have come to the conclusion that its best to just sit back, look at the whole big picture and go from there.

First and foremost is credibility. And yes that includes moral credibility, if your off balance morally, the rest will be off balance as well...Society seems to be rolling downhill at a rapid rate. leaders standing on a podium, making speeches, society in a buzz of activity, arguing who is right, who is wrong, taking sides etc....all oblivious to the fact that they are slowly self destructing, and rolling downhill....wealth and power....and no sense of direction, and to dumb to realize it.

My advice is get out of that wagon.....then decide.

From: Rocky D
28-Feb-23
“ A senior Biden administration scientist authored an internal memo warning of the impacts offshore wind development may have on marine life months before the recent spate of whale deaths along the East Coast.

Sean Hayes, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) chief of protected species, penned the memo in May 2022 and sent it to Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) lead biologist Brian Hooker, also copying more than a dozen other scientists from the two agencies. The memo highlighted Hayes' concerns about how offshore wind construction and surveying could disrupt the endangered Atlantic right whale.”

Timex, you probably want find this on CNN!

From: DanaC
28-Feb-23
Weeds out the stupid whales that won't just swim *around*.

From: 70lbDraw
28-Feb-23
Have you guys ever looked at a map of the world’s landmass, how it was, how it is now, where it’s going?

I can see the liberals scrambling to keep the continent together back then. Blaming white folks for causing the land mass to separate.

From: timex
28-Feb-23
The offshore wind farms and resulting dead whale's are a big deal on the coast where I live, but currently it's kinda like watching a dog chasing its tail.

Ultimately the government is funding the research & construction of the projects and at the same time the agencies conducting the research on the dead whale's is also government funded.

Has anyone ever known a snake to voluntarily cut it's own head off !!!

From: scentman
28-Feb-23
No such thing as "government funding", "tax funding" is more an appropriate phrase. Lake Erie is next on the list... fresh water lakes, getting rid of all fossil fuels including wood stoves, Rod Serling could not even come up with this for an episode of " The Twighlite Zone".

From: Grey Ghost
28-Feb-23
"In essence oil is a renewable resource and the earth can never run out of it. This theory began to be explored when the oil industry went back and began pumping from wells that had long since run dry. The reservoirs had been refilling in the interim."

Oil flows thru the porous and fractured crust of the earth for long distances. The fact that a once dry well fills back up doesn't mean the earth is producing oil faster than we are consuming it. It's common for oil companies to use new and more intensive drilling technologies on existing fields because it's cheaper than exploration and development of new fields.

Sure, we'll discover new fields and better ways to extract the oil, and it will last a lot longer than the "Peak Oil" alarmist claim, but I think it's an ignorant stretch to claim oil is "renewable" in the same sense that we speak of other renewable energy sources.

Matt

28-Feb-23
Matt- based on that point, it’s an ignorant stretch to claim batteries are renewable, when the materials used to make them will run out also

From: DanaC
28-Feb-23
Batteries *store* energy, they don't produce it. They are the weak link in the chain that brings 'renewable energy/electricity' to point-of-use. Lithium is a problem, mining and refining it is a mess, supplies are finite and controlled by not-very-friendly nations.

Was reading up on electric trains, and it makes a certain sense to power vehicles by lines or live rails rather than batteries. But that won't work for a 100 million cars.

Has Ford re-started their electric pick-up line yet?

28-Feb-23
In other news, Greta Thunburg is protesting AGAINST a Norway wind farm this week because it interferes with local reindeer meat production.

From: DanaC
28-Feb-23
??? Do the reindeer forget how to f* because of the windmills? Love to see the science on this one!

From: HDE
28-Feb-23
Just for reference, small marine life cannot be buried slowly over time nor can they fossilize and still produce oil. Bacteria will consume the small marine life first and, well, the other should be self explanatory.

It requires rapid and deep deposition to trap the organics that then decay to sludge, aka, oil. Billions of years? Don't buy it - doesn't make logical sense.

As far as coal goes, it doesn't take that long to make coal. Non-fossilized branches and bark have been found in coal seams while mining...

28-Feb-23

Glunt@work's embedded Photo
Glunt@work's embedded Photo

From: bigeasygator
28-Feb-23
You’re right HDE, I should have said millions. I was using the language from azelkhntr’s post, but it certainly doesn’t take billions. Most of this hydrocarbons being produced in this country are from eras 300 mln years old and younger.

From: bigeasygator
28-Feb-23
Sure, we'll discover new fields and better ways to extract the oil, and it will last a lot longer than the "Peak Oil" alarmist claim, but I think it's an ignorant stretch to claim oil is "renewable" in the same sense that we speak of other renewable energy sources.

This^

From: azelkhntr
28-Feb-23
The earths production of oil is an ongoing dynamic process. The deep oceans continually receive a deposit of planktons and diatoms falling like snow to the depths. When the continents drift over the ocean bottoms they are sublimated beneath them, pressurized, cooked and the oil is released into the upper crust because its lighter than the surrounding material. It flows through the cracks in the rocks. This has been going on for billions of years and yes bacteria are also an aid and a component of the ongoing process. So technically it really isn't a fossil fuel at all. Oil is a constant renewable resource. Most coal deposits were laid down during the carboniferous period over millions of years, buried and cooked. Coal is not a renewable resource. These resources make a civilized life possible.

From: HDE
28-Feb-23
^^^^ sorry. It doesn't work that way. At all.

From: Beendare
28-Feb-23
This thread is like our current Gov- it cannot find a direction. “ that can’t Swim Around” that was funny.

It’s crazy to me that we all cannot agree on 3 things; 1) that we need to find better and more efficient, energy sources, 2) that we eventually need to wean ourselves back from fossil fuels and 3) we need a better energy grid.

A nuclear atom has 1 million times the energy of an oil molecule…thats part ofthe solution right there. We have new nuclear reactor solutions that don’t melt down…and the waste can be recycled. Pair a network of these new smaller reactors to a grid that maximizes renewables- problem solved…though its expensive.

The problem is politics. Just the word nuclear incites the Quasi environmentalists which dictate to the Dem party.

From: bigeasygator
28-Feb-23
The deep oceans continually receive a deposit of planktons and diatoms falling like snow to the depths. When the continents drift over the ocean bottoms they are sublimated beneath them, pressurized, cooked and the oil is released into the upper crust because its lighter than the surrounding material.

Like HDE said, this is really not even close to accurate in terms of what happens. It has everything to do with sedimentary deposition and nothing to do with "continental drift." The origin of the organic material that ultimately acts as the source of our oil and gas reservoirs are diverse and intertwined with the depositional environment in which they've been trapped - river beds, river deltas, ancient lakes, reefs, shallow and deep marine environments, sand dunes, etc. And no, the geological processes that create oil and natural gas work waaaaay slower than the rate at which we're consuming hydrocarbons so calling them renewable is a gigantic stretch.

From: azelkhntr
28-Feb-23
^^^ You're probably right. You're not, but you probably are.

From: bigeasygator
28-Feb-23

bigeasygator's Link
I can assure you I am. If you don't want to listen to me, listen to the American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

In petroleum geology, source rock is rock which has generated hydrocarbons or which could generate hydrocarbons. Source rocks are one of the necessary elements of a working petroleum system. They are organic-rich sediments that may have been deposited in a variety of environments including deep water marine, lacustrine and deltaic. Oil shale can be regarded as an organic-rich but immature source rock from which little or no oil has been generated and expelled. Subsurface source rock mapping methodologies make it possible to identify likely zones of petroleum occurrence in sedimentary basins as well as shale gas plays.

Take a look at the link if you want to read more about the types of depositional settings that essentially are the foundation of our petroleum reservoirs. This is literally the type of stuff I work on, az. But I'm sure you know more than me...

From: 70lbDraw
28-Feb-23
I wonder if Noah was bitching about climate change when he was building his boat? Unless he was there to witness the impact, how would he know it was just a meteor strike? At least he didn’t have to haul dinosaurs around until the water subsided!

From: azelkhntr
28-Feb-23
I don't dispute the processes big. I was a Geology Major for 2 years and the job market collapsed in the early '80's and I switched to something I could make a living at. I am very familiar with the geological aspects of oil production. I worked as an asst. geology student for 6 months in Wyo. in the oil patch reading cores. What you fail to understand is that the processes haven't stopped. Oil is actively being produced at this very moment and will continue on until even the end of the cycle of life on earth. Plate tectonics is an active dynamic process through time. The sun still shines, the earth still turns, erosion and deposition is ongoing. When all that stops the earth will become like Mars today.

From: bigeasygator
28-Feb-23
I don't dispute the processes big

That's literally what you did. No one said the processes have stopped. What was said is that it takes LOTS of time for oil to form and accumulate. It has taken millions of years for the oil we are using now to get there. There aren't "younger" sources of oil that are being generated to make up for what we are extracting now, which is what you are suggesting. Anyone with even a minimal exposure to petroleum geology should understand this.

From: 12yards
28-Feb-23
Couldn't agree more Beendare. I'm not apposed to electifying my life.......as long as there is ample, dependable, affordable electricity available. But I'm not willing to significantly reduce my lifestyle, which isn't extravagant as it is, very much. I'm pretty simple really. I need to tow my boat a couple hours for fishing, and I need to travel to remote areas of other states to hunt. And my wife may drag me to Florida every winter. Other than that, I'm pretty low energy budget.

From: Orion
28-Feb-23
It's apparent most guys on here don't travel out of the country. Spend some time in Asia, Central America, China and you will see that nothing we are being pushed into here will make one bit of difference.

From: HDE
28-Feb-23
Precisely. Asia (major and minor), SA, and Russia really don't give a flying rip about greta thornburg and her pissy little tirades...

From: RK
28-Feb-23
Orion

Well said.

From: Grey Ghost
28-Feb-23
AZ spent 2 years as a student geology major 40 years ago and dropped out, yet he feels qualified to argue with geology experts who have spent the last 40 years actually working in the field.. It takes a special kind of ego and narcism...

Matt.

From: timex
28-Feb-23
Getting pretty darn humorous............

It's not rocket science folks..............

I've lived the majority of my life in VA. The winters used to be cold, we ice scared on frozen ponds, you could hang deer for a week outside,Dec, Jan & Feb were rarely above freezing daytime high temps etc. There have been 3 days so far this winter with a daytime high below freezing. The trees & flowers are blooming , 82 degrees on Friday and I saw a bumble bee today.

I moved to the coast in 2000 places I hunted in leather boots 23 years ago, now you need knee high rubber boots and sometimes hip waders.

I don't need a graph or survey or scientific data to prove anything and I'm not some liberal dingbat claiming the sky is falling. Point blank period...where I live it's getting warmer and the water is rising or the land is sinking.

I'm simply stating my true life experience living in VA.

I agree 100% with nuclear power. If we can power a battle ship or aircraft carrier with nuclear power why not electric sub stations.

I honestly believe many folks are reluctant to acknowledge the same changes I've whitnessed in my lifetime for fear of being associated with political Views or beliefs they are against.

From: 12yards
28-Feb-23
Orion, explain please.

From: azelkhntr
28-Feb-23
From: bigeasygator28-Feb-23Private Reply I don't dispute the processes big That's literally what you did. No one said the processes have stopped. What was said is that it takes LOTS of time for oil to form and accumulate. It has taken millions of years for the oil we are using now to get there. There aren't "younger" sources of oil that are being generated to make up for what we are extracting now, which is what you are suggesting. Anyone with even a minimal exposure to petroleum geology should understand this.

^^^ This is entertaining. Time is relative big. Crude oil is constantly being made in and by the earth. It percolates upwards because its lighter than water, right? I've seen oil seeping up at the surface before in Wyoming. It used to be a common thing. The tectonic processes haven't stopped, ie the ring of fire and the mid Atlantic Rift, The African Rift, vulcanism. In theory we can never run out of oil and since we stopped pumping our own oil here in the States, thanks to brain dead pedo pete, it looks like we never will. I remember the 60's and 70's when all the major cities were smog choked. SLC, DEN, LA, Gary, Pittsburgh, NYC were always having smog alerts and most days you couldn't see across them. I remember a road trip to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon and we got there and couldn't see the other side or the bottom because the smog was so thick from the big coal fired plant on the Navajo Rez. This country has cleaned its act up to such an extent that it should be the envy of the world. We have done a magnificent job, but we can't do anymore and thrive as a productive nation. Which we aren't any longer. Climate change is all about stealing your productivity and future.

From: HDE
28-Feb-23
^^^ this is a funny post.

28-Feb-23
Have any of you guys pushing nuclear power thought about what would happen if another country decided to bomb these sites?

I know absolutely nothing about nuclear power. But, I don’t want a nuclear plant built with hundreds of miles of where I live. With the amount of unknown terrorists that’s likely crossed the southern border in the last 20 years, it’d make for an easy jihad if one of them decided to blow one of these plants up.

What would happen if we had nuclear power plants and Putin finally gets pissed that NATO is funding attempts to take over a section of the former Soviet Union? After promising not too? Remember, they got missiles we don’t have. They can hit the continental United States from their home land. We can hit them from within our lower 48 borders.

If nuclear power production isn’t a danger in these scenarios, then over look me and correct me. If they are, be careful what you ask for.

There are A lot of ideas, theories, and people reciting the science of energy production. But, we seem to have a pretty good thing going concerning making energy. And, we have nothing but a scientific theory on how long ago these coal seems were produced.

Here in southern WV, there are 13 mineable seams of coal. From mountain top to the 13th seam is at least a couple thousand feet. I find it amazing that people claim to know how the complexities of the world developed. When human kind and their science can’t prove how people got here.

Timex, did you know that eastern VA is a deciduous rain forest? You constantly quote the days of old and act as if we are headed down a road untraveled before. What if the region is experiencing the temperatures it’s supposed to now?

I’ve spent a far amount of time in the Shenandoah river valley. I never remember temperatures as regular that you described as your youth experiences.

In your often quoted saying of “I’m just a dumb country boy”, have you considered the amount of run off created by industrialization as possibly the reason there are swamps now versus 45 years ago?

I’m not being a wise guy. I’m just confused how so many people have the answers to things we can’t possibly know. Yet, we base things on what we think we know. That’s called ignorant at worst. And guaranteed as naive.

From: Orion
28-Feb-23
12 yards are you serious? What explanation do you need, you've obviously never left the country so your proving my point

From: timex
01-Mar-23
WV Mountaineer........ I spent quite a bit of time hunting in Romney & berkly springs in the 70s & 80s single digit daytime high temps were not unusual whatsoever. When's the last time you experienced that type of cold in the southern part of WV.

I could be wrong but if Putin is gonna nuke something it's probably gonna be the white house and is so we're both screwed irregardless...

From: shade mt
01-Mar-23
Im not here to argue climate change, but i would like to point out that while some areas have been warmer than usual...some areas have also had record breaking snow and cold.

The point being....the world is a lot bigger than your front door.

From: DanaC
01-Mar-23

DanaC's Link
Being attacked with nukes is the least of our worries. Do you know what an 'Ohio-class' submarine is? Bet on it, there is at least one of them parked somewhere fairly close to NK and China - and the military leaders there are dam' well aware of it.

It's called 'deterrence' and it works.

From: Rut-N-Strut
01-Mar-23
I grew up in the shadow of Three Mile Island and knew many people who worked there. These places were built to withstand just about any attack or weather disaster know to man. You’re talking feet upon feet of concrete and steel. You’re also not dealing with weapons grade plutonium at these plants. Not saying it would be the best place to hide during a nuclear war but it’s better than by a wind mill or solar farm

From: 70lbDraw
01-Mar-23
“I honestly believe many folks are reluctant to acknowledge the same changes I've whitnessed in my lifetime for fear of being associated with political Views or beliefs they are against.”

The only thing that never changes, is the fact that everything changes. Just because things change doesn’t mean they’re broken.

01-Mar-23
It’s my understanding any plutonium can be used for a nuclear warhead. There is certainly a difference in weapons and reactor grade. But, it’s all plutonium. Right?

As I said before, I’m sure this has been thought about and planned for by the powers that be. But, the powers that be are as inept as a toddler concerning decision that impact Americans. So, I don’t for one second believe that these plants aren’t targeted as we speak. If we build more……. Everyone gets the point.

Here we go. I don’t know why we don’t just hire Dana as our national security adviser. He seems to have it all figured out.

I do know this though. If canada invaded America, the idea of retaliation wouldn’t stop America from doing what it had to do to get it righted. Why everyone assumes that doesn’t apply over there is beyond me. Especially given the variables involved. So, let’s provoke him. Let’s do what we promised we wouldn’t. He’s just ignorant. Let’s do it.

Tuned, if they nuked Washington, that would kill you. But, not me. Or, most of Americans. There has to be more to it than your answer.

I noticed you didn’t answer the questions about the swamp. I know why you didn’t. Which was my point.

01-Mar-23
FWIW Dana, if you used principle to dictate your thoughts, it’d be more credible.

You had the most feared American president in office last cycle. He was so feared the same people we are fighting today, we’re considered friends. Yet, you called it treason then. But, now it’s a deterrence.

Give me a break.

From: DanaC
01-Mar-23

DanaC's Link
"It’s my understanding any plutonium can be used for a nuclear warhead. There is certainly a difference in weapons and reactor grade. But, it’s all plutonium. Right?

Do you have any idea what it takes to refine enough plutonium (or uranium) for *one* bomb?

"Plutonium and weapons

It takes about 10 kilograms of nearly pure Pu-239 to make a bomb (though the Nagasaki bomb in 1945 used less). Producing this requires 30 megawatt-years of reactor operation, with frequent fuel changes and reprocessing of the 'hot' fuel. Hence 'weapons-grade' plutonium is made in special production reactors by burning natural uranium fuel... "

From: Rocky D
01-Mar-23

Rocky D's Link
“ Being attacked with nukes is the least of our worries.”

DanaC, here’s the rest of the strategy or at least what they will publicly share!

From: timex
01-Mar-23
WV...... I grew up in NW VA. Perhaps I'm wrong but I don't believe the blue ridge foothills were swamp at any time in recent history. On the coast where I've lived the last 23 years, perhaps, Back home there's stone walls that run for a good distance in places up in the mountains and I assume those woods were open country at one point in time.

But hey what the heck. It's February the flowers & trees are blooming, bumble bees buzzing around frogs are chirping and I've already been chewed on by a few skeeters. Life is good my friend.

From: Jaquomo
01-Mar-23
I left my house in Colorado two days ago and it was 10 degrees and 4" of new snow overnight, on top of 3' on the ground. 24" of ice on the lakes. Just another typical late February day. Now I'm in Texas and its 80 degrees. Crazy! The earth has warmed 70 degrees in just two days. People are dying right here in the streets and animals are going extinct in front of my eyes. We're doomed.

From: bigeasygator
01-Mar-23
In theory we can never run out of oil and since we stopped pumping our own oil here in the States

Not surprisingly, az is wrong again.

From: bigeasygator
01-Mar-23

bigeasygator's embedded Photo
bigeasygator's embedded Photo

From: bowyer45
01-Mar-23
The Military has had a Top Secret project going on since the fifties, focused on controlling the earths weather. It involves hi altitude cloud making and seeding , I have recently heard about this on the net from a hi level officer who has observed this as well as an enlisted person with clearance. I never thought this could happen, but nothing is surprising me anymore. What is true anymore, who knows!

From: Beendare
01-Mar-23

Beendare's Link
Adding to the facts of the situation; The midwest grid operator PJM came out with a word salad report saying that the forced retirement of fossil fuel power plants and renewable replacements will leave us short on Power in the future.

This goes back to my , “Do the Math” comment…the current Dem admin is more concerned with agenda and no science or math will get in their way. They are literally running us into the ground.

Heres a paragraph from the report, I posted the link above. Insidelinespjm.com

Overall, the amount of generation retirements appears to be more certain than the timely arrival of replacement generation resources and demand response, given that the quantity of retirements is codified in various policy objectives, while the impacts to the pace of new entry of the Inflation Reduction Act, post-pandemic supply chain issues, and other externalities are still not fully understood. Should these trends continue, PJM could face decreasing reserve margins for the first time in its history.

You Democrats need to open your eyes….

From: azelkhntr
01-Mar-23
We should have started building 100 clean nuclear power plants 20 years ago. They are safe, efficient, long lasting and we have the uranium to fuel them. But nooooo. As far as a nuke strike goes on the US today I for one am very concerned about that. 2 Generals and 4 Colonels were just relieved of duty, ie purged, at Minot SAC. I don't think they were going along with the criminals in the WH today but IDK for sure. Since 2015 the Russians have constructed thousands of nuke attack fallout shelters in their cities and towns. They intend to survive US. Do you know where you're local FS is?

01-Mar-23
I don't know much about nuclear but I listened to a interview with a guy discussing new technology that allows for smaller facilities that can be spread out minimizing the risk if an incident happens at one.

From: timex
01-Mar-23
Do y'all honestly believe that after the embarrassment Putin has endured in Ukraine that he would consider poking a much bigger bear.

Don't get me wrong Putin, china & the Arabs in bed together is significant.

But Putin alone doesn't seem like much of a threat these days.

From: bowyer45
01-Mar-23
Yes nuclear power was the answer and will be the answer again if we last that long. I was a licensed reactor operator at point beach nuclear plant in Wisconsin, before that I was a missile systems analyst electronic specialist on the Minuteman Icbm missile system. i wonder if the firings of the officers had more to do with woke, and maybe about the balloon incident? Being a sac base it was one of the best and we took pride in our work. No different at the nuclear plant all top notch Nuclear navy people. Iran is 12 days away from getting enough fissile material for a bomb and Israel said they won't let that happen. And we are fooling around in Ukraine.

From: azelkhntr
01-Mar-23
2 Generals and 4 Colonels relieved of duty at the Minot SAC has me very concerned. Not knowing the particulars, I am going to believe it was a purge of senior officers who aren't going along with the o'biden, NATO/EU, CIA, WEF program for the Russian Federation. F-jb. Oh, and tell your kids to get ready to go die for the kike klown in kiev because apparently, they have fought to the last Ukrainian and need new cannon fodder.

From: bowyer45
01-Mar-23
I heard, that Zelinski made a statement he needed our young men and women to come and help out. Boots on the ground.

01-Mar-23
Hey Dana, I appreciate the science lesson. Plutonium is great. I’ll order it for my tea sweetener next time at dinner. Heck, let’s build them. Forget mining coal and natural gas. Or wind and solar. Let’s build it. The bombs will come.

Timex, a better question is do you truly believe that Russia couldn’t squash Ukraine if so desired? You can’t be that naive.

We heard it from the bowsite educated bunch for weeks. How Putin couldn’t afford to do this. It’d be over in a month. They were broke. No one would do business with them. Etc…. Well, all that was wrong.

We are feeding Ukraine weapons and money. As is a lot of the world. Why? Because nato countries would love to have Ukraine as a member. Why aren’t they? Because it would officially start world war 3.

You can’t just listen to politicians and the mainstream “unbiased” media on why Putin did this. There are variables involved that aren’t making headlines. And, when you consider them all, it kinda makes sense if your job is to protect Russian interests.

My only question is why are all the talking heads acting as if we have Putin right where we want him. We don’t. He’s playing us as a fool. Why? Because we have bought and paid for fools leading us. Say it ain’t so. You can’t. Hunters already proved that.

Now, we have enemies training together. It isn’t for a soccer match. Why? Because we have spineless fools for leadership. And, previous spineless leaders lied to and mocked Putin over Russia joining NATO.

The whole world is now holding its breath hoping we aren’t bombing one another next month. And the Dana’s and Timex’s of the world acts like Putin Is incompetent. You betcha.

Aren’t the Chinese, Russians, and North Korea in bed together. Hey Timex, in case you missed it, Putin isn’t poking the big bear alone.

My goodness wake up. Putin has his countries support. He has the support of half of Ukraine. Putin now has the support of China. Openly. Putin has had the support of North Korea. This isn’t heading in the direction of world peace.

Let’s build more nuclear plants. Let’s pass more policy to further weaken this country’s ability to make energy. In the face of world war 3! That’s a great idea.

We debate stuff like energy production. Because Half our country is ok with policy that cripples business in this country. While showing zero regard as our foe’s grow stronger and stronger.

We had America investing in a lab in Wuhan. Experimenting on a coronavirus. It escaped. Ukraine had its own biological laboratory that American money and interests were investing in. In the name of health. Hell, what could go wrong with that? Besides, wasn’t that the disguise for the Wuhan lab? Health reasons.

Yep, let’s build a bunch of nuclear power plants. Let’s talk about how we got Putin right where we want him. Because he’s scared. He wasn’t too scared to invade Ukraine. But, Dana and Timex thinks he’s scared. You got that right.

Come next election, you fellas keep preaching how Trump tore this country apart. How he made us look like fools. Let’s elect more politicians like Lindsey Graham and Joe Biden instead. That’ll fix it. So they can continue to be bribed to pass further legislation crippling this country. While the most evil people on the planet continue to strengthen and combine forces for the World Cup.

From: Rut-N-Strut
01-Mar-23

Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Sorry but Ukrainecan is not winning this war. We have now spent more than any country and more than a ten year period of the afghan war. What is the end game? We can’t afford this!!!

From: Rut-N-Strut
01-Mar-23

Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo

From: Rut-N-Strut
01-Mar-23

Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo

01-Mar-23
Q: all these archeological discoveries being exposed during droughts.....doesn't that mean historically sea levels rose? Was it man-made global warming 1000 years ago?

01-Mar-23
Mike, it’s a question I’ve often wandered when I listen to folks claim thing are changing.

Obviously, things changed before or we wouldn’t be having this discussion. I think everyone knows that if they’d stop and think for themselves. Versus reciting the narrative they’ve obviously bought into. Lock, stock, and barrel.

Things are a changin’!!!!!!

From: timex
01-Mar-23
WV.......you seam to have a newly found fondness of me. I'm gonna give you 2 suggestions, the first is, take your meds. The 2nd is if you've already taken your meds, than perhaps you shouldn't. Your kinda out there brother.

01-Mar-23
I’m out there? No, I’m tired of hearing your “I’m just a country boy” bit. Why I don’t doubt your experiences, I do question how you derive opinions from them.

You get on this forum and insinuate every one but you is out of touch with reality. Really? Reality says the earth has always changed. It’s a known. What you seem to miss is everyone agrees with that.

I don’t take meds. So, I haven’t missed any. But, if we are going to discuss reality, let’s discuss it.

The reality is even country boys are being led to discuss something like climate change in the face of what might be the end of the world as we know it.

It’s a flippin’ narrative. It’s not a new revelation. Or even science. We all know this. Things change.

Concerning Putin, reality say you are wrong. He isn’t afraid of poking us. He’s afraid of unleashing the whole world on him until he gets people in his corner. Guess what? Reality is seeing that play out.

And, if it goes all the way, you likely be able to walk those areas in leather boots again. Because It’s gonna be nuked off the face of the earth.

That’s reality.

01-Mar-23
FWIW, I don’t dislike you. Nor Dana. But, I don’t forget much. And, I don’t believe in random events. Everything has a reason or a consequence.

From: timex
01-Mar-23
Well then .........I think you need some meds.......I can literally envision the veins bulging out & the sweat rolling down your forehead.

Relax....... brother........

From: timex
01-Mar-23
WV..... how can you like or dislike a fictitious name on the internet. You seem to be getting rather emotional about the words of a man you've never looked in the eyes.

01-Mar-23
Timex, I’m not upset. You stated you were unsure why I focused on you. Stating my personal feelings aren’t emotion per se. Just validation it wasn’t personal. As I’ve stated before, I’ll be in Front royal in a month or so. I’ll buy you dinner if you want. Then we can look each other in the eyes. Not being confrontational when I say that either.

Concerning my feelings on why I’ve posted the way I did, I’m Just unsure Who’s going to stop evil when America can’t. NATO is nothing but a title minus American money and mite.

We are throwing the gift of America, to the whole world, down the drain. From within. And narratives like climate change play a big part in the intentional weakening of this country.

It’s a serious problem that’s easy to fix if Americans weren’t so blinded by the narratives meant to hide those intentions.

From: timex
01-Mar-23
SaxtoN......if I'm a fool for speaking about what I've whitnessed with my own eyes in my lifetime in the place I've lived than so be it.

I'll keep my opinion of your opinion to myself.

Have a good evening sir.

01-Mar-23
I had to edit my previous post Timex. To address your question.

From: 12yards
02-Mar-23

12yards's Link
Timex, like you, I too grew up and lived through the 1970s. The 1970s were cold. In fact at that time the narrative was we were heading into another ice age. It was warmer before the 1970s and after. We might be biased by what we've lived through. The 1930s were the hottest years ever in the US. Here's a link showing how temperature data adjustments have gone off the rails.

From: azelkhntr
02-Mar-23

azelkhntr's embedded Photo
Hmmm?
azelkhntr's embedded Photo
Hmmm?

From: azelkhntr
02-Mar-23

azelkhntr's Link
From: bowyer4501-Mar-23 I heard, that Zelinski made a statement he needed our young men and women to come and help out. Boots on the ground.

^^^^ You heard right. I told you all this would happen months ago. Don't be fooled. We are into the Ukraine for over $195 billion. Woke up to about 3 inches of snow this morning. March really came in like a lion in the SOAZ. If you live above 40' N Lat.. you may not have a summer this year.

From: Hackbow
02-Mar-23

Hackbow's embedded Photo
Hackbow's embedded Photo
Hackbow's embedded Photo
Hackbow's embedded Photo
This thread is mildly entertaining. Thank you to most for your participation.

Remember all those folks who claim Biden had zero, zip, nada to do with fuel price increases? Id like to specifically thank BEGger for the informative graph showing the last 40 yrs of U.S. Field Production of Crude Oil. I'm sure there is no causation by the amazing coincidence of Biden's election, the policies and rhetoric he immediately thrust upon us, and the single most precipitous decrease in production in those 40yrs (according to BEGger's graph).

Coincidences are funny.

From: Beendare
04-Mar-23
Many may not be familiar with Ca politics…the liberal Democrats have ruled for decades…and the Dems are led around by the nose from the Quasi environmental groups.

These environmentalists have effectively shut down the renewable resource logging industry and initiated hundreds of lawsuits not to cut anything. This overgrown forest condition is what creates these massive fires.

The unintended consequences from these dumb ass environmentalists has been studied; ( from the U of Chicago)

UChicago study finds single year of wildfire emissions is close to double emissions reductions achieved over 16 years

As wildfires raged in California again this summer, the damages are adding up. In 2020 alone, wildfires killed 30 people and caused more than $19 billion in economic losses. On top of the immediate damages, the wildfires lead to pollution that is set to shave nearly a year off the life expectancy of residents in California’s most polluted counties if pollution levels persist. What is often ignored is that, fueled by climate change’s higher temperatures and drier conditions, the wildfires also contribute to climate change. A new analysis finds the wildfires in 2020 alone make up 30 percent of the state’s greenhouse gas emissions.

From: Beendare
04-Mar-23
So essentially; Dem policy has reversed 16 years of the US emission controls in one fell swoop-

Bravo you dumb asses….

From: 12yards
05-Mar-23

12yards's Link
Here's the un-cherry picked fire data.

From: Jaquomo
05-Mar-23
The "Union of Concerned Grant Funded Scientists" who would have to get real jobs if the gravy train dried up...

From: Beendare
05-Mar-23

Beendare's Link
The Republicans are investigating the “ Science” during the Pandemic; Fauchi got scientists that were getting funded from his agency to say, “ Nothing to see here” …I’ll put the link here so you Democrats that watch CNN, Reuters, MSNBC, etc that parroted that report can get the facts.

Headline; Fauci 'Prompted' Scientists To Fabricate 'Proximal Origins' Paper Ruling Out Lab-Leak: House GOP Dr. Anthony Fauci - who offshored banned gain-of-function research to make bat coronaviruses more transmissible to humans - has been accused by Congressional investigators of having 'prompted' the fabrication of a paper by a cadre of scientists aimed at disproving the Covid-19 lab-leak theory.

On February 1, 2020, Fauci and his boss, NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins, and at least eleven other scientists participated in a conference call during which several of them warned that COVID-19 may have leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China - may have been intentionally genetically manipulated.

Three days after the call, four participants from the call (Scripps Research virologist Kristian Andersen, University of Sydney virologist Edward Holmes, Tulane School of Medicine virologist Robert Garry, University of Edinburgh virologist Andrew Rambaut and Columbia University virologist Ian Lipkin) seemingly discarded their concerns over a lab-leak, and drafted "The Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2," which they sent to Fauci and Collins.

Also heavily involved (yet not credited) was Dr. Jeremy Farrar, the current Chief Scientist at the World Health Organization.

As a related aside - the Washington Examiner revealed last week that two authors of "Proximal Origin" who initially expressed concerns over a lab-leak and then changed their tune (Anderson and Garry), received millions in NIH grants under Fauci.

Now, according to the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, Fauci 'prompted' the creation of the paper; Paper at link

All so Biden could spend $8 trillion during the pandemic…oh but the Dems claim that didn’t have anything to do with inflation….

From: Beendare
06-Mar-23

Beendare's Link
Wow 12 yards…the data from that site you linked - RealClimateScience.com is incredibly well researched and documented.

The link is to the page where the US scientists fudged the climate data…..just made it up to suit their theory of Global warming….wow, just wow

From: 70lbDraw
06-Mar-23
“The link is to the page where the US scientists fudged the climate data…..just made it up to suit their theory of Global warming….wow, just wow”

This thread is getting out of control! Where are the bowlibs to tell us the real truth and set us straight?!

From: bigeasygator
06-Mar-23

bigeasygator's embedded Photo
bigeasygator's embedded Photo

bigeasygator's Link
Remember all those folks who claim Biden had zero, zip, nada to do with fuel price increases? Id like to specifically thank BEGger for the informative graph showing the last 40 yrs of U.S. Field Production of Crude Oil. I'm sure there is no causation by the amazing coincidence of Biden's election, the policies and rhetoric he immediately thrust upon us, and the single most precipitous decrease in production in those 40yrs (according to BEGger's graph).

Some crack detective work there, Hackbow. Unfortunately, you're pointing at a dip that occurred in March through August of 2020. We had this little thing called COVID happen then, maybe you heard of it. This dip that you are pointing to started nearly six months before Biden was even elected.

For a more accurate representation of when Biden entered office, see the graphic above. I've linked to the field level data if you want to confirm for yourself. Again, Biden has next to nothing to do with the steady rise of oil production since the date he entered office (just like he has next to nothing to do with prices at the pump).

From: DanaC
06-Mar-23
" Again, Biden has next to nothing to do with the steady rise of oil production since the date he entered office (just like he has next to nothing to do with prices at the pump)."

But Jason, what accounts for it then? Could it be 'supply and demand'? Does capitalism actually work? Hmmm.

06-Mar-23
Here we go again.

Government policy affects optimism and investment. As well as supply. Which affects fuel pricing. To say otherwise is lying.

From: Beendare
06-Mar-23

Beendare's Link
BEG must have missed the memo from the experts to Biden that developing some of the Alaskan resources would help with our strategic energy security.

He over rode them, can’t that get in the way of their climate agenda…the Biden admin stonewalled and jacked the price so high for the lease they didn’t get competitive bids.

Show me a fed agency the Democrats haven’t wrecked..and introduced politics? You can’t.

Did you see the latest Biden ( or Soros or Obama, whomever is actually pulling Bidens strings) nominee for the FAA?

He could not answer one question Senator Ted Budd asked about aviation systems. He was 0 for 7. He was clueless as to issues relevant to his job description.

The Democrats criteria is not experience ( to help keep us safe) instead they install easily manipulated minorities or LGBT’s….look at Bidens record.

youtube link above….

Dems complain about the Reps….but look at the truth and facts they are exposing right now…. .

From: Bigdog 21
06-Mar-23

From: bigeasygator
06-Mar-23
the Biden admin stonewalled and jacked the price so high for the lease they didn’t get competitive bids.

The administration doesn't set prices for leases. They are awarded by auction.

From: KsRancher
07-Mar-23
GUYS! This climate change thing is serious. I was watching the 6:00 news last night and they were talking about all of the turbulence that airplanes were experiencing. Yep, you guessed it. They said it was "due to climate change"

07-Mar-23
I thought Biden increased the lease royalty rate to 18+%.

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
I thought Biden increased the lease royalty rate to 18+%.

He did, but that has nothing to do with the cost to acquire a lease. The reason the Cook inlet auction didn't attract much activity is because it's a played out basin viewed as not very attractive for most O&G producers.

From: Rocky D
07-Mar-23
Doesn’t the BLM control the price.

From: Hackbow
07-Mar-23
It's funny and at the same time sad to watch the uber-educated, pseudo-sciency guys defend libtard policies, deny actual biology, promote revisionist history and willfully be used as tools by their overlords in the large govcorps under which they draw their paychecks.

One thing that can no longer be denied is that the fabricated right wing conspiracies of the last few years are no longer considered conspiracies. Where are Pfizer's Bowsite ground troops now? Where are Fauci's backer's. How about those that scoffed at natural immunity? What has happened to all of the climate crusaders predicting certain death? Greta's disciples? Gore's carbon credit champions?

In due time, every single idiotic libtard proposal is debunked. The unholy, polygamist marriage between the fedgov, higher education, MSM, and large corps is producing a single-minded hoard of zombie evangelists. The 'structure' created has lead to the circular argument that something is true because of the evidentiary peer-reviewed opinions of their zombie evangelist friends. DNA is not proof and no longer science. Actual weather events are no longer proof, only feelings about them are. Wasted, inefficient dollars are no longer proof, only an indicator that something hasn't been tried enough. Being caught lying about something isn't proof, the socially acceptable intent of the lie what's important.

Of course, Biden isn't DIRECTLY responsible for increased fuel prices and reduced production. But his, and other libtard (including those from RINOs) policies allowing oil producers to make record profits from less production while financially supporting the politicians who created regulations that result in this scenario are responsible. The cost of this kabuki theater is forcing academia and large corps to promote an anti-science, sexually deviant, anti-small, independent business, anti God of the Bible cultural agenda.

But you large corp employees keep repeating your scripted mantras. Your reward here on earth is obviously more important than your souls.

From: Rut-N-Strut
07-Mar-23
Exactly Rocky! BLM and Forestry dept determine price of leases which last time I checked is part of the govt. Libs are genius when it comes to passing blame. Don’t you know in all the bad that has happened in this country in the last 200 years the republicans are to blame. Duh

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
But his, and other libtard (including those from RINOs) policies allowing oil producers to make record profits from less production while financially supporting the politicians who created regulations that result in this scenario are responsible

Another alleged conservative hating on the free market. Hackbow, what's an "acceptable" level of profits for all these oil companies?

What regulations have changed in the last two years that moved the industry from record losses to record profits?

From: Hackbow
07-Mar-23
LOL that you say you believe a free market actually exists. In the past I have defended corporate profits. But see what happens to those profits if your C Suite puppets don't bow down to the cultural and social engineering of the libtard agenda. They are allowed to make profits as a result of their compliant corporate promotion of those things I mentioned above.

Surely they've got their eyes on you for advancement. Your zombie evangelist game is strong.

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
They are allowed to make profits as a result of their compliant corporate promotion of those things I mentioned above.

All you've done is rambled like a mad man, talking about zombies and what not. I asked two very straightforward questions. I'll ask them again.

What is an acceptable amount of profit for oil companies to make?

The industry has gone from record losses/bankruptcies to record profits. You said this is a result of a change in regulations (I quote "...the politicians who created regulations that result in this scenario"). What regulations are those?

From: Hackbow
07-Mar-23
Over the years you have defended government overreach in the form of entitlement programs. You were firmly on the side of govt heavy-handedness and big pharma control during the scamdemic. I reject what you believe because truth over time doesn't support your words.

I don't care how much profit a company or industry makes unless that profit is created due to an alliance of govt & industry working together to take away control from the individual.

Drilling policies, permits, taxation, corporate welfare, social engineering, have all been orchestrated to create a system where the individual has nearly no say. There is no one policy or regulatory change that has done this.

But please tell us what would happen if you were to publicly ridicule diversity training at one of your corporate events. Further, tell us what would happen if your employer rejected diversity in its hiring practices - even if the highest ranked candidates were all homogeneous in color and chromosomes. What would happen to your company's profits as a direct result?

Tell us what happened to individual doctors and nurses that publicly rejected the now proven false narrative of effectiveness of paper masks and synthetic vaccines.

I don't care what words you use or what 'your truth' is, simply because you've been wrong so many times previously.

But again, you'll do well climbing your corporate ladder. So you got that going for you.

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
You don't have to go on these incomprehensible rants, Hackbow. You could just say "I can't answer your questions."

From: Hackbow
07-Mar-23
I very clearly answered both your questions, BEGger.

Now please answer mine.

From: Beendare
07-Mar-23
There are many cases where the Biden admin stonewalled Oil and Gas development……thats a fact…

His public comments and policy with an irrational 10-15 year timeline essentially kills any increase in refineries…and negatively hampers new oil projects.

Whats even worse…he has no comprehensive plan to replace it. The Midwest grid operator has a report stating we will not have enough power in the future with the current policy. Bidens solution amounts to billions in Tax credits to folks that buy an EV…no matter that here in Ca, the Socal grid operator said they are tetering on the brink of capacity right now. No wonder we have brownouts.

Biden throwing a few billion at nuclear and grid stuff amounts to spitting in the ocean.

Sure we need to ween ourselves off of oil and develop new improved energy sources…but we need a comprehensive long term viable plan instead of the current knee jerk policy bowing to ignorant environmental weinies.

From: 70lbDraw
07-Mar-23
“One thing that can no longer be denied is that the fabricated right wing conspiracies of the last few years are no longer considered conspiracies.”

Including j6 thanks to Tucker! He showed a video of officer Sicknick (sp?) (one of the five officers that they claim was killed that day) walking through the Capitol shortly after he was killed with a fire extinguisher. But I’m sure DanaC and the others will tell you that Tucker must have doctored the videos before he aired them! Lol! Liberals don’t realize that it’s OK to admit you’re wrong now and then.

Oops I’m off topic! Or am I? The OP topic is about liberal lies as well. They all seem to go hand in hand.

From: Grey Ghost
07-Mar-23
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the US still the largest oil and petroleum products producing country in the world by a significant amount?

Matt

From: Hackbow
07-Mar-23
70lb....they can't admit they are wrong because their ideologies and agendas are always based on lies. The truth never matters to a libtard. Especially those drawing big paychecks that are due, in large part, to parroting those lies.

Matt.....I'm not sure where the US falls on oil production ranking. But that isn't the point. It is the decision making at the highest levels of those corporations, with the blessing/cajoling of the fedgov, that results in market fluctuations affecting price, employment, inflation, etc. It has become a toolbox for power grabs caused by instability rather than helping create stability and an environment in which middle to lower income folks have less trouble improving their lot.

From: Rut-N-Strut
07-Mar-23
We produce around 1% more than Russia and 2% more than Saudi Arabia. Then why are we dependent on foreign oil? Why did Biden have to tap into our reserves for the first time in decades??

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
I very clearly answered both your questions, BEGger.

Let me see if I got this right. So your answer to the profit is "it's unacceptable because oil companies are in cahoots with the government to stick it to the people?" So does Biden hate oil or companies or love them? I can't tell based on your line of thinking.

And regarding regulations, you first said there were changes in regulations that led to this scenario of record oil company profits, but then highlighted the fact that not one regulation has changed since oil companies were actually losing billions of dollars, going bankrupt, and laying 10s of thousands of workers off. So which one is it?

It is the decision making at the highest levels of those corporations, with the blessing/cajoling of the fedgov, that results in market fluctuations affecting price, employment, inflation, etc. It has become a toolbox for power grabs caused by instability rather than helping create stability and an environment in which middle to lower income folks have less trouble improving their lot. It has become a toolbox for power grabs caused by instability rather than helping create stability and an environment in which middle to lower income folks have less trouble improving their lot.

You clearly have no clue how any of this works, Hackbow. Decisions around investment and supply lag price movements - which are always driven by broader market forces largely out of control by oil companies - not the other way. Just another example of your distorted world view leading you to a wrong conclusion, once again.

And regarding your questions:

But please tell us what would happen if you were to publicly ridicule diversity training at one of your corporate events.

Probably the same thing that would happen to any employee that publicly ridiculed their company, regardless over what. There would be disciplinary action.

Further, tell us what would happen if your employer rejected diversity in its hiring practices - even if the highest ranked candidates were all homogeneous in color and chromosomes.

This hypothetical is incredibly flawed. Undoubtedly, the highest ranked candidates will not all be homogeneous - be it related to visible characteristics or those that lie below the surface. To that end, if ultimately your workforce looked and acted exactly the same, you run all kinds of risks to optimal performanced - from a lack of diversity of thought to failing to attract the best candidates because they may feel alienated by a homogenous workforce.

What would happen to your company's profits as a direct result?

Per the answer above, there is a very real chance that they will suffer when compared to a diverse workforce.

From: Grey Ghost
07-Mar-23

Grey Ghost's embedded Photo
Grey Ghost's embedded Photo
2021 figures are the most recent I could find.

We aren't dependent on foreign oil, that's the point. We choose to import about 40% of our oil because it's cheaper than domestically produced oil, even with shipping costs.

Our Strategic Petroleum Reserve has been tapped into several times in the last 2 decades.

Facts, not Fox.

Matt

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
Then why are we dependent on foreign oil? Why did Biden have to tap into our reserves for the first time in decades??

Depends on what your definition of "dependent" is, but generally we import oil to meet demand and to take advantage of market pricing. We are net importers of crude, but net exporters of refined petroleum products. On balance the net trade is about zero these days.

The Strategic Reserve was tapped in an attempt to add more supply to the market and lower prices.

From: Beendare
07-Mar-23
So the clever Can do Folks in the US out maneuvered the Biden admin on oil production, whats your point? How did he improve things?

Thankfully we have Oil corps that did this…other wise our energy costs would be a heck of a lot higher…making that inflation even worse.

And theres the Fox comment. You probably don’t know if you don’t read Fox…that many of the supposed fake news reported by the other news agencies are in fact true. News flash..the Hunter laptop is Real, There was no Trump Russia collusion- all made up by the Dems, Its 99.9% that Covid came from the Wuhan lab…and there is documentation Fauchi was covering his ass. Oh yeah, and Bidens boy Sam Britton was caught red handed stealing and fondling other peoples clothes.

Scarily, that only the tip of the iceberg…many more debacles that one wouldn’t know when their news is edited…..

Interesting that oil production facts get produced….but when fact after fact about stupidity behind the Bidens many Policies comes out….the liberal Dems ignore it.

Another member pinged me and he is right on- until the brainwashed Dems realize their confirmation bias…we are doomed.

From: Rut-N-Strut
07-Mar-23

Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Facts not CNN

From: Hackbow
07-Mar-23
"Let me see if I got this right. So your answer to the profit is "it's unacceptable because oil companies are in cahoots with the government to stick it to the people?" So does Biden hate oil or companies or love them? I can't tell based on your line of thinking."

Are you purposely being obtuse, or do you truly lack basic reading comprehension skills? I stated that I don't care what a corporation's profits are, as long as they are not unduly influenced/enhanced/damaged by govt at any level.

I assume it is also beyond your comprehension to acknowledge that those in political power working in concert with those in corporate power always win. Sure, a CEO may lose his job at Company A but he almost always does so with a golden parachute so large he can take his support staff with him to Company B and then double dip. In essence, he's just taken one for the team and is compensated handsomely for the public embarrassment and not being able to attend the big social events for a little while.

You're so right. I have no clue how any of it works. Especially the part where you admit above that saying the wrong things or not hiring the approved way will result in dire consequences...not because of the consequences of the free market, but due to the consequences of not supporting an ideology. You're so marinated in libtard ideology that you're incapable of separating actual facts from the belief system. My exact words were; "...if you were to publicly ridicule diversity training at one of your corporate events?" In your attempt to show me how wrong I was, your words were this; "Probably the same thing that would happen to any employee that publicly ridiculed their company..."

I wrote about ridiculing diversity training, you read and comprehended ridiculing the company - two completely different concepts. But the company and the idea are inextricably linked in your worldview. Freedom of thought is verboten!

Just for giggles, what are your positions on the Kung Flu scamdemic these days? Any changes from the party line positions you held during the height of biggovcorp fear mongering?

From: azelkhntr
07-Mar-23
The Sierras are going to get another 4-5ft. of fresh snow Wed/Thu. Lots more also coming across the upper plains States.

From: Grey Ghost
07-Mar-23
Rut, my numbers are from US Energy Information Administration. Where did you get your numbers from?

Matt

From: Whocares
07-Mar-23

From: Whocares
07-Mar-23
I ordered a new bow. But I guess nobody cares..

From: Rut-N-Strut
07-Mar-23

Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Same

07-Mar-23
The all wonderful knowing, super intelligent BEG. Who earlier said that Biden has done nothing to increase fuel prices. Then, later expresses that pricing is affected by market conditions.

“ You clearly have no clue how any of this works, Hackbow. Decisions around investment and supply lag price movements - which are always driven by broader market forces largely out of control by oil companies - not the other way. Just another example of your distorted world view leading you to a wrong conclusion, once again.”

Those market forces are also largely driven by government policy. Are they not? No need to answer. Even 5th graders know that.

Anyway, one thing you definitely are intent on accomplishing causing disrupt to support your middle of the road ideology. With your circling of every topic.

As always anytime someone discusses cause and affect and how it is playing out in the structuring of our society, you play the same card and talk as if it’s incoherent rambling. You aren’t that dumb. Only too ignorant to realize no one else is that dumb either.

Why don’t you stop. It’s ok to offer an opinion. But, you try and push your opinion as fact and talk in circles trying to align them as the real facts. Contradicting yourself while doing so. No one here buys your inflated egotistical crap. It’s false and it’s an apparent lie.

It kills me that liberals preach grey but, try and define things as black and white when it’s convenient for them. It truly showcases the weakness of a faithless conviction in everything except their own ego.

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
Are you purposely being obtuse, or do you truly lack basic reading comprehension skills? I stated that I don't care what a corporation's profits are, as long as they are not unduly influenced/enhanced/damaged by govt at any level.

But his, and other libtard (including those from RINOs) policies allowing oil producers to make record profits from less production while financially supporting the politicians who created regulations that result in this scenario are responsible

Yup, sounds like you're completely ok with oil company profits LOL

Those market forces are also largely driven by government policy. Are they not?

Believe it or not, WVM, there are forces much greater than government policy that influence supply and demand.

You're so right. I have no clue how any of it works. Especially the part where you admit above that saying the wrong things or not hiring the approved way will result in dire consequences...not because of the consequences of the free market, but due to the consequences of not supporting an ideology.

Yes, generally saying the wrong things (depending on the rule set) or blatantly ignoring a company policy (be it hiring or otherwise) generally carries consequences. Maybe that's why people like you seem to struggle in this world. This is pretty basic stuff, Hackbow. And furthermore, this is quite literally an outcome of the free market - companies and their management are free to decide what that is for them.

You're so marinated in libtard ideology that you're incapable of separating actual facts from the belief system. My exact words were; "...if you were to publicly ridicule diversity training at one of your corporate events?" In your attempt to show me how wrong I was, your words were this; "Probably the same thing that would happen to any employee that publicly ridiculed their company..."

My point was if you want to "ridicule" (ie, to make fun of, taunt, mock, deride, etc) anything company related - be it decisions of management, diversity training, pay and benefits, you name it - there will likely be consequences. Again, this is not shocking. Maybe you don't know the meaning of the word ridicule??

Those market forces are also largely driven by government policy. Are they not? No need to answer. Even 5th graders know that.

What policy caused the oil price crash in 2015? What policy has led to continued increased production under Biden and prices dropping roughly 40% over the last 7 months?

From: Hackbow
07-Mar-23
You nailed it Justin. He spent much time pontificating about the wisdom and wonderful intentions of the biggovcorp Covid Crusaders. I must have missed his retraction post.

Who am I kidding? He'll probably double down at some point and try to convince himself he was right anyway while BEGsplaining how those of us who were right, are really wrong.

07-Mar-23
You dug the hole. You talked in circles trying to justify your stance. So, I’m not going to discuss it any farther than this post.

You are simply lying when you say government policy is a small influencer of oil markets. Flat out lying. Government policy is the biggest influencer of fossil fuel markets. You know that. If it weren’t so, we wouldn’t have administrations trying to convert to alternate power sources. And, the industry wouldn’t live by regulations. Period. End of story. No need for 18 paragraphs trying to deflect from it.

Own it. Don’t deflect from the real issues. It’s easy. Say it out loud.

“It’s ok if everyone doesn’t think I’m the authority.”

Whoosia.

From: Rocky D
07-Mar-23
“In 2021, the United States consumed 18.7 million barrels of oil daily.”

GG, so if use as much as you produce and export 40% what’s the delta?

From: bigeasygator
07-Mar-23
Remind me how long you’ve worked in the oil and gas industry, Justin?

Speaking of deflection, I see you refused to answer my questions. Not surprising.

07-Mar-23
I don’t work in the oil field Jason. I’m just not an egotistical fool. Or, a fool of any sort.

Your question had no bearing on the point. None. It was simple deflection on your part. So you can control the narrative. And, deflect from the obvious topic at hand. In order to justify your numbing existence in these threads.

It’s simple. Government policy affects oil markets more than any one variable. Which was Hackbow’s point. It utterly defines the playing field. The rules. It directs optimism and investment. In simplest terms It literally creates the market. Yet, we’ve had 6 years of you declaring otherwise.

I may not work in the oil field but, my guess is if your employer read some of the dumb stuff you’ve posted in defense of your personal politics, you likely wouldn’t either. I bet your companies first quarter meeting in 2025 won’t be about the Super Bowl champs. It’s going to be about the policies of the elected administration in THIS country.

Go ahead, come up with another Einstein response. We don’t want anyone on bowsite to get confused about you having all the answers.

From: Grey Ghost
08-Mar-23
They can’t answer the question, BEG.

Matt.

08-Mar-23
The answer to the question is irrelevant. However, It’s nice to hear from the other self proclaimed genius among us as well.

We are so lucky to have the likes of you two.

From: bigeasygator
08-Mar-23
They can’t answer the question, BEG.

Of course they can't, or they won't, because it doesn't fit their narrative of "it's all the fault of the government."

Since you don't want to answer those questions, maybe you'll answer these. If we could push a button tomorrow and make the government disappear, tell me what effect that would have on the oil industry? What would happen to prices? What would happen to production? What would happen to investment?

From: Grey Ghost
08-Mar-23
WV made this claim:

"Those market forces are also largely driven by government policy."

Then, BEG asked this question:

"What policy caused the oil price crash in 2015? What policy has led to continued increased production under Biden and prices dropping roughly 40% over the last 7 months?"

WV's response:

"The answer to the question is irrelevant.

Too funny.

From: Rocky D
08-Mar-23
"What policy caused the oil price crash in 2015? What policy has led to continued increased production under Biden and prices dropping roughly 40% over the last 7 months?"

GG, you know that it is multiple policy issues!

I don’t know how dumb people must think that you are if they expect you to believe that policy had zero effect!

From: bigeasygator
08-Mar-23
I don’t know how dumb people must think that you are if they expect you to believe that policy had zero effect!

I've never said "zero effect." I've said you all give the government FAR too much credit for what happens. But maybe you can answer the questions, Rocky? Tell me which policies have been moving the oil market over the last 7 months? You said it's multiple policy issues - point to one change in regulation or policy that caused these moves. What about in 2015?

Furthermore, as a thought exercise, tell me what would happen to oil prices, oil production, and CAPEX investment in the oil sector if we made the government disappear.

From: Beendare
08-Mar-23
The oil industry worked around the Biden admin policy….thank god…if they would have taken their ball and went home as the many speeches by the liberal Dems; Biden, Kerry etc…we would be in a heap of trouble.

Funny that Dems focus on Oil production…but then ignore the grid operators telling us there won’t be enough energy in the future if we follow the Dems Climate policy.

Dems also ignore the fact that much of these Climate predictions are hack science and politically motivated.

Now we have that Dem excuse maker Yellen saying we will loose money because of climate change…Sheesh, .selling us down a river.

From: Rut-N-Strut
08-Mar-23

Rut-N-Strut's Link
Here are 25 reasons

From: DanaC
08-Mar-23
Might want to check the dates on that link. Payed $3.079 for gas this morning.

From: bigeasygator
08-Mar-23
The oil industry worked around the Biden admin policy….thank god

Well which is it? Did his policy have a massive effect or did the industry find a workaround?

I'll help. The answer is neither. There was nothing significant put in place by this administration that needed some work around by the industry. The most impactful action taken by the administration was the suspension of federal leasing, which was overturned by the Inflation Reduction Act.

Furthermore, production from a new lease would be years to decades from hitting the market, so no meaningful impact on the market or meaningful impact on company's strategy to deal with this Executive Order (which has now been undone).

Biden's position on energy sucks. It's the height of comedy that on one hand he argues for more alternative energy sources and on the other begs the industry for more production. Regardless, don't confuse words with actions.

From: 70lbDraw
08-Mar-23
“Might want to check the dates on that link. Payed $3.079 for gas this morning.”

So why is it that MA and other states are down to $3.00 and we still pay almost a dollar a gallon more in Idaho? Not to mention diesel that is still around $4.50. And don’t tell me that it has to do with our geographical location. Other than someone lining their pockets, there’s no reasonable explanation for the huge price differences from state to state.

From: Deep Cut
08-Mar-23
If you follow every step of finding the oil to drill, drilling for the oil, extracting the oil, transporting the oil, refining the oil, transporting the refined products (gasoline and diesel), transporting the products made from refined products (ie:plastics), transporting to market, distribution of the market products etc., the price is amazingly low. Most people in this country cannot begin to explain or comprehend what it takes to produce the electricity that comes magically from that socket in the wall, or how all that food and other essentials show up at the super walmart everyday.

From: Beendare
08-Mar-23

Beendare's Link
I just don’t get how you can still worship Biden there BEG after everything that has come out….but you continue to makes excuses for him…time after time.

Link is to comments that totally contradict you BEG……by the CEO of Chevron that knows a little bit about oil don’t you think? Grin

from link;

“Chevron CEO says there may never be another oil refinery built in the US Mike Wirth points to the federal government's policies on energy”

At every level of the system, the policy of our government is to reduce demand, and so it’s very hard in a business where investments have a payout period of a decade or more," Wirth said. "And the stated policy of the government for a long time has been to reduce demand for your products."

From: Beendare
08-Mar-23

Beendare's Link
20+ articles here at the American Petroleum Institute that disagree with you BEG….

Fact after fact……outlining the many ways the Biden admin hampered our energy security in the US….

Heres a few articles outlining the stonewalling, and illustrating the distain the Democrats have for energy development from pipelines to oil facilities

Business Groups Urge Biden Administration to Support Domestic Energy Production, Act on Stalled Offshore Leasing Program

API Statement on Biden Administration’s Energy and Climate Executive Orders

Sorry, America: OPEC+ Oil Rebuff Keeps Focus on Flawed White House Energy Policies

White House Blame Game Redux on Gasoline Prices

08-Mar-23
Beendare, what policies caused the oil crash in 2015? How long have you worked in the oil field? How dare you question the smartest man on Bowsite. LOL

Wait, Grey the great Ghost will be along shortly and pat BEG on the behind with an ‘atta boy so he can respond.

From: Rocky D
08-Mar-23
"What policy caused the oil price crash in 2015? What policy has led to continued increased production under Biden and prices dropping roughly 40% over the last 7 months?"

GG, you know that it is multiple policy issues!

I don’t know how dumb people must think that you are if they expect you to believe that policy had zero effect!

From: DanaC
08-Mar-23
" So why is it that MA and other states are down to $3.00 and we still pay almost a dollar a gallon more in Idaho? "

No idea what your state taxes are on fuel. I can tell you that Connecticut gas prices have long been higher than MA because of higher state tax. (And I know MA folks who drive to NH to buy cigarettes...)

From: bigeasygator
09-Mar-23
I just don’t get how you can still worship Biden there BEG after everything that has come out….but you continue to makes excuses for him…time after time.

Worship Biden? I've been clear that he's terrible and his stated positions on energy on terrible. Again, I also know how to separate words from actions. He can say all he wants. Just like Greta Thurnberg or Al Gore can. Without meaningful regulation or legislation behind those words, they are largely hollow.

At every level of the system, the policy of our government is to reduce demand, and so it’s very hard in a business where investments have a payout period of a decade or more," Wirth said. "And the stated policy of the government for a long time has been to reduce demand for your products."

And then he pointed to legislation from decades before Biden was in office.

Wirth went on to list examples such as the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards for fuel efficiency in vehicles that Congress first enacted in the 70s, the Renewable Fuel Standard created in 2005 requiring a certain amount of biofuels like Ethanol to replace petroleum-based fuels, and electric vehicle tax subsidies.

Did this legislation have an effect on refining margins and markets? Sure, but again, it is so minor when viewed in context of the other factors that effect margins. Use the Renewable Fuel Standard as an example. Please tell me what oil prices and oil production did in the three year period following its passage?

I encourage you to dig around on Chevron's website, look at their stated strategies, and report back to what they think the future for oil and gas holds.

Business Groups Urge Biden Administration to Support Domestic Energy Production, Act on Stalled Offshore Leasing Program

API Statement on Biden Administration’s Energy and Climate Executive Orders

How much do you know about leasing, Beendare? What is the average time from lease acquisition to production? How many outstanding OCS leases have yet to be explored and appraised? How many are yet to have production?

There is a healthy backlog of leases owned across the industry that oil companies have yet to get to. There are only so many people and rigs to mature these opportunities. The time from exploration (in the success case) to production is often measured in decades. So the leasing ban had essentially no impact on the industry's ability to operate.

Now had it stayed in effect for, say, multiple years or decades, then yes, it would be a problem. But you'll rest assured knowing that the Inflation Reduction Act mandated that auctions go forward on a prescribed schedule. So it's back to business as usual.

Was it a dumb EO by the president? Yup. Did it have a meaningful impact on the industry, prices, production, etc? Nope.

From: Beendare
09-Mar-23
Look, the last thing I want to do is turn this into an argument with a fellow bowhunter..so this is my last post.

The Democrats climate policy is endemic of all of that parties policy decisions. They created a bad guy; Climate Change…and they are the Knight on a white horse.

This latest from the Dems sums up the ridiculousness of their ideology;

The White House just gave the “Women of Courage “ award…to a biological male.

From: 70lbDraw
09-Mar-23
Everyone get your affairs in order and update your last will and testament. Another atmospheric river is heading our way after the storm of a lifetime has hit California.

Eat your heart out Greta Thunburg, the world is going to end sooner than even YOU thought!! Lol!

From: Jaquomo
09-Mar-23

Jaquomo's embedded Photo
Jaquomo's embedded Photo
Regular unleaded is $2.63 a gallon here in Texas. When I left Colorado last week, the station down the road had it for $4.19.

From: 12yards
09-Mar-23
3.29 here in central MN.

From: Rut-N-Strut
09-Mar-23

Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo
Rut-N-Strut's embedded Photo

From: Grey Ghost
09-Mar-23
I'm happy fuel for my 5000 mile roundtrip to Florida in May will be cheaper than 7 months ago. Can someone tell me who to credit and thank?

Matt

From: Rut-N-Strut
09-Mar-23
Why would any lefty want to go to Florida??

From: Grey Ghost
09-Mar-23
Rut, I'm not sure. What lefty are you talking about? We've been spending the entire month of May in Florida for almost a decade. None of that time has been spent with "lefties". I prefer to hang out with hard-core fisherman who share my support for the Florida governor and his policies.

From: RK
09-Mar-23
So GG have they got it cleaned up enough to have a place for you guys to stay or is it a 5th wheel for this year? I know they have made some remarkable progress on the island

From: Grey Ghost
09-Mar-23
RK, it's a month rental house in the Keys this year. Sanibel is a long ways from being the paradise it used to be, sadly.

Matt

From: RK
09-Mar-23
Fishing is still great in the keys

From: Grey Ghost
09-Mar-23
Arguably better, if you're a fly fisherman, RK.

We'll miss our dear friends in Sanibel, though. There's a slim chance they'll join us for a week, or so, in the Keys. Fingers crossed.

Matt

From: spike78
10-Mar-23
All I have to say is read about 15 minute city’s which is happening as we speak.

From: timex
10-Mar-23
I go hunting and fishing to escape the complexity's associated with life. And hopefully bring some food home If someone chooses to discuss politics while hunting & fishing with me it will be the last time they hunt with me or fish on my boat. Been to Oregon inlet NC twice so far this winter. No giant bluefins for us so far this winter. But I love it dearly. 30 gallons fuel in the truck, $50.00 Toles on the Chesapeake bay bridge, 70 gallons gas in the boat. That's an expensive day of fishing.

10-Mar-23
I’m headed down in June. Hopefully going to get into some yellow fin and black eyes tunas on some Gulf Stream charters. Wahoo too. I’m going to spend 5 days in the pamlico sound after trout and puppy drum on kayaks. Might get a day of surf fishing in.

I love it too.

From: 70lbDraw
10-Mar-23
“All I have to say is read about 15 minute city’s which is happening as we speak.”

I’ve heard the term before but I’m not sure I know what it means. What is a 15 minute city?

From: azelkhntr
10-Mar-23
The 15 min cities are a concept from the Stalin era. A city or town that you can easily walk across in 15 mins, 1sg. mi. which will include everything you need. In essence a ghetto that you will be restricted to and must then ask permission to travel outside of. An Orwellian marxists dream.

From: Jaquomo
10-Mar-23
My wife is making me fish every evening here on the Gulf. Catching every species down here, but havent landed any big ones yet, though we've hooked a couple. Going out with a really good fly guide Sunday for some sight fishing for reds. Much different than sight fishing down a hole in the cold back home!

From: spike78
10-Mar-23
70 go read up on it. The pilot programs will be starting soon. Basically they will limit travel via car and if you travel where they don’t want you to you will be fined. They basically want it so you only travel so far to get get what you need and go back home to reduce the effects of climate change. Everything you need will be conveniently located within 15 minute walk away. Now think about the lines in any store you go to? This makes entire sense with all the gun banning going on in city’s. No way to resist.

From: 70lbDraw
10-Mar-23
It sounds like more democrat/liberal stupidity to me, not mention logistically impossible in the near future. Will we have wear armbands that identify which prison city we belong to?

From: RK
10-Mar-23
Lou that is awesome. I hope he can put you on some redfish. Nothing better than throwing to them. Look forward to seeing you guys next week. Also. Welcome to spring break

Spike78

You realize that what you have your underwear in a knot about is nothing new

Any union town with factories and manufacturing has been that way forever. Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Cleveland etc etc etc. people lived and shopped and ate in the area they lived in

Nothing better than local mom and pop restaurants and local meat markets etc

The more mobile the society was the less of that was present

From: 12yards
10-Mar-23
Holy moly Timex! Do you really go through that much fuel on a fishing trip? Or is that how much the boat tank holds? If I burned 70 gallons of fuel per trip I'd be bankrupt! What do you usually fish for?

From: spike78
11-Mar-23
RK the difference is one was voluntary this is not. There will be cameras put up throughout the city and fines will be imposed for going where you are not allowed. After that it will be you are not allowed to drive due to climate change. When they go through with it when the people say no then that is a problem. Look up Oxford England.

From: azelkhntr
11-Mar-23

azelkhntr's Link
Drive? You think you'll be allowed to own a car? They are already selling this concept in the EU.

From: Jaquomo
11-Mar-23

From: RK
11-Mar-23
Spike78

My suggestion to you is to get on an airplane and do some traveling. See for yourself

I have a good friend who daughter just graduated from Oxford, you know that university in Oxford England. Her slant from being there is a little different I also have a friend who lives in Oxford. X air force pilot. Further right wing than you can imagine without conspiracy non sense

His slant is a little different also. But he lives there so he may be brain washed

Bottom line is with all the talk of 15 min cities in several English towns nothing has been implemented other than some traffic pattern changes.

We have so much more to worry. About than that, but hey knock yourself out

Have a great weekend. Get some sun!

From: Jaquomo
11-Mar-23
They're having a sale on tin foil hats at the Ace Hardware this weekend!

From: spike78
12-Mar-23
Yes you are correct Jaq there is absolutely nothing crazy going on in the world today. How nuts of people to think there is a broader scheme happening. Either some of you are going to feel like naive idiots in the future or I am. We will see.

From: Beendare
12-Mar-23
I think the point of all of this is not to fall for the political rhetoric and trickery- on either side of the isle. I use the current Democrat regime as an example simply because they are the current regime.

It’s pretty obvious the Biden administration is using the Nazi tactics that worked in the 1930s. They create an Imperative; CLIMATE CHANGE…. and they create a bad guy just like the Nazis did to the Jews, but in this case, it’s “The Rich”…..and Big Bad Corporations… and the Democrats will be the white nights to save us.

What most democrat voters don’t understand is that the rich pay the Lions share of the income tax the stat varies, but it’s something like the top 10% pay over 70% of the total tax. Most rich, it was not handed to them. They have worked very hard to get it within the system. The Democrats appeal to the innate jealousy of someone that has less.

Then the Democrat, voter base does not realize that the politicians are tricking them by taxing corporations. Tax is a passthru expense. It just drives up the cost of goods and services. So what the Democrats are doing is jamming us all and making it look like they are the white night.

Its trickery and it looks like the majority of voters across the United States are not smart enough to figure this out. The current administration is using the magician trick of “Look over here.”….. don’t worry about that man behind the curtain.

From: 70lbDraw
12-Mar-23
“It’s trickery and it looks like the majority of voters across the United States are not smart enough to figure this out.”

You mean the democratic left wing voters aren’t smart enough to figure it out. Myself and most other conservatives I know can see right through it. It’s no different than these J6 cultists, that believe 5 cops died that day. I don’t know if they actually believe it, or they’ve just been so brainwashed they can’t see straight.

From: Rocky D
12-Mar-23
“It’s trickery and it looks like the majority of voters across the United States are not smart enough to figure this out.”

Heard Joe Manchin yammering yammering away about fiscal responsibility and the budget the other day!

Sorta, ironic after he fell victim to a promise that fell through and voted in favor of the massive omnibus bill!

Then, they want us to take them seriously when they speak.

From: azelkhntr
13-Mar-23

azelkhntr's Link
I've been following this guy for a year or 2. He's very good at explaining what the dangers and realities of space weather impacts are upon Earth.

From: spike78
13-Mar-23
I’m wondering how many times the voters will believe the Dems when they say “We will make the rich pay their fair share”. Seems to be a selling point every year lol. I guess they do though right into their pockets.

From: Bigdog 21
13-Mar-23
Climate must be getting better, Biden broke his campaign promos not to drill on fed ground. He approved the willow project. Say good by to thousands of acres and trees.

From: Basil
20-Mar-23

Basil's embedded Photo
Basil's embedded Photo

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