E
Ender
Guest
Gee, what a surprise. There’s also this classic Anderson Cooper live report on a flooded road…where he stood in a ditch to over-dramatize the amount of flooding.
…while zillions of other meteorologists say Gore’s assertions were made with evidence. But yeah, let’s focus on this one.Al Gore's Hurricane Florence claim debunked by scientists - Washington Times
Meteorologist Ryan Maue says Gore’s assertion made ‘without any evidence’
…the opposite of what 65,845,063 people voted for.What exactly does McCartney think 60 million people voted for?
Then don’t cite the popular vote when you really meant the electoral college.Read up on the Electoral College.
Really? This is all you’ve got to say to counter the allegations? Let me be more specific:So you want to take this silly misrepresentation of the EPA over the real EPA? Funny.
It is the claim that the EPA delivers its rulings based on actual science that is the silly misrepresentation.EPA claims the PM2.5-death hypothesis is supported by existing epidemiology, toxicology and clinical studies. This is false.
Epidemiology. EPA admitted in federal court that its epidemiologic studies on PM2.5, because of their exclusively statistical nature, prove nothing by themselves.
Toxicology. No laboratory animal has ever died from PM2.5 in an experimental setting — even though animals have been exposed to levels of PM2.5 as much as 100+ times greater than human exposures to PM2.5 in outdoor air.
Clinical studies. EPA has tested a variety of air pollutants — including very high exposures to PM2.5 — on over 6,000 human volunteers. Many of these volunteers were elderly or already health-compromised — the very groups EPA claims are most susceptible to dying from PM2.5 exposures. EPA has admitted that there have been no deaths or any dangerous adverse events clearly caused by these PM2.5 exposures. PM2.5 exposures in these experiments have been as high as 21 times greater than allowable by EPA’s own air quality rules.
Well, that one does seem extreme, and I’d have to see where the EPA actually said that to accept it, but the rest of the rebuttal is very specific, especially the part about what the EPA admitted in federal court.Let me be more specific. This is a silly misrepresentation:
The EPA’s position is that:
- ANY inhalation of PM2.5 — even one molecule — can cause death;
Sorry to use an ad hominem argument, but once someone makes a mistake like that I’m outta there as far as seriously considering their other claims.LeafByNiggle:![]()
Well, that one does seem extreme, and I’d have to see where the EPA actually said that to accept it, but the rest of the rebuttal is very specific, especially the part about what the EPA admitted in federal court.Let me be more specific. This is a silly misrepresentation:
The EPA’s position is that:
- ANY inhalation of PM2.5 — even one molecule — can cause death;
Yes, this has been your approach to pretty much everything that contradicts your position: find some way to rationalize dismissing it.Sorry to use an ad hominem argument, but once someone makes a mistake like that I’m outta there as far as seriously considering their other claims.
The report I cited rebutting the EPA’s findings has its own problems, but it does offer evidence that their findings are not as rigorously supported by science as they claim. This is hardly surprising.My understanding is that those deaths are mostly assumed ‘early deaths’ by people with pneumonia, bronchitis, severe allergies, and other lung ailments. Most are the old who might live longer with clean air.
As someone who lives with an asthma sufferer, I object to your implication that people with sensitive respiratory systems have the onus on them to provide for themselves the clean air they require. They can’t stay locked up in their sealed houses all the time. They like to go out and walk in the park, go hunting in the woods, take a bike ride along the riverfront, or attend an open-air baseball game. Your policies would impose a serious and unnecessary quality of life burden on those who otherwise might lived a fairly normal life.@ender, thanks for the link.
My understanding is that those deaths are mostly assumed ‘early deaths’ by people with pneumonia, bronchitis, severe allergies, and other lung ailments. Most are the old who might live longer with clean air.
These people should already have hepa air filters cleaning their room air.
And you so easily dismiss the EPA’s findings because of something you stumbled across in JunkScience.com.LeafByNiggle:![]()
Yes, this has been your approach to pretty much everything that contradicts your position: find some way to rationalize dismissing it.Sorry to use an ad hominem argument, but once someone makes a mistake like that I’m outta there as far as seriously considering their other claims.
Resent it all you want but our standards are set for the general good of the population, not just to meet the needs of the utmost sensitive. I fully expect an IC unit treating people with respiratory diseases to use HEPA filters. Homes that care for the aged should also have additional air filters. Heck we should even add it to their building code regulations.As someone who lives with an asthma sufferer, I object to your implication that people with sensitive respiratory systems have the onus on them to provide for themselves the clean air they require.