LeafByNiggle
Well-known member
You may not think the question can be “properly” answered, but NASA did answer it, as I cited. I trust their opinion over yours.
NASA did not answer that question, unless you think “something might happen” is an actual prediction. This goes back to my original complaint that people were being mislead into believing that extreme weather events were happening more frequently than ever before. The data categorically refute that so now people are being mislead into believing that scientists are predicting it will happen in the future. That too is untrue.You may not think the question can be “properly” answered, but NASA did answer it, as I cited. I trust their opinion over yours.
This was the first thing written on that page:Go back and read the NASA page I linked. All of it. It is clearly more than something might happen . Don’t make me except for you.
If the objective was in fact a cleaner, safer planet we would do a whole lot of things differently, including making a wholesale transition to nuclear power, but this has never been about saving the planet. It is about the transformation and control of national economies. That there are a lot of individuals committed to “Saving the Earth” and who have bought into the AGW story is not significant. They aren’t driving the effort; they are simply useful to those who are.That said, I believe we should approach this with a more balanced and unpartisan mentality. We are in fact making a whole lot of more trash and we contaminate the planet. I believe if politicians attack this as cleaning the planet, we can have better results. Because we all agree that we are making the planet filthier.
I am pretty certain that by NASA you mean some scientists who happen to work at NASA. That would be like assuming the “Union of Concerned Scientists” represents the definitive and to-be-trusted-as-scientifically-reliable findings of scientists and not merely the one-sided perspective of scientists who have a lucrative vested interest in a highly politicized view of climate change.You may not think the question can be “properly” answered, but NASA did answer it, as I cited. I trust their opinion over yours.
You don’t honestly expect people to believe that NASA is so incompetent as to allow a group of rogue scientists to post in the name of NASA on the official NASA website something that is grossly misrepresentative of the position of NASA as a whole, do you? If you examine the entire NASA website you will see that the page I cited is not an aberration, but is typical of the rest of the site.I am pretty certain that by NASA you mean some scientists who happen to work at NASA.
Then, I guess Curry is cool with this from the NASA page I cited:I didn’t see a thing on the NASA site that contradicted Curry
Droughts in the Southwest and heat waves (periods of abnormally hot weather lasting days to weeks) everywhere are projected to become more intense, and cold waves less intense everywhere.
Summer temperatures are projected to continue rising, and a reduction of soil moisture, which exacerbates heat waves, is projected for much of the western and central U.S. in summer. By the end of this century, what have been once-in-20-year extreme heat days (one-day events) are projected to occur every two or three years over most of the nation.
So, if “NASA didn’t say that” doesn’t work, you are resorting to “If NASA did say that, they are wrong.”. Nice to keep your options open, eh?But you do have to read their material with some objectivity, there is a bias.
NASA is regurgitating the model projections. Curry could honestly make the same statement about what the models are “projecting”.everywhere are projected to become more intense, and cold waves less intense everywhere.
I have no idea what point you are trying to make. I’ll repeat, the precipitation record as referenced by NASA could not be measured prior to satellite measurement.So, if “NASA didn’t say that” doesn’t work, you are resorting to “If NASA did say that, they are wrong.”. Nice to keep your options open, eh?
Are you suggesting that NASA is not justified in what they claim? If that is your position - that NASA is incompetent - just come out and say so.I’ll repeat, the precipitation record as referenced by NASA could not be measured prior to satellite measurement.
Believing that everything put out on the NASA website was written by a scientist and encapsulates the considered opinions of all the actual scientists is akin to believing that everything put out on the USCCB website was written by a bishop and represents the collective wisdom of all bishops in the US.You don’t honestly expect people to believe that NASA is so incompetent as to allow a group of rogue scientists to post in the name of NASA on the official NASA website something that is grossly misrepresentative of the position of NASA as a whole, do you? If you examine the entire NASA website you will see that the page I cited is not an aberration, but is typical of the rest of the site.
Does the NAS say what happened 40 years before that? Or 400? How does the NAS know that what happened 40 years ago was normal and not an aberration?The volume of ice mass that Antarctica loses annually multiplied sixfold from what was recorded 40 years ago, according to a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS) that was released in January.
If you have a question about how these scientists know those things you should ask those scientists, not someone who is reporting on those scientists.Does the NAS say what happened 40 years before that? Or 400? How does the NAS know that what happened 40 years ago was normal and not an aberration?