OK, listen. The reason I’m actually spending my time here is that you really got on my nerves with post #3.
If you don’t believe in global warming, it’s your problem. Really. I don’t care.
I am, however, deeply offended by your characterization of the study in the OP as
at least double hearsay if not triple or more. I’m a scientist (though not in climate). I’ve read enough papers to know a bad study when I see one. That study is derivative – so what. Many studies are derivative. That doesn’t necessarily mean they’re bad. You don’t like systematic review – fine. I don’t like it either. It’s hard labor with no glamour, and no opportunity for these ‘Eureka!’ moments we scientists love. Reading papers and putting tick marks in the table. Boring. But it has to be done. Many useful things were discovered this way – but sifting through papers for days does not make for a good story of discovery.
14 people did this study. Given the complexity of the climate code, they had to spend weeks just to learn how to use the models (particularly as they had no prior experience). There were hours spent hunting for long obsolete and forgotten software libraries the code depends on. There was swearing at cryptic error messages which one gets when trying to run old code through a modern compiler. Then, someone had to wrote several thousand lines of code just to translate the data formats used by different models, so the same (name removed by moderator)uts could be fed to all models and the output normalized to a common format, because of course, each model developer always believes that his way of saving data is the right one. 39 parsers, each for a different data format? My God. I am physically sick when I have to write ONE. And I have more experience in writing software then an average undergrad.
You don’t like their conclusions? Fine. That’s your right.
But dismissing something that 14 people have put several months of life into, without reading it, just because you don’t like the subject on principle – now, THAT is something extremely uncharitable. Maybe my parents didn’t teach me proper manners, but they did teach me that someone’s else hard work should be respected.
Then in post #62 you were nice enough to accuse me of having a totalitarian mindset, and say that AGW believers are totalitarians. I’m just going to say that: in my experience, accusations of totalitarism are usually thrown by people who have never experienced totalitarian government, nor knew anyone who did. Regulation of energy market to reduce CO2 is totalitarian? Fine. But what word then should we use to describe the regime that put my grandfather on a one-way train to Germany against his will? (He managed to escape from that train, though.) What about the other regime of the same time, whose soldiers have given my other grandfather and his family 30 minutes to pack whatever they could take, leave the house built over the years with their own hands and get on a train to God knows where – all that at gunpoint? (Don’t worry the place where that train was going to wasn’t bad at all… particularly if compared to that first train. Its destination still gives me shivers when I think about it. Well… okay. I digress.)
So… yeah. Please excuse me for the use of sarcasm to keep myself calm while responding to your claims.
OK, now, your approach to this is getting interesting.
You have derided the OP study as derivative, i.e. not based on real data. So I give you the data from mankind’s, newest, state-of-art orbital platform. This baby measures ice thickness WITH THE PRECISION OF 1.6 CENTIMETER while orbiting 700km above the ice. The level of technology involved here is completely mind blowing. (In fact, for the last several hours I am fighting a sudden urge to get on the next plane to Toulouse, walk into the EADS/Astrium office and beg them on my knees to hire me. Just give me a job with whoever built this radar. I can even clean floors for them.)
So, data from this wonder of French technology shows that the ice is shrinking. No, wait. It’s not shrinking. It’s disappearing. It’s not modeling, it’s not speculation, it’s direct measurement over the last 3 years. It’s what you have demanded: hard data.
Well, now. It’s not my fault that you don’t have time to do some reading on the subject of global warming. It can take time – when I got interested in the subject 3 years ago I was reading literature in the evenings for about 6 months. I’m also deeply grateful to one professor of atmospheric physics who has several times destroyed me in the comment section of his blog. I’ve learned a lot.
Of course! But doesn’t it strike you as strange that Canada was never interested in patrolling these waters before? No gunboats in their own backyard since ever! Maybe, just maybe, it has to do with the fact that the waterways in question used to be covered with ice, and therefore not navigable?