But it does specify the North Atlantic only.
Wrong. It specifies sampling performed in the Sargasso Sea, Puerto Rico, the Gulf Coast, and Iceland. Covering a pretty freakin' huge area.
And funny enough it's just below the chapter : Globally.
Which says specifically that
one study found local warming and global cooling.
And which also says specifically that "certain regions such as central Eurasia, northwestern North America, and (with less confidence) parts of South Atlantic, exhibit
anomalous coolness."
Anomalous.
Wait, what? You mean that you discovered this independently from him or something? Because he admitted it as a serious blunder of his after the universe was discovered to be expanding in the 1920s
It's the kind of blunder Einstein never should have made to begin with. He should have known better than that. You
never allow your personal wants to get into the numbers. Ever.
and anybody who had some familiarity with Einstein would likely run across a mention of this.
What I describe has never been mentioned by anybody before, ever. Yes, the history books do say Einstein admitted his mistake after he got pwn3d by Edwin Hubble; what I'm describing is
why Einstein's mistake was a mistake. It was a mistake because Einstein allowed his personal bias to cloud his judgement. He wanted the universe to be static, even when the evidence in
his own theories suggested otherwise.
And it might not have even been all that wrong. A cosmological constant could explain acceleration of the expansion of the universe.
And that cosmological constant is caused by what?? That's the problem. Einstein never had any actual evidence, other than his desire for a static universe.
Speaking for myself, as one of those people you are referring to, you are flat out wrong (not that you'll ever admit it!).
Heheh. Weasel words, dude. I said "a bunch of you" want global warming to be real. I did not say
which of you I'm referring to.
I would love to see real evidence that AGW is not a problem and doesn't exist - really, really love it! One thing less to worry about....
Okay. I'll reiterate some past material for ya.
First off, it's known that during the Paleocene epoch, the Earth was TEN DEGREES warmer than today. And that's not Fahrenheit, either. That's Celsius. The Earth was much warmer than it is now--yet there was no ecological disaster. The United States was a tropical region, the poles were temperate zones, there were almost no deserts anywhere, and every part of the planet that wasn't a desert was positively stuffed with plant and animal life.
Second: it's known that at least some parts of the Earth saw warmer temperatures during the Medieval Warm Period. In those regions where it was warmer, there was no ecological disaster--instead there was mild weather and bountiful harvests.
Third: during the Little Ice Age, there
was massive disaster. On a global scale. Frozen harbors, paralyzed trade, crop failures, famines. And wars. Though that last one is really just a result of the previous stuff in the list.
Fourth: how is it possible that the jungles of the Far East can exist on the
same latitude as the Sahara Desert?? Obviously it can't be solar radiation that's making the Sahara into the Sahara, because both the Sahara and all the green parts in the East are at the same latitude and getting the same amount of radiation. It's not heat that makes a desert. A desert is not a desert because it's hot, it's a desert because it's dry. (In fact, at night, deserts are
FREEZING COLD) Therefore global warming and deserts are unrelated.
Fifth: while hurricanes
are more destructive than in the past, they are
not actually becoming more powerful. That's a blatant lie by global warming alarmists. The most powerful hurricane ever to hit the U.S. (that I know of) happened in 1938. That one was a lot more powerful than Katrina. And if that hurricane had struck today, the result would have been far worse than New Orleans. Today, there are more people and more buildings, more closely sardined together. Hurricanes are more destructive today because there are more targets for them to hit.
All of that is stuff that's been established already. The Paelocene did happen, the Little Ice Age did happen, the Medieval Warm Period did happen, and that fourth one is simple observation of the fact that jungles exist on the same latitude as deserts (sometimes right next to deserts). The fifth takes a little more work to verify.
Global warming will cause some problems, but it will solve others, such as world hunger. So relax and enjoy driving that SUV.
