Is this supposed to be a positive claim or merely a possibility?
Well, I see you've been paying attention in that thread on annoying argument tactics.
Yes, that's a positive claim I made. I will now prove it.
Every single Doomsday prediction made by human beings, EVER (and there have been thousands) has fallen far short of the predictions.
Infectious diseases (Ebola, AIDS, hantavirus). Environmental disasters (Exxon Valdez, the Kuwait oil well fires). The use of nuclear weapons (Japan got hit by two). Genetically-engineered supercrops. Mutated insects. The Y2K bug. And that's just modern ones. Go back to medieval times, and you'll find a lot more.
Global warming Doomsday itself has been disproven by the Pleiocene epoch.
So there. I've got about ten thousand examples throughout world history showing that when we humans predict Doomsday, we are ALWAYS wrong.
Loki130 said:
So no global sea level rise?
Dear God. Why must it always be black and white with you people??? Either gigantic sea level rise, or none.
WHAT DID I SAY?? I said this: "Global warming will produce a mishmash of very
limited, boring, and not-newsworthy effects."
Now get with the program. I said
some sea level rise. Meaning a little. Meaning not enough to break a sweat over. Your house will fall over due to wood rot caused by termites long before the rising ocean gets anywhere near it.
Sheesh.
El_Machinae said:
It could be innocuous, as long as no serious tipping points are reached
Tipping point: human beings reduce their CO2 emissions enough that the world's plants overconsume it, starting a chain reaction that reduces CO2 to near-zero levels. And the next Ice Age begins.
Don't stare at me like that. I didn't write that scenario--
Exit Mundi did.
Exit Mundi said:
It goes like this: mankind emits a hell of a lot of greenhouse gasses, such as carbon dioxide. But plants and algae live on carbon dioxide. They'll grow and grow, because there's plenty of the stuff around. Already, this effect is clearly seen in oceans, where algae and plankton thrive more than ever.
But then, after some decades, carbon dioxide is up. Be it because of humans switching to other, cleaner fuels, or be it because there are so many algae and plants; the carbon dioxide level in the atmosphere will drop. But all those `extra' plants and algae will still be there, sucking up all carbon dioxide they can get. In a short period of time, they will suck almost all carbon dioxide out of the Earth's atmosphere.
So there. I has a tipping point. Better make sure we don't set it off, right....?
.....right.....?
See? This old tipping-point argument of yours doesn't work.