1. AFAIK all data is gathered from geological, meteorolgical research. Weather stations, ground and ice drillings, sattelites etc. Both parties probably have similar raw data.
2. Back in the early 80's I was told in school we were heading towards an ice age. 'Problems' back then were acid rain and later ozone. Somewhere around that time the greenhouse thing came along. I personally think they made a couple of mistakes. (3) But instead of going "Oops! Sorry, we were wrong." They didn't want to loose face and feared they would lose their fundings.
(4) Now then, the money making. First the scientists themselves. They scream the world is headed for a disaster, it's man's fault and man can stop it. But to know how to stop it, they need to do more research and for that they need more money.
(5) Governments: They find it a great excuse to raise taxes. I mentioned some examples from Holland earlier. The latest addition to that is upping the VAT on meat because cows and pigs produce CO2.
(6) Semi-government: My country is littered with committees and such. They do research, some are (sociological) think tanks, some develop ideas for durable technologies. Every now then they show something on TV or a local newspaper. Most of their ideas are from from realistic. Maybe the think Futurama and Star Trek are reality shows. The big kahuna's of those committees are ex-politicians, highly rated friends and members of red and green parties, celbrities, guys with grey beards and sandals who never been off campus grounds and the odd ex-astronaut. They probably couldn't have any other job. All heavily funded by tax payer's money.
(7) Business: The last who jumped on the band wagon. But now they know how to sell their product. "Buy this new car. It takes less fuel, it's better for the environment." "Buy this new fridge, it uses less electricity." Philips jumped into the energy saving light bulb. They get some govt. funding and praise and make more profit on them. That those lights take more energy to produce and recycle and that they contain mercury doesn't seem to matter. Then there's companies that produce wind turbines, sun collectors and stuff. A booming market but only viable because of government support. Stores are filled with 'eco products' and I find it questionable wether or not they really are.
Save the planet, buy new stuff.
1: don't think that's how it works. all those weather stations are (presumably) also run by scientists. Do you trust those ones and not the climate change ones? etc. etc.
2: acid rain and ozone were problems. As I told you in a previous thread (i think), where you claimed that these things went away on their own, I posted links which showed that what the scientists suggested doing actually fixed the problems. i don't remember being told about an ice age in the 80s (i was too young), but i'd add that i was told a lot of cr@p in school, primary school especially, mainly because the teachers weren't science specialists.
(3) That may be so, but I'd also point out that another surefire way of losing funding (and maybe even your doctorate) is to be caught making stuff up. It's really not worth it. Would you rather lose your current job or never be able to work again (at least in science)?
(4) Plenty of scientists make money without screaming that the world is going to end. The vast majority, in fact. And I'd point out that if money is your main priority, scientific research is a fairly bad path to follow.
(5) Oh, I agree, but as I already pointed out, green taxes make a very small proportion of the overall tax revenue, in the UK, anyway (and I assume the netherlands is the same). Plus many of these green proposals etc. would actually cost the government money, in terms of reduced VAT revenue, corporation tax, income tax, etc. (because of reduced consumption), not to mention the costs involved in completely changing the entire infrastructure.
(6) can't argue with that, it's the same here. But again, they're rarely the scientists, they're other eejits jumping on the bandwagon.
(7) again, i'm not arguing with companies jumping on the bandwagon, I hate that. But that's a symptom of climate change, not that they're manufacturing climate change to sell more stuff (for the vast majority of companies, anyway). It's not like they struggled to sell stuff before climate change became a big issue, and climate change is likely to be very hard on a lot of very big companies (oil, mining, etc. etc.).
OMG!
I just had the laugh of the year. Nothing will be able to top this.
Someone in the Dutch Labour Party just put this on twitter: http://twitter.com/ChantalGillard/status/7724057954
Translation: If we don't act disasters like this on Haiti will continue to happen. We must stop climate change and improve the coasts of the islands.
assuming he claimed that the earthquake was related to climate change (never gone to twitter before, not starting now :lol: ), that is fairly retarded, nice find. :lol:
and hey, i didn't start the thread. I don't like every thread on here, and don't post in them saying the ones i don't like should stop. :)