No. It is not possible. It is not even in the realm of possible.
No. It is not possible. It is not even in the realm of possible.
Where did the water go?
Me personally? Doesn’t impact me, though it does frustrate the hell out of me and make me feel sad for the kids being indoctrinated with anti-science. However, where this project crosses the line is in the article:
I’m not sure how a slowly rising tide could kill several million people. As for displacement, I learned in Geology 101 never to build or buy a house where it may be at geologic risk. Coastlines were #1, followed by flood valleys, fault zones, and volcanoes. Even without rising sea levels, the edges of coastlines…
Makes you wonder about their projected savings figures as well...
I would argue the opposite. No one wants to purposefully ruin the earth. Nevertheless, it is only the people who believe burning fossil fuels contributes to climate change and yet continue to burn those fuels for their own selfish needs that are saying “screw it, let’s just go ahead and heat this baby up!”
Who has ever said such a thing?
As I said, there is no such thing as static global climate. It is always either warming or cooling. Currently it is warming, and I am thankful for that.
Seems like just about everyone is trying to stop the climate from changing.
I think the only safe conclusion to draw is that our climate is not, nor has it ever been, static.
I just get frustrated that no one ever seems to be willing to just accept that the earth is warming and we are going to have to deal with it.
Neither is Sarah Connor...
This was my thought after reading the story...I do this every night on purpose! These women dealt with MRIs and never once thought to close the eye that was looking at a bright light in bed to see if both eyes were blind?
Something tells me Skynet was never really going to be a problem...
That was honestly my favorite part about Civ IV. Hope it comes back with Civ VI.
Barring a large-scale geo-engineering effort, the atmosphere will remain carbon-loaded for thousands of years to come, even if everybody on Earth stops using fossil fuels tomorrow.