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Travis In Austin

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Posts posted by Travis In Austin

  1. My style changes with the situation, who I amdealing with on the other side. Are they new, have we dealt on things before, what is their style? Gender makes a difference in how I may approach something. I have dealt with the same types you have dealt with. On some things it is just, NO, NO, NO there really is no negotiations but I try to be optomistic because I have worked out things I never thought could get worked out.

    My closest friend is superb at it, a niche practice of getting things worked out. He doesnt go to trial, if he can't work it out he sends them to someone else to try.

    I wish I was better at it, that is for sure.

    • Like 1
  2. Are you saying the Montreal Protocol "fixed" the ozone problem?

    I don't think I did, did I?

     

    I wouldn't think it would have fixed it, it has only been 25 years and I would think it would take a lot longer than that.  I know that the size of the hole has shrunk and that we now monitor it in real time from a NOAA bird.  

     

    I have attached a pdf from the Montreal Protocol listing what they SAY it has achieved.  I don't think they say they have fixed it, but they claim that it is first UN treaty to have universal ratification, some 20 years after the US was one of the first signers.  They claim that is has resulted in a reduction of skin cancer and cataracts to a significant degree. 

     

     

    I know that Reagan, despite being urged to oppose it, helped negotiate it and, as in many things, the UK followed.  

     

    Here is an article from the NY Times about the history of it, I had forgotten that Reagan had skin cancer.  A close aide said he thinks he supported it because he liked the outdoors.   http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/10/science/the-montreal-protocol-a-little-treaty-that-could.html?_r=0

     

    The article has a nice photo of the Gipper walking in cowboy boots  with Maggie at Camp David.  The article concludes by saying:

     

    "Durwood Zaelke, who heads a Washington advocacy group called the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development that is pushing for the treaty amendment, told me he drew a simple lesson from all this: Durwood Zaelke, who heads a Washington advocacy group called the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development that is pushing for the treaty amendment, told me he drew a simple lesson from all this: However overwhelming global warming may seem at times, we are not powerless in the face of it..

     

    Which was my point, it is obviously a world problem (if global warming is real, and if it is a problem).  That doesn't mean that we cannot be the leader in addressing the issue and that others will follow.  The MP apparently has had some impact on global warming, and I believe we adopted the amendment mentioned in the 2013 article.  

     

    I remember Molina and Rowland being all over the news about the discovery, they said something had to be done, and had to be done quick.  That was mid 70s when I was in high school and our chemistry teacher was all freaked out by this study.  I remember people switching to spray bottles from aerosols because of "the environment."  I am sure you can appreciate the culture of those times in California.  Twenty years later the MP was a reality and a guy from Mexico City who wanted a PhD from Cal and ends of going to teach at UC Irving and wins the Nobel Prize in chemistry with his mentor.

     

    So now the world works on Kyoto and it's outgrowth.  Two administrations ago we were in, the last administration withdrew us, and now we are back in.  We can be a leader, or not.  These world size problems tend to require that everyone acknowledge there is a problem, and then get together to fix it, which I think is the biggest lesson.  The use of common sense approach to phase out the bad, bring in the new, and then to bring on as many as you can works.  It is kind of everyone has to be in, or nobody is in.  Special interests lost in that debate, science won out.  

     

    Someone said here earlier, follow the money.  Despite what some people think, university research in the United States is both privately and publicly funded.  It is typically pretty solid.  Look where the money is on the side scientists that say there is a problem, and look on the side where people say it is't a problem.  It was the same with tobacco, it was the same with ozone, and it is true here.  

     

    People can wake up on the morning and see what they see, make conclusions from local weather patterns and form an opinion that there is no warming, and it has no consequence.  They are not in the mainstream if that poll in Scientific American is accurate.  Or then can read one of the studies, or the studies on the studies, and make up their own mind instead of watching CNN, Fox, NBC or whatever.  

     

    This thread started with a link to an article by a debunked skeptic who doesn't accept asbestos as being in the least bit harmful, evolution, or second hand smoke.  He is what we refer to as a prostitute.  The question was raised, "is the hype over?"  Yes, but not in the sense that Steven meant it.  The hype is over, America has chosen science over politics and propoganda and 70% plus of the entire political spectrum have chosen to believe the science.  We are back in on Kyoto, the EPA is setting standards.  Right now TODAY, coal burning power plants that don't use certain scrubbing pay a carbon tax.  There were 4,000 peer reviewed studies that Dr. Green's peer reviewed study looked and, and over 90 percent of them say there is global warming, and it is man made.

     

    Peer review, as you know, means something is science.  It is a big deal.  It is what distinguishes science from opinion based on assumptions.  

     

    There is apparently 400 or so peer reviewed studies that say there is no global warming, or not man made, in comparison to the 3,600 out there that say otherwise, but no one will cite or mention one.  

     

    The warming doesn't really matter to me.  What I worry about is the ocean, and the CO2 in the ocean.  That is manmade, there is no question about it, and it had dropped the pH of the ocean by 30%.  That has to stop and people don't even understand why.  They need to understand where 50% of our oxygen comes from.  

     

    When you see a study that says that sea algae is dying off due to pH it is too late.  It will take 50 years to adjust it back.  

     

    T

    • Like 1
  3.  

    it comes down to what Americans are willing to do today to address a problem that will largely affect their grandchildren.

     

    Well, not really. How can anyone describe this as a problem for "Americans?" Either individually, or collectively, this is a wild claim. The climate change problem is a result of a global system of organization in place for a thousand years or more. The world is organized as a "for profit resource." That's not a decision of mine or fellow Americans, or the legislators, or the other people around the globe.

     

    Americans can do nothing about this. Nor can Germans or Chinese. 7 billion people are involved in profiting from the resource as their reason for being. Oh sure, I'm going to collect cans, turn my thermostat down and change that!

     

    Global Warming, or it's cousin Global Cooling, is not so much a scientific discovery as a philosophical one: "Profit is incompatible with sustainable civilization." Think about it. Embedded in the very concept of profit is the contradiction of sustainability. It is self cancelling.

     

    But sure, push it down and blame it on the citizens for not making a decision. As I pointed out earlier, 1/3 of the world is food insecure. Well, of course! That's exactly how you extract a profit. You take from the bottom and push it up to the top. Where else would the excess to form a profit come from if not the bottom?

     

    This is not a problem for science to solve. It's certainly not a problem for politicians to solve. How do you grab the entire world, shake it, and revise it's goals?

     

     

    By being a leader, by setting the example, like we have always done.  We did it on Ozone depletion by being the leader in science, and then one of the first to sign the Montreal Protocol, and now in the monitoring of it.  We have half the population of China but put out twice as much Co2.  The top ten countries put out 70% of the CO2.

     

    When it started raining sulphuric acid in the northern states and people's car paint started peeling off and the level of mercury in our kid's tuna fish sandwiches got to a level that people stop buying it we passed the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act and created the EPA despite other countries continuing to burn coal without scrubbers.

     

    Then, when we insisted that others follow suit in the way of trade agreements and other means, we could say that "we are doing it, and so should you." 

     

    I am guessing we emit way more CO2 than China per capita because they are using more nuclear generation.  It takes 10 or 15 years to get a plant online, I think we need to get 10 up and running and the first one should be in Humboldt Bay (not really, but to say we can lower things with nuclear power is certainly true, but it takes a long time to do it).  Maybe Terrapower and Bill Gates can get things moving faster on that, hopefully so.

     

    This plant used to provide Southern California Edison with 20% of its power, emission free.  It is going to take 4 Billion, and twenty years to decommission it.  A nuclear storage facility is in the process of getting the permits from the State to be able to store the 4,000 tons of waste that is currently stored there.

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  4. I don't eat at MickeyD and this should in NO way be considered in their defense.  But 20 years ago or so their French fries were fried in lard.  "For some reason, American French fries also contain beef flavor..." is due to the fact that the McDonald's brand was largely built by the excellence of their French fries "back in the day."  It was the food police that made them change and that beef flavor is an attempt to replace a natural flavor with an agent.  If you've been programmed to consider lard a deadly poison you'll ignore this whole post, but into the 1960s it was a staple in home cooking and had been for centuries.  My mother didn't fry something daily, but we had fried chicken, chicken fried steak, or fried fish reasonably often.  Cakes were made with lard shortening. 

     

    All in all I am reasonably certain I never consumed more than a tablespoon a week and I find it rather unlikely that in those amounts it was deleterious in any way.  Like any food, I suspect it wouldn't be a good thing to eat lard, or any greasy food, multiple times per day.  So don't.

     

    I won't say the food police aren't really trying to help people, but I believe some efforts over the years have been misguided and overhyped and, in many cases, have led to the use of stuff even worse than the natural, original ingredients.

     

    I still keep lard around to extend pan drippings in the making of southern milk gravy and a few other things.  Blast it if you will...but it IS organic by definition.

     

    Dave

     

    Best frys, bar none.  They still taste great, I knew they went from tallow to some kind of vegetable oil, it wold make since they would have to use beef flavoring now because they are not using the beef fat any longer.

     

    The best mexican food or Tex-Mex cooks, whether it is at someone's home or eating out, you look in their kitchen and you will nearly always find a block of lard from Mexico.  They sell it in every store here, both organic lard, and regular, whatever you want.  

     

    I figure if I hit McD's twice a year for fries it isn't going to matter.  

     

    T

  5. I know this will irritate many people, but this discussion of the food is exactly why people can't do anything about "Global Warming" - they can't even get clean food to eat. Now, before everyone yells that "people have a choice" and all that other fluff about choice being the only concept that matters, let me say this, the choice to put sawdust in bread, or pink slime in meat, and think you are doing the world a service, is the only choice we need to be focused on. Choice begins at the source. If the source is philosophically polluted and criminal, the downstream events don't really matter. You can't push on a string.

     

    I pretty much agree with that, but believe it can go from both sides.  We had to read Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" in high school.  That book, at the time it came out, apparently stood the country on its ear.  It may have even contributed to the creation of the Food and Drug Administration, I can't remember exactly.  

     

    So how do you motivate the fast food industry, the tobacco industry, the meat packing industry to do the "right thing."  They will not, absolutely will not, ever do the right thing when they learn of a problem, or at least when they do the right thing they don't have the right PR people to say they did the right thing.  Example after example after example shows that they were aware of the problem (or a condition which they didn't perceive to be a problem, for example trying to make cigs more addictive), but made a conscious BUSINESS decision to keep doing what they were doing.  Subway, from what I heard, finally had to acknowledge that it was using this material in their bread because it was a preservative that made the bread the way customers wanted it, and the material wan't toxic. Really? 

     

    It usually takes a whistle blower, or a consumer advocacy group or a lawsuit or sometimes even an agency that regulates/inspects them to push/pull them along.  It seems like the only thing that keeps them on their toes is the threat of fines, being shut down or being sued.  

     

    Just never, ever trust the source.  It is hard to know, but you can buy locally grown from farmers markets (of course you never know what they do, but after twenty years I can even figure out what is an organically grown tomato or not), growing it yourself, etc.  We have the luxury of Whole Foods being based in Austin, they are all about the source, where it is from, what the impact is, who picks it, etc.  They go to the source of the coffee, or the bananas, the fish, and inspect them themselves.  You pay a premium, but they are just packed, all the time.  I think it is double, by the time you grab all of the stuff you don't really need and isn't available at HEB.  

     

    HEB, our major grocer, I think pretty much all over Texas now (there are some Randal's, Albertson's/Safeways still around) has taken notice.  They thought my having a store every mile or so in Austin would get people to shop there out of convenience (and it is a great store, reminds me of Ralphs or Fry's in CA), but people will drive the extra 15 minutes to get Whole Foods, at a way higher cost.  Somehow Whole Foods has an image that you can trust them.  For the last two years HEB is doing commercials about the growers, fishermen, wine producers, etc. that supply them with food.  They are trying to show that they are selective and put a human side to who they buy from, because they have seen what Whole Foods has done.  

     

    But how long did it take for people to realize that when purchasing food you may want to consider something else besides price.  It used to only be "those" people did that and they had to go to the health food store to get that stuff.  

     

    Now I am going to go eat lunch, checking every carefully that there isn't a finger or a mouse in my salad.

     

    T

     

    T

  6. It was me Dave, I ended it.  I went out and got florescent or LED bulbs last night to replace all of the regular bulbs in the house, hit the switch this morning and I must have thrown everything off the grid.  :unsure:

     

    Moved what was here back to the original thread now what it is back going again.

  7. Some things are presented here which I wasn't aware of.  Interesting that McDonalds is following the same line of "reasoning" as Monsanto that it's fine for Americans to be poisoned, but not fine for the citizens of other countries.  I'd love to see the non-US based bank accounts of those who make the laws here.........

     

    Maynard

     

    http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2015/02/11/mcdonalds-fries-ingredients.aspx?e_cid=20150211Z1_DNL_NB_art_1&utm_source=dnl&utm_medium=email&utm_content=art1&utm_campaign=20150211Z1_DNL_NB&et_cid=DM67181&et_rid=838502390

     

    I am afraid to read that article, just like I am afraid to watch "Fast Food Wars" based on what I have heard it uncovered.  Subway being made out of yoga mat material.  I thought no way, that has got to be a  hoax.  My quick go to source for an instant BS test is SNOPES.  Comes back true.  I heard that someone had asked Subway what their bread was made out of, got the stall, sent it to a lab on their own, yoga mat.

     

    Several years ago I was reading the the label on a loaf of bread, and I am going down the list, whole wheat flower . . . and then saw "sawdust."  I couldn't believe it, had to check it three times.  Not particlized cellulose or some other watered down version, just "sawdust."

     

    I was a fast food fiend for years and years, I just almost completely avoid it now, (well, I am assuming that Franklin BBQ is not considered fast food)  but you have to be just as careful with processed foods at the grocery story.

    • Like 1
  8. My better half got a look at the American Express statement last night.  :angry:  $$$$$

     

    Three high-end AVR and a SVS subwoofer.

     

    I explained they are all under evaluation and I can return them. I'm only going to (maybe) keep one of the AVR. And the sub is gratis years of accumulated American Express Rewards. Might as well use the Rewards for something, right? Why not a free sub?

     

    She says, "What? You paid how much for a ******* sandwich?"

     

    :unsure:  :wub:

     

    How did you get a pass on the "points."  She didn't say she wanted first class to Paris?

    • Like 1
  9. You won't be disappointed.

     

    https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/NkbZlautuUc?rel=0

     

    The ONLY Michael Jackson music I own is Billie Jean from Michael jackson's Thriller.  I have the mp3 version downloaded from Amazon, as well as the Pono version.  Both are loaded on my Pono player.  It is the best music I've found for demonstrating the easily recognizable superiority of Pono high resolution to mp3.

     

    What stands out?  Just all of it?  On the sites I have been on that compare Mp3 to uncompressed/lossless it is pretty dramatic, an overall difference.  I figured the clips used were for a reason, to show the difference but I could not place it on anything specific like vocals, bass, drums, etc.

     

    I know that it is almost impossible to describe it, but wondered if what you were hearing on that song was what I had heard by streaming examples.

     

    Travis

  10. Of course, solar has advanced massively in the past decade and could also play a big role, as well as wind.  A hybrid plan converting all residential and institutional power users to solar and big industry to nuclear is not hard to imagine.    Fusion, the holy grail, has been 30 years in the future now for 60 years largely due to only a pittance being spent on research.  Money speeds things up.  Let's say we accelerate that funding by a factor of a 100 times...still probably less of a percentage of even just the US budget alone than Apollo...doesn't it seem like we might have working fusion designs in maybe 5 or 10 years?  The US went from basically zero to an atomic bomb in less than 4 years and nobody even knew it was happening.  THINK, fer cryin' out loud!   If you accept the science of human effect in global warming then the science of the above is irrefutable.  What is hard to accept is that functionally we are hearing air raid sirens an no credible defenses are being readied.    Here is my own take:  Until the powers that be come together and clearly enunciate a plan to prevent planetary catastrophe I will not accept it as fact that one is eminent.  They may be evil, they may be good, they may be somewhere in between but I do not think they are suicidal and this nation, and others, have a history of pulling together when faced with an emergency.  If the call goes out, I am ready to respond.    Dave

     

     

    I agree 100% with that.

     

    I used to surf right in front of a reactor growing up ("The Boobs").  It has been shut down now, not over safety issues per se,  but it was refitted with new steam generators that turned out to be defective.  Edison was going to try and get it back on line but I am sure the cost of overcoming the opposition and all the red tape it was cheeper to shut it down.  It is interesting that a part of that state that wants clean air, that has had some of the worst air, would rather have much increased CO2 and whatever else. 

     

    Apparently 20% of our power in the U.S. is generated by nuclear plants.  There is only one left in California now (that sits on a fault), we have two in Texas.  I am hoping that TerraPower/Bill Gates can make some headway in Washington on it and get that number up.  Politics makes strange bedfellows, not only is he having to get environmentalists to under stand it is in their interest, he has to fight coal, oil and natural gas.  If is quite a story to see those guys lined up on the same side.  Texas has paved the way for the Dallas billionaire who has a nuclear storage in West Texas for low and mid-level waste to accept, at least on an interim basis, spent rods and other high level waste from all over the country.  They may be getting the 4,000 tons that are sitting at The Boobs.  How they are going to get it there is going to be a major fight, but the big problem was the waste.  It was going to be at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, but that got shut down.  The facility in West Texas has been expanding and requesting approval for higher levels from the state.

     

    I keep seeing articles that they can burn coal absolutely clean, and are getting better and better at it, but I can never find out what it costs to do that.  It has to be astronomical, but they never seem to comment on that.

     

    Ohio state is going to enlarge their experimental clean burning power plant to something that is commercially viable, http://www.crainscleveland.com/article/20140623/FREE/140629930/babcock-wilcox-ohio-state-university-to-design-clean-coal-power

     

    On fusion, I have been hearing that it is 30 years away all my life also.  But I thought we put several billion into a facility at Lawrence Livermore, and that they have (created, achieved, ??) fusion.  Granted, it was something like a fraction of a second and I guess the key in that area is how long you can keep it going.  They seem to be all hyped up about getting it to one minute.  But as I recall, this was a breakthrough because it was REAL fusion, meaning that output exceeded input which has not been the case with the type of fusion achieved at other locations.

     

    I attached a photo of the San Onofre reactor for those who have not seen it and wonder how it got its name.

     

    Travis

  11. Well I guess the hype should be over.  Now the "scientific" story is about whether consensus in the scientific community should even be the story.  http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-to-determine-the-scientific-consensus-on-global-warming/

     

    A partial quote:

     

     

    The point of contention is a peer-reviewed study published last year by Green, a chemistry professor at Michigan Technological University; John Cook, a research fellow at the Global Change Institute at the University of Queensland in Australia; and 10 other scientists who blog under the collective name of Skeptical Science. The scientists examined 4,014 abstracts on climate change and found 97.2 percent of the papers assumed humans play a role in global warming (ClimateWire, May 16, 2013).

    That statement quickly got boiled down in the popular media to a much simpler message: that 97 percent of scientists believe climate change is caused by humans. President Obama tweeted the 97 percent consensus. Comedian John Oliver did a segment on it that went viral on the Internet.

    Predictably, climate change skeptics challenged the study. The Skeptical Science group fended off their attacks. Then fame beckoned. The paper has been downloaded more than 200,000 times, making it among the most popular scientific studies of 2013.

    Lately, the Skeptical Science researchers have been battling a rear guard attack from within the climate science community itself. Some social scientists, political scientists, climate change communicators—and Tol—question whether informing people of a scientific consensus serves any purpose.

    To them, climate change is no longer a debate over science. The latest surveys show that 89 percent of Democrats, 79 percent of independents and 70 percent of Republicans already believe global warming is happening and is at least partly caused by human actions.

    Rather, the climate debate is now ethical and political; it comes down to what Americans are willing to do today to address a problem that will largely affect their grandchildren. In this realm of moral choice, the 97 percent consensus can be polarizing, said Dan Kahan, a professor of psychology at Yale University.

    The article from Scientific American brought out something I had not realized before, that people were saying it was the number of scientists, not the number of studies.  It is nice to see a guy from Yale get the pleasure of stating one of the few absolutes (not "the obvious", after all he is from Yale) about the debate, "it is "polarizing."

  12.  

     

    Really?  Of course it is not easy.  But Congress has the power.  Time to elect new congressmen.  Start by eliminating democrats and republicans.

     

    Yes. Throw them all out on their behinee's and demand the newly elected members dismantle special interest. It's a start.

     

     

     

    Now, now. Just toss the lawyers (both sides) and everything will work itself out just fine. 

     

     

    Hey now wait a minute, wouldn't that be like sticking your head in the sand? :o  :rolleyes:

     

    On second thought I'm all for it.  

     

    Travis

  13.  

     

     

    I mean if there is a global warming skeptic, that has science behind him I am most haapy to look whst he rvgas got,

     

     

     

    Yes, we can look at motives.

     

    1.  Big, dirty industry wants us to believe there is no anthropological global warming.

    2.  Climatologists agree AGW is serious issue that can shake the foundations of our planet.  They want subsidies to study it and prove it.  Profiteers want to manage brokerage houses designed to trade on emission allotments.  

     

    Who do you believe?  That's the question.  Seems you align with those greedy climatologists and profiteers.

     

    The answer, naturally, is unscientific.  All it will derive from is the lenses through which you view politics.

     

     

     

    I don't agree.  You were around when Texas, along with other states, got together to take on tobacco which resulted in the dismantling of the tobacco industry.  That case was all about science and big tobacco knew they had none and what science they did have, in unauthorized released documents, showed they knew it was harmful, they knew it was addictive, but they could fund around that.    

     

    You have seen the standard change like I have from Frye to Daubert.  I have dealt with science, and "junk science" my whole career.  It can be political, certainly.  But you know as well as I do that in medicine and science there is funding protocols to keep it as independent as possible, and then there is funding that comes from business like tobacco, oil companies, drug companies and on the other side as well.  The Sierra Club and others have their own scientists, etc.  UT and A & M are two of the top public research universities  in the country (so is Rice).  The protocols for research grants, try to eliminate as much bias as possible, but we are dealing with humans who want the money, and humans who give out the money.  But in the end, what results is a peer reviewed research study.  This is the filter that science used to weed out the junk, the politics, and even is some cases, made up data.  I think it works really well. 

     

    I am aware that administrations try and put a slant on the research that is conducted by various agencies.  This gets exposed, it happened with global warming.  But as you know, in science where there is disagreement a true scientist will say it needs to be studied further.  It sorts it self out one way or the other over time free of politics just like it did with the ban on CFCs over DuPont's strong stance there was no "scientific link."  Pretty soon you become the lone wolf in the wilderness.

     

    Science has done so with tobacco, DDT, mercury, the ozone layer, Actos, thermography (remember that, they could diagnosis you after putting you in a freezer and then taking a "photo" of you) and on and on and on.  When you have "Institutes" created with tobacco money, oil money, chemical company money, drug company money it is pretty easy to see that they are not scientists.  The same is true of anti (fill in the blank) people on the other side.  I try to read the actual studies myself, both pro and con, if any, and make up my own mind. 

     

    The key, is finding the real scientists on an issue, and avoiding the funded advocates who may happen to have a scientific background.  We deal with this all the time in forensics, I think that is why is so easy to see what is science, what is "hype" and what is advocacy.  Scientists in stating and defending their conclusions write a different way, talk in a different way, refer to prior conclusions in a different way then in the world of jurisprudence and political debate.  It is pretty easy to spot, at least for me, someone who is defending their conclusions based on observations (a scientist) and someone advocating a position that may be based on scientific data.  I have also seen on many, many occasions say, without hesitation, "the research is mixed on that," or "we don't have an answer to that yet, Dr. _________ over at _________ is doing a study on that now."  A real scientist will say when the jury is still out. 

     

    I do agree, when money is at stake, we will all look through the lens that is going to preserve our self interest.  My point is that, given time and the desire to find objective answers, science is where to look.

     

    I look at all of the peer reviewed studies on the casual relationship between fracking and local earthquakes.  The recent SMU study is pretty clear that they were unable to reach a conclusion one way or the other, much more research is needed.  While there is a temporal relationship, there isn't one that would withstand scientific scrutiny one way or the other.  Eventually there will be some solid scientific data on that, one way or the other.  Unfortunately, I think as a result of Denton banning fracking last November, everyone is going to hire there own private research to be done.  It will take years and years to sort that out I am thinking.

    • Like 2
  14.  

    Yeah TWK, I agree that does have some merit to it. I remember several years ago this subject was a very hot topic. As I recall there was a hole in the ozone but it shrunk or similar? Can you expound on what happened?

     

    The Montreal Protocol happened.

     

    Opps, you already answered this, I just did a post.  I couldn't for the life of me remember the name of the Protocol.  

     

    I believe it has been amended a few times and the US is at the forefront of it all.  

  15. Yeah TWK, I agree that does have some merit to it. I remember several years ago this subject was a very hot topic. As I recall there was a hole in the ozone but it shrunk or similar? Can you expound on what happened?

     

    I can, it is pretty simple.  Our atmosphere has a layer of ozone that surrounds the Earth.  The ozone layer filters out UV light from the Sun.  Without it, life as we know it couldn't exist on Earth.  Some scientists way back when, the 60s maybe, believed there was a hole in the ozone layer.  Some other scientists thought the reason for the hole was being caused by chemicals such as CFCs and HFCs (contained in A/C refrigerants and aerosol sprays).  There was a big debate about all of this.  Science kept building and more and more data came in.  

     

    We, being a world leader, sent up some satellites to confirm there was a hole and sure enough there was one and it was growing (slowly) and we, along with other nations adopted an international protocol banning the use of CFCs and other chemicals.  We were a couple of years behind in adopting it because the big chem companies like DuPont, were not convinced by the science.  The US went ahead and adopted the treaty in the 80s, signed by Reagan, which phased out CFCs, etc.  Since then we have been one of the leaders in the agreement, signing on to amendments to the protocol and I believe we signed on to something last year that limits things even further.

     

    The hole is supposedly closing or closed up.  The 25th anniversary of the international agreement was a few years ago, some science journal I read said that treaty banning CFCs had over 100 states that had joined that that the banning of CFC was working to reverse the trend.  

     

    We now have a bird up in the air that measures ozone in near real time.

     

    It is kind of Deja vu all over again.

  16.  

     

     

     

    I've been skeptical of the global warming believers since the start.  Especially those proclaiming it is man-made.  It seems now the news media is starting to cool (no pun intended) to the assertions.  Which is good.  I think we need more sanity brought into this debate.

     

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/environment/globalwarming/11395516/The-fiddling-with-temperature-data-is-the-biggest-science-scandal-ever.html

    in NY , you cant see the sky on smog days , the air has a kinda of a nice odor -like the smell of a car's muffler - you need a mask to filter the nasty dust particles that burn the eyes but again that is not man made ,yep , just natural

     

     

    You are using a micro example to explain a macro phenomena. Does man create smog in New York?  Of course he does.  Does it change the temperature in Africa?  I'm not convinced.

     

    the planet turns every 24 hours - next time you use your washing machine - take a close look , did you notice that your clothes got cleaner as they spun around , now add a bit of dirt and spin it , I betcha that your clothes are dirty -  same things with a planet -one huge washing machine -instead that the gases interact -it is called global warming -

     

     

    My washing machine doesn't have the best scrubbers nature can make: Trees and plants. 

     

     

    Lift top or front load?  Just kidding, a topic of another thread long ago and forgotten.  

  17. I am beginning to see more and more 'scientific' evidence to rebut the global warming data. I think this can be a healthy debate.  Yes, I know there are those that will try to discredit those data by either pointing to foul sources or claiming the writer has an agenda.  And perhaps they would have a point.  But I wonder if they would realize that what they are complaining about is exactly what the skeptics have been complaining about, only to be met with personal attacks on both our character and our intellect?

     

    It's our Earth.  Not just mine and not just yours.  I don't want draconian regulation thrust upon me simply because three decades of research points in a direction that, for all intents and purposes, isn't 100% solid.  The stakes are high on both sides.  I'd just like a chance at some rebuttal without being shut down and given a political label like some sort of pariah and told 'it's our way or the highway.' 

    Really?  I would like to see it, sincerely, just simply to be well informed.  Most, really all, of the scientific "evidence" I have seen recently about the data is from a big oil funded think tank or "Institute."  It really isn't scientific, it is spin, misinformation and sometimes just outright lies, just like the Tobacco Institute used to put out.

     

    Here is a link to an article that identifies the well know big oil funded "Institutes."  http://mediamatters.org/blog/2012/11/28/meet-the-climate-denial-machine/191545  The one you frequently see is the Heartland Institute.  There are other websites on the other side that have just as much hype on the other side.  And then there are a few that are science driven that expose what is science and what is hyperbole.  

     

    I really would like to see any peer reviewed studies you run across to the contrary, or a mainstream source that makes reference to such a study.  I have been burned too many times on studies cited by talking heads on both sides to review a study they cite to prove their point.  I have yet to read a study they cite that says what they say it says.  

  18. Travis,

    Do you use the Google Keyboard with "swipe type?"

    If not, try it. I've used it for months now with good success. Yes, if you get careless it will guess a wrong word, but with practice it is awesome.

    No, it is a Samsung Note3 or something.  I think there might be an option to switch to swipe type, I will give it a try.  

     

    WIth my laptop or pc I use Dragon dictation software, which is my everything I "write" tend to be long winded.  With that you have to go back and carefully check on syntax, verb agreement, and other grammatical things which I discover typically after I have made a post.

     

    I will try swipe and see if that is better.

  19. It is indisputable that what humans do on Earth will have no lasting impact on the planet. What’s thoughtless is the mindset that there is no need to try to make conditions better for ourselves while we’re here. Not caring, or the viewpoint that we have no control of ourselves, is similar to someone who has a poor diet, smokes, doesn't exercise and plays Russian roulette. Who supports a person who says ‘what’s the use, in the end we all die?’

     

    We do have some control. Overpopulating and trying to compensate our conditions with windmills and such while ignoring the pink elephant at the table is just more foolishness. We can't control asteroids or volcanos but we can control other things. 

     

    Well I guess "long lasting" is certainly relative, it only took us 150 years to pollute the entire ocean system with mercury (granted, there wasn't any way to know that burning coal in order to eat and survive could possibly build up to the point that it became toxic in fish, but it is still there in significant levels 50 years after we had conclusive proof of it.  

     

    The mercury is still in fish at the top of the food chain in levels that limited portions are recommended, and it is strongly recommended that women avoid most fish.  I guess it will eventually work itself out over time.  To me, fifty years is "long term," but most things related to the Earth are looked at in terms of geologic time, eons.

     

    I do agree, wholeheartedly, with your sentiment in trying to to improve the human condition while we are here.

  20.  

     

    This is happening now, not 30 rears from now, in significant amouts in some areas.

    I mean if there is a global warming skeptic, that has science behind him I am most haapy to look whst he rvgas got,

    Travis

     

     

     

    Travis,

    I agree with the substance of your post.

    It can only be assumed that passion while typing explains the numerous typos, my favorite being, ". . . 30 rears from now . . ." What do the Kardashians have to do with global warning?

    My posts are frequently found to be riddled with typos when I re-read them. That prompts a removal of the mittens and editing.

    Solving global warming will only stall, briefly, the population crisis. The developed world's population is under control. The developing world's population is out of control. Until we recognize that there is only one world, and that we're all in this together, population growth will accelerate with catastrophic consequences. I'm not optimistic.

     

    That will teach me to try and type on a tablet, my fat thumbs and small screen make it a slow learning process.

     

    I went and tried to edit it back into something comprehensible.

     

    Travis

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