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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443677
07/27/25 11:33 AM
07/27/25 11:33 AM
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Then how do people get sunburnt on cloudy days?
Got any more brain busters?
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443679
07/27/25 11:34 AM
07/27/25 11:34 AM
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443680
07/27/25 11:35 AM
07/27/25 11:35 AM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Central Oregon
AntiGov
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2014
Central Oregon
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What ?
It doesn't eliminate the sun .....obviously......we'd all be dead
The Vink for chief moderator....night shift ...11pm- 5am best coast time zone.....Free Marty
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: newfox1]
#8443693
07/27/25 12:01 PM
07/27/25 12:01 PM
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Joined: Feb 2015
Iowa
trapdog1
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2015
Iowa
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It’s a good thing you guys aren’t beaver, BP would have you on a board. Except the climate change folks won’t let him trap beaver anymore…..
American Karens - not a fan
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: ]
#8443701
07/27/25 12:16 PM
07/27/25 12:16 PM
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Joined: Apr 2007
ohio
Ohio Wolverine
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2007
ohio
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Then how do people get sunburnt on cloudy days?
Got any more brain busters? Ultra violet rays go through the clouds . Cloudy days the sun doesn't reflect back into the sky. That's why it's colder on clear nights, there's no cloud cover to hold the heat down.
We have met the enemy and the enemy is us!
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Ohio Wolverine]
#8443708
07/27/25 12:39 PM
07/27/25 12:39 PM
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Then how do people get sunburnt on cloudy days?
Got any more brain busters? Ultra violet rays go through the clouds . Cloudy days the sun doesn't reflect back into the sky. That's why it's colder on clear nights, there's no cloud cover to hold the heat down. I know. He keeps calling those smokestacks UV blockers. Maybe he’s being facetious
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443718
07/27/25 01:03 PM
07/27/25 01:03 PM
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Joined: Jan 2007
central Haudenosaunee, the De...
white marlin
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
central Haudenosaunee, the De...
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from one of the links Leroy posted..."Most of the trees that have died within the last century, and continue to die, regenerated during the Little Ice Age (1400-1850). Heavy snow accumulation is thought to have occurred during this period, giving yellow-cedar a competitive advantage on low-elevation sites in Southeast Alaska. Trees on these sites are now susceptible to exposure-freezing injury under warmer climate conditions. An abnormal rate of yellow-cedar mortality began around 1880, accelerated in the 1970s and 1980s, and continues today. These dates coincide with the end of the Little Ice Age and a warm period in the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. On a finer temporal scale, recent analysis of 20th century weather station data from Southeast Alaska documented increased temperatures and reduced snowpack in late winter months, in combination with the persistence of freezing weather events in spring (Beier et al. 2008)."
"From the time crown symptoms appear, it takes 10 to 15 years for trees to die, making it difficult to associate observations from aerial surveys to weather events in particular years. Mortality has subsided somewhat in the last three decades."
so, during the Little Ice Age, many of these trees got their start as seedlings due to a competitive advantage from a heavy snow pack. as the Little Ice Age came to a close in 1850 (before widespread Industrial Age pollution), these trees began to decline (spiking in 1880). the decline accelerated 45-55 years ago and continues today.
where is the cause and effect nexus with human activity?
why would mortality have subsided somewhat over the last three decades? that doesn't make sense in the global warming paradigm.
Last edited by white marlin; 07/27/25 01:11 PM.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: beaverpeeler]
#8443719
07/27/25 01:03 PM
07/27/25 01:03 PM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Virginia
52Carl
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2014
Virginia
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A lot of money is being spent to make sure people think climate change is still a hoax.
What is most alarming is that it is happening even faster than originally projected. We probably are too late to reverse it at this point. The melting of permafrost is releasing vast amounts of methane which is the worst offender of the greenhouse gases.
Hey Keith, want some mango trees to try at your place?
I'm sure there is tons of MY TAX MONEY being spent to make sure that people think that man made climate change is scientific fact and that the science is settled. Which of course, neither is true.
Last edited by 52Carl; 07/27/25 01:04 PM.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: ]
#8443724
07/27/25 01:10 PM
07/27/25 01:10 PM
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Joined: Aug 2022
Maine
Jkeith
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2022
Maine
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Jkeith, I’m playing devil’s advocate and asking questions. So far, no good answers. Just politics, YouTube, “follow the money”, and just like you just said - “you’re not qualified”. You just chimed in on a trapping forum, so your response doesn’t mean a hill of beans. And you STILL haven’t provided a reason why human’s are incapable of influencing the Earth. You don't need to be an expert on anything to recognize faulty reasoning. 1) You're equivocating on your challenge to "provide a reason why humans are incapable of influencing the Earth." Nobody would make that claim. Human beings obviously alter their environment, thus impacting the earth to some degree, but so do beavers and locusts, carp, bacteria and so on. Is it possible that humans have caused climate change? Yes, but it's also possible that I will be the first human being to step foot on Mars. You're using the possibility of one thing to argue for the probability of another. That leap from possibility (which has such a low bar) to probability is an equivocation. 2) The burden of proof is on you to show that human action, rather than normal cyclical climate patterns, is a significant cause of climate change, which is the assertion you’re trying to make. Neither you nor the scientific community have sufficiently made that case. No politics needed!
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Jkeith]
#8443744
07/27/25 02:06 PM
07/27/25 02:06 PM
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Jkeith, I’m playing devil’s advocate and asking questions. So far, no good answers. Just politics, YouTube, “follow the money”, and just like you just said - “you’re not qualified”. You just chimed in on a trapping forum, so your response doesn’t mean a hill of beans. And you STILL haven’t provided a reason why human’s are incapable of influencing the Earth. You don't need to be an expert on anything to recognize faulty reasoning. 1) You're equivocating on your challenge to "provide a reason why humans are incapable of influencing the Earth." Nobody would make that claim. Human beings obviously alter their environment, thus impacting the earth to some degree, but so do beavers and locusts, carp, bacteria and so on. Is it possible that humans have caused climate change? Yes, but it's also possible that I will be the first human being to step foot on Mars. You're using the possibility of one thing to argue for the probability of another. That leap from possibility (which has such a low bar) to probability is an equivocation. 2) The burden of proof is on you to show that human action, rather than normal cyclical climate patterns, is a significant cause of climate change, which is the assertion you’re trying to make. Neither you nor the scientific community have sufficiently made that case. No politics needed! 1. I’ve asked if humans are capable of influencing these cycles. Finally, someone (you) admitted that it’s possible. And like I’ve stated several times already, the cycles are natural. In this case, I think it’s reasonable that humans have accelerated the cycles. Humans interact with the world in a much, much more complex way than a carp. 2. Like I’ve also stated, I’ve witnessed things that would suggest the acceleration influence is real. But I guess since I haven’t personally measured glaciers and core sampled the earth’s crust I’m not allowed to have an opinion or an open mind.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443748
07/27/25 02:12 PM
07/27/25 02:12 PM
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Joined: Jan 2007
central Haudenosaunee, the De...
white marlin
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
central Haudenosaunee, the De...
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you can have as open of a mind as you like (some have such an open mind that their brain falls out).
but when a political movement says we have to upend centuries of economic practice to save the earth, they better come up with absolutely unimpeachable, real evidence that meets the Common Sense Smell Test (not faulty computer models, etc.) AND that treats every country the same.
Last edited by white marlin; 07/27/25 02:12 PM.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443750
07/27/25 02:20 PM
07/27/25 02:20 PM
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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I don’t make policy - foreign or domestic. Maybe Jkeith can provide us with some of his scientific papers to help influence policy and taxation since he’s so convicted on his pedestal.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443755
07/27/25 02:31 PM
07/27/25 02:31 PM
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Joined: Jan 2007
central Haudenosaunee, the De...
white marlin
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
central Haudenosaunee, the De...
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Leroy, when you are reviewing the "scientific" papers that support your position, do me a favor...count how many times they use what I call weasel words: "may cause", "might result in", "likely to", "could lead to" etc. etc.
those aren't scientific conclusions...they are scare tactics.
do scare tactics have any place in a truly Scientific Paper?
Last edited by white marlin; 07/27/25 02:33 PM.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443764
07/27/25 02:54 PM
07/27/25 02:54 PM
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Rat, I think it’s fair to say that nobody truly knows. But it seems foolish to me, as a land steward and outdoorsman who cares about the wild world I spend a lot of time in, to dig your heels in and say with absolute conviction that humans couldn’t impact our climate.
Again, big cities are a prime example of humans impacting temperatures and weather patterns in their “microclimate”. This is studied, measured, and proven.
But I’m not going to Mars. I’m going to write my Senator to push higher taxes on Jkeith, white marlin, and AntiGov so we can finally solve this problem.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: ]
#8443770
07/27/25 03:02 PM
07/27/25 03:02 PM
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Joined: Aug 2012
South Dakota
Rat Masterson
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2012
South Dakota
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Rat, I think it’s fair to say that nobody truly knows. But it seems foolish to me, as a land steward and outdoorsman who cares about the wild world I spend a lot of time in, to dig your heels in and say with absolute conviction that humans couldn’t impact our climate.
Again, big cities are a prime example of humans impacting temperatures and weather patterns in their “microclimate”. This is studied, measured, and proven.
But I’m not going to Mars. I’m going to write my Senator to push higher taxes on Jkeith, white marlin, and AntiGov so we can finally solve this problem. Man probably has some slight, miniscule, impact on climate, but not enough to bankrupt the US. The real behind the scenes folks pulling the strings on the climate emergency are in it for the money. Oh and thanks for not mentioning me to your Senator, I pay enough taxes.
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Re: Still believing in climate change?
[Re: Finster]
#8443774
07/27/25 03:06 PM
07/27/25 03:06 PM
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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Leroy Bob
Unregistered
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And of course nobody wants excessive taxation with no clear path to resolution. Isn’t that true for most of our tax money? For what it’s worth, I’m glad to not see Greta Thunberg in the news anymore.
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