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It has become
commonplace knowledge, and is unchallenged, that global
average temperature has not increased since 1998. This
corresponds to a 9-year period during which the level of
atmospheric carbon dioxide, in contrast, did increase, and
that by almost 5%.
The greenhouse hypothesis - which
asserts that carbon dioxide increases of human origin will
cause dangerous global warming - is clearly invalidated by
these data.
As if that were not enough, a leading computer
modelling team has recently published a paper in Nature
which acknowledges what climate rationalists (the so-called
“sceptics”) have always asserted. Which is that,
contrary to IPCC assessments, any human influence on global
temperature is so small that it cannot yet be differentiated
from natural cycles of climate change. The same modellers
have even predicted (after the start of the event, of
course) that cooling will now occur for at least the next
few years. Mortal strike two against dangerous, human-caused
warming.
At this news, the rare balanced commentaries that
hitherto have been but a trickle through cracks in the
monolithic dam of climate alarmism have coalesced into a
steady, fissured flow, and there is an imminent likelihood
of total dam collapse. Interestingly, at the same time, the
fierce discussion about the pros and cons of dangerous
human-caused change that has formerly been conducted almost
exclusively on the internet (including particularly blogs
and video outlets like YouTube) is starting to spread to the
more mainstream press.
For instance, critical analyses of
global warming science reality and policy options have
recently been provided by two leading articles in the
National Business Review (editorial 1; editorial 2 ) and
others on Muriel Newman’s Centre for Political Research
website and in the NZ Herald, Christchurch Press, NZ Farmers
Weekly and the U.K. Telegraph.
Finally, and most
belatedly of all, even radio and TV commentators are now
starting to provide a broader and better balanced
perspective on the global warming issue.
Nzone Tonight is
a nightly news and current affairs programme broadcast by
Shine TV, a NZ Christian broadcaster that aims to provide a
balanced and truthful review of all the day's news suitable
for family viewing. In mid-April, Nzone broadcast a current
affairs discussion about global warming between host Alan
Lee and Professor Bob Carter. Since being posted on YouTube,
this video has attracted 15,000 worldwide viewers, and
during its first three weeks has become the most viewed,
most discussed and most favorited - and the number two top
rated - New Zealand News and Politics video clip of the
month. Amongst other supportive comment, one US viewer noted
that “I did enjoy the respectful nature of the interview.
I do wish this interview was shown on every network in this
country, and at every school!”
That these events
represent a deep public demand for balanced presentations of
the science of climate change is indicated by another Bob
Carter video clip - this time of a lecture to the Australian
Environment Foundation (AEF) that was posted on YouTube just
over 6 months ago. To date this video clip has achieved more
than 100,000 viewers and lists as the 14th most discussed
Australian News and Politics item of all time - a remarkable
result, and by far the highest ranking that a fact-based
lecture has ever achieved.
Comments made on the AEF video
lecture have included:
“That was a superb set of
videos. Very well done, and thank you, Bob Carter. Should be
compulsory viewing for everyone who sees Gore's movie. Any
chance of getting (it) into all British schools?”; and
“Watching Bob Carter's presentation, which he has
articulated in a no nonsense manner, I am alarmed at how the
so-called environmental movement, supported by sensational
journalism, are promoting such an alarmist position on CO2
emissions. It is a frightening prospect that money which
could be spent on far more sensible issues may well be
wasted on carbon sequestration, which apparently will have
little or even no effect on climate change”.
For a
science lecture to receive comments such as these, and
attain such a large number of viewings, is indicative of a
great public hunger for accurate, well balanced information
on the science of the global warming issue.
Perhaps, at
last, the time has arrived when YouTube and blog discussions
will now be supplemented by mainstream newspaper, radio and
TV outlets providing the balanced news and documentary
programs about global warming that have been so lamentably
lacking for the last ten years. Keep your eye on that
dam. Source
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