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Just as Al Gore did not invent the Internet, he did not invent global warming theory. Scientists invented it, and they continue to fuel the mass hysteria they created by making predictions about climate change and its dire consequences for our planet. But have any of their followers stopped to consider how scientists are able to predict a global catastrophe in the distant future without being able to make accurate short-term predictions?
For the last two years, scientists were predicting high hurricane activity in the United States. Yet, according to David Demming, writing in the Washington Times last year, "...neither the intensity nor the frequency of hurricanes has increased." The article points out that "the 2007 season was the third-quietest since 1966," and that "in 2006 not a single hurricane made landfall in the U.S."
Seasonal predictions are also challenging for scientists,
which might help explain why we have been consulting a groundhog for so
long. I live in Buffalo, and when scientists try to forecast our summer
or winter weather, they are rarely accurate. Although scientists have
sophisticated maps and models and cutting-edge technology, my own
predictions based on intuition and conjecture would probably be just as
accurate - if not more so.
Even the next day's weather forecasts
are a formidable task for scientists. This past winter, on several
occasions, they predicted one to two feet of snow in our area, and we
barely got a white coating. Last summer, when my wife and I were trying
to grow our new lawn, forecasters predicted rain every day for a week,
but it hardly rained at all.
Of course, weather predictions are
not always wrong. Sometimes scientists are right on target with their
predictions, but often they are not, and sometimes they are way off the
mark. The point is that their weather predictions should be
significantly more accurate before trying to predict the destiny of the
planet 50, 100 or 1000 years from now. Otherwise, it would be analogous
to a student struggling with arithmetic but mastering calculus. It just
doesn't happen.
It's not just scientists' predictions that
cast doubt on their ability to predict a global catastrophe; it's also
the predictions they don't make. They didn't predict, for example,
Buffalo's surprise snow storm in October 2006, which destroyed many
trees, knocked out power in Buffalo for several days, and sent the
whole city scrambling to find alternative sources of heat. An early
warning from scientists would have enabled us to prepare for the storm.
Nor
did scientists predict that most parts of the world would be colder
rather than warmer in 2007, but that is what happened. In fact, many
places experienced record low temperatures and more people died from
cold than warmth, according to "Year of Global Cooling." Even some
Mediterranean countries like Greece and Israel that normally have mild
winters were hit hard by snowstorms.
These events, which seem to
conflict with both scientists' predictions and global warming theory,
are often explained by global warming itself. Thus, one explanation for
the cold weather worldwide is that global warming is creating strange
weather patterns. Does this mean that, since global warming is supposed
to happen, any event that is not consistent with global warming is
strange? Also, why didn't scientists predict that global warming would
-- or even could -- manifest as global cooling? In the minds of global
warming enthusiasts, all events, whether they were expected or not, are
proof of global warming since global warming is a foregone conclusion.
The
reason scientists struggle with predictions and should be careful about
making too many of them is that the world is incomprehensibly fluid and
complex. The earth has always gone through warming and cooling phases.
On April 28, 1975, a Newsweek article by Peter Gwynne titled, "A
Cooling World," warned about the dangers posed by the earth's cooling.
A few years after that article appeared, temperatures rose again,
bringing us back to pre-cooling levels.
Scientists, of course,
know all of this. So why do they continue to instill fear and guilt in
their followers through gloomy prophecies? Perhaps they don't want to
take any chances, and feel it is their duty to prevent a global
catastrophe. But how can they help us save the planet when they can't
even help the poor farmer in the Midwest by warning him of the upcoming
drought, or the newlyweds whose honeymoon plans have been shattered due
to an unexpected storm, or the retired couple who spent their life
savings on a dream vacation only to have it ruined by rain?
Although
scientists are intelligent and serve an important function in our
society, they are not soothsayers. Their inability to predict
short-term events with a high degree of accuracy suggests their
knowledge about the planet and universe is still quite limited.
So can scientists really predict a global climate catastrophe? I doubt it. Source
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