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CO2

@BorisOspasky Climate activists are some of the dumbest people on earth. Especially the ones who glue themselves to the center of busy highways.
@dstne

https://imgur.com/dsYSx6L
This is a graph comparing the emissions of CO2 and the rise of temperature.

You can see that there is a strong correlation between both, when one starts to rise, the other does aswell!
Aren't we all more interested in seeing what I wore to church today where I prayed for your soul and mine?
@bfchessguy said in #4:
> Here we go again! lol

WHERE THE HECK DID YOU GET THAT HILARIOUS VIDEO AHAHAHAHHAHAHAH

@Sweatergirl said in #23:
> Aren't we all more interested in seeing what I wore to church today where I prayed for your soul and mine?

go for it!
@ambrooks Yep.. those self entitled idiots who think they’ve the right to disrupt everyone’s lives, deface art and commit criminal acts with impunity.

Dragging by the hair is way too good for them.. and glue yourself to something,... well that’s half your hand gone as you’re pulled off the tarmac. These imbeciles have had it too easy for too long.
heartland.org/opinion/the-hockey-stick-curve-obscures-earths-co2-history/

Today, 400 ppm of CO2 is 10 percent of the Earth’s historical levels 500,000,000 years ago when CO2 reached 4,000 ppm that supported the vegetation during the dinosaurs reign.

Dinosaurs that roamed the Earth 250 million years ago knew a world with five times more carbon dioxide than is present on Earth today, researchers say, and new techniques for estimating the amount of carbon dioxide on prehistoric Earth may help scientists predict how Earth’s climate may change in the future. Looking back, 65 percent of dinosaurs were herbivores. Those plant-eating dinosaurs included the Brachiosaurus, the Diplodocus, the Stegosaurus, and the Triceratops.

While humans try to reduce CO2 emissions, the recent Eyjafjallajokull volcano eruption in Iceland spewed volcanic ash. In just FOUR DAYS, NEGATED EVERY SINGLE EFFORT have made in the past five years to control CO2 emissions on our planet. Carbon dioxide is also coming out of the recent La Soufriere volcano eruption that has rocked the eastern Caribbean island of St Vincent.

Al Gore’s limited “tunnel vision” correctly reminded us that there is more CO2 in the atmosphere today than there has been for the past 400,000 years. What he intentionally does not mention is the previous Ice Age that peaked 450,000,000 years ago occurred when CO2 was about 4,000 ppm, more than 10 times its present level.

If both warm and cold climates can develop when there is far more CO2 in the atmosphere than today, as the graph shows, how can we be certain that CO2 is determining the climate now?
www.scientificamerican.com/article/behind-the-hockey-stick/

>Mann remains somewhat mum on whether the U.S. should join the Kyoto Treaty, an international agreement to limit fossil-fuel emissions: "It's hard enough predicting the climate. I don't pretend to be able to predict the behavior of politicians." He sees the Kyoto accord as an initial step that is unlikely to curtail emissions all that much, but it will at least set in motion a process that can be built on with other treaties.
@ambrooks 4.000 ppm, imagine that. We get headaches and become dizzy because of 800 to 1.200 ppm, that happens when we keep on closed places, like our bedroom, and the athmosphere doesn't change to much, and the CO2 that we expel accumulates. 4.000 ppm would be impossible for us, we would have health problems, and would need to live forcibly inside rooms, with a co2 removal tool.
And the temperature increased by 1 degree when the CO2 in the atmosphere increased by 120 ppm.

How much 4.000 ppm would trigger of temperature increase? 15 degrees?