| ▲ | gitaarik 10 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Earth's climate always changes over time, it's not unusual, although not always the best for us. What causes this climate change, how much infuence humans have on it, and how much we could possibly do about it is unclear. That's not a reason to not do anything about it, but there's also no reason to be super intense about it. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | defrost 10 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> Earth's climate always changes over time, it's not unusual, although not always the best for us. Earth's climate has been stable during the rise of human civilisation. It has changed more in the past 100 years than in the past 200,000. It's true it's changed often over the course of the 4 billion year history of the pkanet. It's not true to claim it's fluctuated wildly over the course of human civilisation. > What causes this climate change, how much infuence humans have on it, and how much we could possibly do about it is unclear. False. It's clear the cause is the increased insulation factor of the atmosphere. It's clear this change has been in the majority due to human activity dragging up millions of years worth of past captured C02 via fossil fuel extraction. > That's not a reason to not do anything about it, Naturally, because as stated it is false to claim the cause is unclear. > but there's also no reason to be super intense about it. Sure. It's true that no one alive today in a G20 non equatorial country need fuss much about it - all the real serious consequence will fall after their lives have passed. | |||||||||||||||||
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