Earth was much warmer 5,000 years ago when atmospheric CO2 levels were lower – so people whose income depends on climate alarmism had to rewrite history. In the following video Tony Heller shows how the real facts have been erased and replaced with data that supports the CO2 hypothesis.
Scientists can gauge all the different factors that cause the earth to warm and cool. The only factor that explains earth's warming today is co2. According to this article, we are warming way faster today than at any time in history. The science of attribution shows that it is humans that is adding the co2 to the atmosphere, and that in turn is the solidly proven mechanism to warm our climate.
ReplyDeleteTo my knowledge and experience, scientists don't get together to collude and cheat the world with information. That whacky behavior belongs to the climate denial machine taking place as we speak. Fossil fuel's wealth depends on us burning their fuels and that is now starting to change across the earth with renewable energy increasingly replacing fossil fuels.
https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/blogs/climateqa/if-earth-has-warmed-and-cooled-throughout-history-what-makes-scientists-think-that-humans-are-causing-global-warming-now/
If Earth has warmed and cooled throughout history, what makes scientists think that humans are causing global warming now?
The first piece of evidence that the warming over the past few decades isn’t part of a natural cycle is how fast the change is happening. The biggest temperature swings our planet has experienced in the past million years are the ice ages. Based on a combination of paleoclimate data and models, scientists estimate that when ice ages have ended in the past, it has taken about 5,000 years for the planet to warm between 4 and 7 degrees Celsius. The warming of the past century—0.7 degrees Celsius—is roughly eight times faster than the ice-age-recovery warming on average.
The second reason that scientists think the current warming is not from natural influences is that, over the past century, scientists from all over the world have been collecting data on natural factors that influence climate—things like changes in the Sun’s brightness, major volcanic eruptions, and cycles such as El NiƱo and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. These observations have failed to show any long-term changes that could fully account for the recent, rapid warming of Earth’s temperature.