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Don't Argue With Me
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 5,023
Adopt-a-Bronco: Darris Nash |
http://usatoday.printthis.clickabili...x.htm&partnerI
By Patrick J. Michaels As a scientist, I bristle when lies dressed up as "science" are used to influence political discourse. The latest example is the global-warming disaster flick, The Day After Tomorrow. This film is propaganda designed to shift the policy of this nation on climate change. At least that's what I take from producer Mark Gordon's comment that "part of the reason we made this movie" was to "raise consciousness about the environment." Fox spokesman Jeffrey Godsick says, "The real power of the movie is to raise consciousness on the issue of (global warming)." 'Nuff said. Oh, the plot. Global warming causes the Gulf Stream to shut down. This current normally brings tropical warmth northward and makes Europe much more comfortable than it should be at its northerly latitude. The heat stays stuck in the tropics, the polar regions get colder, and the atmosphere suddenly flips over in a "superstorm." The frigid stratosphere trades places with our habitable troposphere, and in a matter of days, an ice age ensues. Temperatures drop 100 degrees an hour in Canada. Hurricanes ravage Belfast. Folks in Japan are clobbered by bowling-ball-size hailstones. If we had only listened to concerned scientists and stopped global warming when we could. Each one of these phenomena is physically impossible. Start with the Gulf Stream. Carl Wunsch, a professor of physical oceanography at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, knows more about ocean currents than most anyone. He thinks the nonsense in The Day After Tomorrow detracts from the seriousness of the global-warming issue. So he recently wrote in the prestigious science journal Nature that the scenario depicted in the movie requires one to "turn off the wind system, or to stop the Earth's rotation, or both." The stratosphere will become the troposphere when all three laws of thermodynamics are repealed. Hailstones can't reach bowling-ball size because their growth is limited by gravity. Hurricanes can't hit Belfast because the intervening island of Ireland would destroy them. How do I know so much about a movie that isn't out yet? I've seen the promos, and I've read and reviewed the book upon which it is based, The Coming Global Superstorm by Art Bell and Whitley Strieber. In Strieber's previous work, Communion, he explained that he was told of the Earth's upcoming apocalypse by aliens. And how this knowledge was communicated is much more the purview of an adult Web site than a family newspaper. What's on the movie's Web site is worse — nothing but out-and-out distortion. It also insists that what is depicted on the screen has already started. "Did you know," says the site, that there were more tornadoes recorded in May 2003 than in any other month? I looked up federal tornado statistics, and indeed they're going up, and there was a peak in May 2003. Then I determined the number of radar stations and their type. When our first radar-tracking network was established in the 1960s and '70s, the number of tornadoes rose proportionally, then leveled off until the new Doppler radars came online in 1988. It took a decade to put this system in place, and the number of reported tornadoes went up accordingly. Then I plotted the number of severe tornadoes. If anything, it's going down. So the flashy Doppler radars are merely detecting more weak storms that cause little, if any, damage. The Web site also implies that global warming is making hurricanes worse. Christopher Landsea, the world's most aptly named hurricane scientist, has studied the maximum winds in these storms as measured by aircraft and finds a significant decline. Global warming? Some scientists think climate change strengthens El Niño, the large atmospheric oscillation responsible for a variety of weather — both good and bad. El Niños are known to rip apart hurricanes. So it's more likely that climate change is weakening these storms than enhancing them. Will Godsick and Gordon get their way? They're sure being aided and abetted by MoveOn.org, the liberal advocacy group and billionaire George Soros' policy toy. They've got Al Gore front and center, plumping the film. They've got their Web site using the movie to drum up support for legislation by Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions, which only failed by 12 votes last fall. There's a huge drought out West, which a New York Times editorial blamed on global warming. The issue is hot enough to influence votes out there. Remember that humans have slightly warmed the planet some in recent decades, but the correlation between Western drought and warming is zero. Far be it from me to criticize anyone's freedom of expression. But remember that propaganda can have consequences. McCain's and Lieberman's measure mimics the United Nations' infamous Kyoto Protocol on global warming, which many scientists know will do nothing measurable about planetary temperature within the policy-relevant future. But it will cost money. This isn't Hollywood's first attempt to scare people into its way of thinking. How about Jane Fonda in the 1979 anti-nuclear-power flick, The China Syndrome? Twelve days after its release, the accident at Three Mile Island occurred. Despite the fact that it released only tiny amounts of radiation, the politics of that hysteria effectively killed any new nuclear plant. Analogize the Western drought to Three Mile Island, and you get the idea. Or how about the 1983 movie The Day After, whose purpose was to strengthen the nuclear-freeze movement. It failed. The Day After Tomorrow is only one more day than The Day After, and it deserves the same fate. Lies cloaked as science should never determine how we live our lives. ================================================== = Patrick J. Michaels is senior fellow in environmental studies at the Cato Institute and author of the upcoming book, Meltdown: The Predictable Distortion of Global Warming by Scientists, Politicians and the Media. ================================================== = So, if you're going to see this disaster flick, enjoy the special effects, scare the shiat out of your special someone so she'll cuddle up closer, but DO NOT believe that what you are watching has anything to do with real science or that it is based on facts. It's written by Art Bell and one of his guests who talks to aliens, fercryinoutloud. And mark it up as another one of those Hollywood leftist lie-fests that exaggerate to the point of absurdity in order to advance their political agenda. Think of it as an environmental Farenheit 911. Take TexanBob's movie theory to heart: a movie's worthiness is generally in inverse proportion to the amount of advertising and build-up it receives. Really good, important films don't need to saturate the airwaves with ads. They know they are good and that people will come see them from word of mouth. Only the mediocre or worse films get the huge media build-up because they know they'll only sucker you once to come see this stinker and so they pull out all the stops to make sure you'll see it once. The great ones know you'll be back because you want to see it again. |
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#2 |
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Guerrilla Ontologist
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Future
Posts: 42,696
Adopt-a-Bronco: Prima Materia |
I don't care about your propoganda, i firmly believe that our polluting the earth will speed up and accelearate such weather changes... on that scale... no - but on a worst case scenario..... nothing is out of the question.....
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#3 |
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Aaaayh!!!
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 2,371
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Overfishing Cod and Oysters combined with toxic waste in the oceans is doing more to harm the enviroment than driving my Chrysler to work.
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#4 |
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Cheeky Bastards
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: The Backside of the Internet
Posts: 29,940
Adopt-a-Bronco: Chris Harris |
I saw a study done about global warming and the climactic changes in the history of the Earth and IF we do go into an Ice Age again, its likely that it is part of the NATURAL processes of Earth's climactic cycle. For a while now scientists have believed that we are in a warm period of an Ice Age but are in fact still IN an Ice Age. When the global converyor belt (the Oceanic Current system) is shut down which it is want to do every so often in a natural cycle, the ice age cometh.
Ice Ages aren't exactly a bad thing. THe last ice age spurred the growth of human technological advancements in Europe far faster than in other parts of the world. New tools, techniques for adapting to cold weather living and shelters were developed to cope with the cold weather. Will it hurt the global economy? Certainly it will but there is little to NOTHING we can do about it since it is part of the NATURAL cycle of Earth's weather. For my source I quote The Discovery networks which are owned by the very liberal BBC. They step by step went through the historical evidence of the shift between warm periods and Ice Ages and found the correlation to be STRIKINGLY similar to the current pattern of global weather changes occuring right now. The temperature will go up slowly for a period of time and then within a short time following the Ice Age comes. Now I cant say if any or all of it is true because this is just what I saw on the program and I didnt do the research myself so take it how you will but the brightest scientists in their field gave the report so I tend to believe it. |
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#5 |
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Guerrilla Ontologist
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Future
Posts: 42,696
Adopt-a-Bronco: Prima Materia |
hey guys,
also this is a movie for ENTERTAINMENT! I mean come 'on, it's not a documentary and even so - it's an AT WORST scenario - But i do belive that man's pollution has spend up and helped create conditions for accelerating and creating extremes for the climate. Do i think it's part natural, yes - do i believe that due to the industrialized nations (and ones that have less pollution control than ours) create a large trigger for such things. But for those moveon.org people using the movie for their cause, i piss on them... for the neo-cons trying to argue that this movie is fiction, yes - SCIENCE FICTION! It took an extreme - and made a disaster movie out of it - remember this type of stuff when armageddon came out about a large astroid!? Derp! |
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