New Member
✔️ HL Verified
💻 Oldtimer
- Joined
- May 28, 2006
- Messages
- 1,094
- Best answers
- 0
I understand your use of Katrina, but the Tsunami is a geological occurance, not a meteorological one. An strong earhquake gave way and there was a Tsunami. It has nothing to do with the temperature of the air but of pressure between tectonic plates.
Also, I understand that the oil industry is attempting to monopolize the business, but democracy can easily overthrow such a thing. Its long since time that the government starts regulating gas prices and pushing through some bills. I've heard people say the government is unwilling to let the oil industry die because they supply a large sum of government funding. I say its oil's last death-throws before the people put it down for good. We don't need more Rockafellers. This is America, and the people will always have the power, no matter what corrupt officials hold offices that can prevent these things. And certainly the Bush Administration can help ween us off oil for good.
As for Kyoto, I disagree that .04 degrees in a century is a valid reason to sign onto such a radical program. You might as well be firing a beebee gun at a freight train. It is slow and steady measures towards greener lifestyles and technology that will curb Co2 emmisions. And thankfully, the co2 doesn't remain in the air forever. Every time it rains hard the air is cleansed so much you breathe it in like mountian air. It clear the senses and improves thinking clarity. Why do you think our best ideas come to us in the shower?
I would know this to be true. I live East of Los Angeles, and the horrible smog and filthy factory emissions are blown from LA by coastal winds into our valley, where the heat traps it. The visibility from my home to the mountains to the North is often not even halfway during a heatwave. Basically, what should be LA's problem becomes ours. But every time it rains, all of it is cleansed from the air. The mountains are once more visible at crystal clarity. Trust me when I say its nothing permanent. Once we begin using alternate technologies for automobiles alone, we will notice an astronomical change in the air quality and whatever human impacts (if any) on heating the planet will be entirely reversed. Therefore, true or not, I don't worry.
EDIT: Oh, and I don't know where you heard that Mars was once Earthlike. It is too frigid there for water to exist in liquid form, and the atmosphere is extremely thin. To make Mars hospitable for life and liquid water, you would be required to thicken the atmosphere with greenhouse gases. Mars isn't tainted by too much greenhouse effect, but by not nearly enough. Its a rusty red rock.
Also, I understand that the oil industry is attempting to monopolize the business, but democracy can easily overthrow such a thing. Its long since time that the government starts regulating gas prices and pushing through some bills. I've heard people say the government is unwilling to let the oil industry die because they supply a large sum of government funding. I say its oil's last death-throws before the people put it down for good. We don't need more Rockafellers. This is America, and the people will always have the power, no matter what corrupt officials hold offices that can prevent these things. And certainly the Bush Administration can help ween us off oil for good.
As for Kyoto, I disagree that .04 degrees in a century is a valid reason to sign onto such a radical program. You might as well be firing a beebee gun at a freight train. It is slow and steady measures towards greener lifestyles and technology that will curb Co2 emmisions. And thankfully, the co2 doesn't remain in the air forever. Every time it rains hard the air is cleansed so much you breathe it in like mountian air. It clear the senses and improves thinking clarity. Why do you think our best ideas come to us in the shower?
I would know this to be true. I live East of Los Angeles, and the horrible smog and filthy factory emissions are blown from LA by coastal winds into our valley, where the heat traps it. The visibility from my home to the mountains to the North is often not even halfway during a heatwave. Basically, what should be LA's problem becomes ours. But every time it rains, all of it is cleansed from the air. The mountains are once more visible at crystal clarity. Trust me when I say its nothing permanent. Once we begin using alternate technologies for automobiles alone, we will notice an astronomical change in the air quality and whatever human impacts (if any) on heating the planet will be entirely reversed. Therefore, true or not, I don't worry.
EDIT: Oh, and I don't know where you heard that Mars was once Earthlike. It is too frigid there for water to exist in liquid form, and the atmosphere is extremely thin. To make Mars hospitable for life and liquid water, you would be required to thicken the atmosphere with greenhouse gases. Mars isn't tainted by too much greenhouse effect, but by not nearly enough. Its a rusty red rock.