Message from @Ubo
Discord ID: 546729836526174238
maybe they lost the way to know like nasa lost teh tech
ugh
thats a persistent myth
i think carbon tax is an excuse to fund the new world order
NASA didnt 'lose the tech', NASA lost the ability to replicate pieces of technology that are by all means ridiculously outdated, just like volkswagen cant churn out a 1969 beetle any more, and moog doesnt have the tools to build a 1969 system 55
well... it will happen eventually anyways... like every single time before
Get back on topic
If we cant keep on topics in daily debates ill just stop doing it
Science has been wrong initially before, the way we learn things is initially we make a prediction. Take the concept of plate tectonics, our theory had holes in it to begin with, but as more evidence was gathered the theory was improved until we have out current understanding today. Back in the 60s the majority of reports supported the fact that temperatures were rising due to greenhouses.
@Normal Man aye
science is a method of acquiring and perfecting knowledge, not that knowledge itself
that science is willing to change when it finds itself proven wrong should be taken as a token of its reliability (and the other way around: when the academic establishment maintains a position in the face of increasingly overwhelming evidence, thats usually a sign that something is being covered up or suppressed)
What caused climate-changes before?
Solar activity
Mainly
It then invoked a positive or negative feedback loop
short-term climate changes, like the pleistocene alternations of glacials and interglacials, are usually the straightforward result of solar cycles
Issue is this
Solar output isn't the driving factor
long-term ones, like the Cretaceous hothouse, usually have similar causes, but then set off a feedback loop: the changing circumstances affect the biological production of co2, which then leads to changes that last longer and are much more dramatic
human-made climate change is similarly concerning not necessarily because we as a species are having such an insurmountable effect, but because we are setting feedback loops in motion (like the acidification of the oceans) that can lead to absolutely disastrous consequences in just a couple decades
here in the netherlands, which as you might know is partially under sea level, we are already making serious plans to abandon the western half of the country, because our waterworks just cant handle the rising sea levels
I like global-warming tbh
is always to cold here
and the land rises still from last ice-age here
so no probs w that
The issue is that it won't benefit you, look at the Sahara, it's expanding and taking over farm land. There will be a massive migration crisis when people cannot feed themselves, or when they run out of water. Where will they go? They'll go to temperate, first world countries.
there's just to many ppl in there
aye
the climate problem's role in the refugee crisis is underappreciated
Oh shit, this is flat-earth related topic also!:
"Ice, water and mantle rocks have mass, and as they move around, they exert a gravitational pull on other masses towards them. Thus, the gravity field, which is sensitive to all mass on the surface and within the Earth, is affected by the redistribution of ice/melted water on the surface of the Earth and the flow of mantle rocks within.[17]
Today, more than 6000 years after the last deglaciation terminated, the flow of mantle material back to the glaciated area causes the overall shape of the Earth to become less oblate. This change in the topography of Earth's surface affects the long-wavelength components of the gravity field.[citation needed] "
So the ice makes the earth flat ๐
lol
its saying _less_ oblate though <:thonkdonk:392836776852717578>
oblate1
Dictionary result for oblate
/หษbleษชt/
adjectiveGeometry
adjective: oblate
(of a spheroid) flattened at the poles.
So it makes it less flat ๐
aye
ye dat way ๐
Love how you kept the [Citation needed] in there too ๐
so do i.[citation needed]
it has some good parts anyhow.. "sea level change due to deglaciation of the last glacial maximum (postglacial sea level change), deformation of the land and ocean floor and other factors. Thus, to understand global warming from sea level change, one must be able to separate all these factors, especially postglacial rebound, since it is one of the leading factors"