- Moderator
- #21
Bogger
Bogger of the GBCA
Going to start reading now. I appreciate the link.
I'll openly say, that I truly believe you can find something on the internet that supports any argument you want. I do not know everything for sure. My belief in rising CO2 levels, and climate change is based on mostly anecdotal evidence/personal experiences over a relatively short lifespan. I guess I'm just tired of being told to "research things" because what it boils down to is that you can research until you are blue in the face and two different reasonably intelligent people, can draw vastly different conclusions based on whichever sources they choose to trust. How do we decide who to trust in this day and age of the internet, when anyone can spin up a blog and start talking. *shrug*
I'll take a rich d-bag actor such as DiCaprio over say BP or Exxon, any fawking day of the week. In my mind, DiCaprio has nothing to gain by spouting off, he is already rich, and set for life while the BP's of the world have everything to lose.
Actually he does have lots to gain, as does Gore, Suzuki, Young and Travolta. They are all heavily invested in alternative energy. If coal/oil/gas are phased out and we are forced to get ALL of our energy from alternative/renewable sources the loser is the consumer and the winners are the investors. I'm not saying that alternative energies are bad, they are part of the solution but the technologies are not there yet..... I have a huge issue with the amount of batteries that are required to store solar power, the raw materials and manufacturing processes required to produce the large windmills (by some accounts leaving a larger carbon footprint than burning coal oldschool). Clean coal is still dirty yes but it is 100x better than it was 20 years ago and so on and so forth.....
I agree anything can be proven/disproven using selected information and stats, the truth is difficult to find. I'm not 100% sure of anything but if I had to guess I'd bet that climate change is a natural process that we can not impact nor control. One volcano and/or forest fire can create more CO2 than a year of automobile use or 100 years of oil sand development (so I've read). If carbon credits are the way to go moving forward than Canada should be owed huge by the rest of the developed nations, due to our sparse population and vast forests we remove more CO2 than we produce.