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Posted
6 hours ago, Nationalist said:

Indeed. A great job.

Enjoy. 😅

You're so proud of your ANACHONISTIC BEHAVIOR, like Trump is proud of his SEXUAL ASSAULT.

2 hours ago, Nationalist said:

Yes. Prosperity is always good.

Destroying the environment is NOT prosperity, dropout.

Posted
18 hours ago, Nationalist said:
18 hours ago, herbie said:

 

Yes...more windmills and mirrors...that's what we need..

If there was a valid reason other than sheer arseholiness yo make such a statement, it is beyond anyone's guess.
Condoning the worst and non-renewakle solution just to 'own' the easiest, cheapest and best  . Thinking of using coal over even natural gas is incredibly ignorant.

Posted
4 minutes ago, herbie said:

If there was a valid reason other than sheer arseholiness yo make such a statement, it is beyond anyone's guess.
Condoning the worst and non-renewakle solution just to 'own' the easiest, cheapest and best  . Thinking of using coal over even natural gas is incredibly ignorant.

Tell that to the miners and the electrical companies and the steel producers.

Oh wait...Hilary-Billary tried...and lost to Trump.

Oops...

What's ignorant is driving up inflation across the board, just to satisfy your irrational fear.

Its so lonely in m'saddle since m'horse died.

Posted (edited)
56 minutes ago, Nationalist said:

Tell that to the miners and the electrical companies and the steel producers.

Oh wait...Hilary-Billary tried...and lost to Trump.

Oops...

What's ignorant is driving up inflation across the board, just to satisfy your irrational fear.

You believing it's "irrational fear" when the scientists tell you it's REAL, is the definition of irrational.

Of course you never took science classes and you keep proving that HERE, dropout.

Edited by robosmith
Posted
1 minute ago, robosmith said:

You believing it's "irrational fear" when the scientists tell you it's REAL, is the definition of irrational.

Of course you never took science classes and you keep proving that HERE, dropout.

Which scientists?

Posted
1 hour ago, robosmith said:

You believing it's "irrational fear" when the scientists tell you it's REAL, is the definition of irrational.

Of course you never took science classes and you keep proving that HERE, dropout.

Scientists also tell me its not something we need to be terribly concerned with right now as well.

You sort o' ignored that part eh?

Its so lonely in m'saddle since m'horse died.

Posted
1 hour ago, Nationalist said:

Scientists also tell me its not something we need to be terribly concerned with right now as well.

You sort o' ignored that part eh?

When we have a huge intractible problem, concern is ALWAYS warranted.

No group of scientists has ever said what you allege.

You're just a cheapskate who doesn't want to do the wise thing now because it will cost you money NOW.

And you don't understand how tipping points can make it much more urgent in a flash.

But probably not in your lifetime, so you don't care. 🤮

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Posted

According to major scientific assessments  the effects of climate change will intensify dramatically within the next few decades due to increasing global temps, ice loss (earth's a/c) and sea-level rise. 

 Relax......... chance are the majority won't live long enough to see it.  (whew!)

 

Posted
11 hours ago, robosmith said:

When we have a huge intractible problem, concern is ALWAYS warranted.

No group of scientists has ever said what you allege.

You're just a cheapskate who doesn't want to do the wise thing now because it will cost you money NOW.

And you don't understand how tipping points can make it much more urgent in a flash.

But probably not in your lifetime, so you don't care. 🤮

Until they lose their home to wildfire or flooding, which can happen at any time now with today's extreme weather. Then they are the first people to beg for help and money to rebuild, which will not be available thanks to things like Trumps bullshit policies. As a matter of fact, it is already happening in many states as we speak. But don't tell them, everyone is suffering from TDS. Shrug. 

  • Like 1
Posted
8 hours ago, John Stone said:

According to major scientific assessments  the effects of climate change will intensify dramatically within the next few decades due to increasing global temps, ice loss (earth's a/c) and sea-level rise. 

 Relax......... chance are the majority won't live long enough to see it.  (whew!)

 

If you do a forensic examination of the arguments from people on here who believe themselves to be conservatives, you can kind of plot where this is going to go.

Short answer, a different direction. 

We will have fewer people, less environmental impact, Less reliance on fossil fuel, more automation, more interconnectedness. 

The imbalances We are seeing now by the beginning of the end of those old systems. The future will not be like 1955.  My father used to tell me that every dying Empire clings to nostalgia.  I think he meant culture, but today it seems to mean systems.

 

Looks like someone has a new patronizing catch phrase !

Michael Hardner

Posted
14 hours ago, robosmith said:

When we have a huge intractible problem, concern is ALWAYS warranted.

No group of scientists has ever said what you allege.

You're just a cheapskate who doesn't want to do the wise thing now because it will cost you money NOW.

And you don't understand how tipping points can make it much more urgent in a flash.

But probably not in your lifetime, so you don't care. 🤮

So go hide Sweetie. Try Alaska.

Its so lonely in m'saddle since m'horse died.

Posted
9 hours ago, John Stone said:

According to major scientific assessments  the effects of climate change will intensify dramatically within the next few decades due to increasing global temps, ice loss (earth's a/c) and sea-level rise. 

 Relax......... chance are the majority won't live long enough to see it.  (whew!)

 

Ya ya Ya. I know...'we all gonna die'.

Except we ain't.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/bobeccles/2025/08/19/heres-why-climate-change-is-actually-not-a-existential-crisis/

You have a choice. Run around claiming 'we all gonna die', or live within reality and get the Hell outta the way of common sense and prosperity. 

 

Its so lonely in m'saddle since m'horse died.

Posted
3 hours ago, Nationalist said:

So go hide Sweetie. Try Alaska.

No thanks, you're already in Alaska and it ain't big enough for both of us.

I'm not stupid enough to live in your icebox.

3 hours ago, Nationalist said:

Ya ya Ya. I know...'we all gonna die'.

Except we ain't.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/bobeccles/2025/08/19/heres-why-climate-change-is-actually-not-a-existential-crisis/

You have a choice. Run around claiming 'we all gonna die', or live within reality and get the Hell outta the way of common sense and prosperity. 

 

^lDIOT believes "forbes" is a peer reviewed climate journal. LMAO

Posted
3 hours ago, Nationalist said:

Ya ya Ya. I know...'we all gonna die'.

Except we ain't.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/bobeccles/2025/08/19/heres-why-climate-change-is-actually-not-a-existential-crisis/

You have a choice. Run around claiming 'we all gonna die', or live within reality and get the Hell outta the way of common sense and prosperity. 

 

Your author is NOT a climatologist, he is a sociologist.

Quote

Robert G. Eccles was a tenured professor at the Harvard Business School. He is now with Said Business School at the University of Oxford. He was the founding chairman of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board. The focus of his work is on the role companies and investors play in creating a sustainable world within the bounds of the fiduciary duty of their directors. This also means understanding the proper relationship between the public and the private sector. He explains this in his Harvard Business Review article "Moving Beyond ESG." Eccles graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. with degrees in pure mathematics and humanities and has a master and doctoral degree in sociology from Harvard University. 

From  the paper YOU CITE:

Quote

To be sure, the IPCC report discusses tipping points at various temperature levels—such as species extinction, irreversible biodiversity loss, and loss of ice sheets in Greenland and West Antarctic—and these are serious. But they don’t mean the end of human civilization. To be clear, I should also say that there is a great deal of uncertainty about tipping points. They are low probability/high impact scenarios which can be extremely consequential. They are “fat-tail” risks for which it is very difficult to assign a precise probability. These scenarios aren’t something to ignore

But YOU want to IGNORE THEM because you're CHEAP.  LMAO

 

Posted
3 hours ago, robosmith said:

Your author is NOT a climatologist, he is a sociologist.

From  the paper YOU CITE:

But YOU want to IGNORE THEM because you're CHEAP.  LMAO

 

Lol...so much for your cause, eh Tweenkie-Poo?

Its so lonely in m'saddle since m'horse died.

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