Oh my... January 2023 even colder than December 2022... 0.04° C below the 1991-2020 average. January 2023 colder than January 1988... despite 50% of manmade CO2. 35 years of CO2 emissions... and colder. CO2 warming is a hoax, people. drroyspencer.com/2023/02/uah-gl…
@JunkScience @RobertD85962257 Agreed, but “50% of manmade CO2”? Twaddle. Why spread *their* propaganda in the middle of your own argument?
@Versati51739827 @JunkScience Yes, I didn’t spot that.
@RobertD85962257 @Versati51739827 @JunkScience Even he can't deny that we have driven the 50% increase.
@UseTechForGood @RobertD85962257 @JunkScience But I do! “We’ve driven” is emotive, not objective. “We’ve added too” might be more honest. OK, trying to reveal the relevance of our CO2 is laudable. However (yet again!) the “isotope/trend line” argument died horribly when shown in true % scale. It too was a despicable LIE.
@Versati51739827 @RobertD85962257 @JunkScience It's objective. There is no 'true' percentage scale. What you are referring to is a denier squashing the y-axis down to nothing while ignoring the significance of what these changes actually represent, as they do with global average temps, ignoring the shifting distribution.
@UseTechForGood @RobertD85962257 @JunkScience “There is no 'true' percentage scale.” Really? Thankfully, being a “denier”, it’s easier to disprove than prove any theory, as it takes only one elemental assumption (or impossibility) to destroy any equation. Ie. Effect of man’s (3%?) annual CO2 contribution as a % of all.
@Versati51739827 @RobertD85962257 @JunkScience Yes, the scale is appropriate to observe the change and the change is significant. You wouldn't measure human body temperature on a y axis of 0 to 100 C. Human emissions are enough to push total emissions over total absorbed causing the consistent and rapid increase.
@Versati51739827 @RobertD85962257 @JunkScience Look at it like this, if you maintain your weight at 2500 calories, it doesn't matter if the sugar you put in your coffees is only 5% of your total calories at 125 calories. A 125 calorie surplus for 365 days would equate to 13 pounds of fat gained every year. 5% can do that.
@UseTechForGood @RobertD85962257 @JunkScience Metaphorically 100% true, as a mathematical fact. But can a slow increase in CO2 AND temp. honestly be attributed to man’s tiny % contribution, or is that hugely overshadowed by a tiny % increase in Nature’s 97% (minimum) CO2 contribution, quite possibly driven by temperature?