The scientific community has become VERY politicized. Many who go against the grain are blacklisted and unemployed. I have friends in meteorology who can’t even question the narrative.

That’s not science.

You’ve even proven my point by saying “…..if you say this….this conversation is over.”

GOOD science ALWAYS asks questions. No name calling, but we see a lot of that.

Dr William Gray, one of the most respected meteorologists and professor at CSU studied the data intensely. (He’s passed away now).

He gave numerous tropical weather lectures and occasionally he would politely say that he could find no evidence of anthropogenic warming.

You can find one of his papers “The physical flaws of the global warming theory and deep ocean circulation changes as the primary climate driver” at tropical.atmos.colostate.edu

Science isn’t emotional. Media and politics made it emotional because there’s SERIOUS money to be scammed….I mean made.

I worked in the Joint Typhoon Warning Center with some of the top climatologist in the world.

I’m old enough to remember when the narrative was acid rain, global cooling, global warming, notice how they moved the goal posts? NY was supposed to be under water by now.

Here’s one that will blow your mind. OIL DOES NOT COME FROM DINOSAURS. It’s not a fossil fuel.

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Me saying, “this conversation is over if you agree with either of the above” is not an example of politicizing anything, as you have alleged.

To repeat, the “either of the above” was my request that your confirm your extraordinary claim that either:

1. over 50% of ALL scientists don’t believe in climate change, or

2. over 50% of climate scientists specifically are lying in order to remain employed.

Again, you said “most scientists don’t believe the hoax.” Rather than answering, you changed to state that you have friends who can’t question the narrative. “Most of my friends think something” is not evidence. It’s anecdotal. Regardless, I agree with you that good science is about remaining open to questions.

So, let me ask you these questions:

1. What do you think about habitat loss and over-harvesting driven primarily by our global food system are the dominant threats to wildlife populations around the world?

2. What do you think about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch?

3. What do you think is causing species (plants, animals, insects) and wildlife degradation to the tune of 73% over the last 50 years?

Over harvesting is real. Monoculture and pesticides are the wrong approach.

The pacific has a trash problem, for certain.

Human greed is the root issue. Power too.

We are not great stewards of the planet.

But short of nuclear, we can’t raise the temperature of the planet. The earth, atmosphere and water cycle act as a self-regulating terrarium. It is arrogant to think we can raise the temperature of the planet.

But we can agree to disagree. That’s okay.

You saying, “this conversation is over if you agree with either of the above” is emotional.

It demonstrates the typical, closed minded echo chamber of left agenda.

Science is not emotional.

That’s not emotional, my dude. It’s me setting a limitation on how much of your bullshit I’m willing to suffer.