Your just being Polemic.
Nobody is that stupid to go against the worlds scientific community.

On Oct 3, 3:32 am, Gaar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Seems Biden is another of the "Al Gore" Loony Liberal that believe in
> Man Made Global Warming.
>
> On Oct 2, 11:32 am, Gaar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I have been going on about the lack of Solar activity for a while now,
> > and it strikes me that my first, and only, real Debate on that "other
> > Forum" was on Man Made Global Warming, so this seems to be something
> > that may help prove my side of this discussion, once and for all...
>
> >http://planetgore.nationalreview.com/post/?q=MWExNDZhOTM5YTUyOGRkMmJi...
>
> > Wednesday, October 01, 2008
>
> > More on Cosmic Rays   [Edward John Craig]
>
> > Hudson’s Dennis Avery in the Canada Free Press (hat-tip to Tom
> > Nelson).
>
> > A Canadian scientist says the largest known hole in the ozone will
> > occur over the South Pole in the next week. If that happens, it will
> > help us understand global warming.
>
> > Dr. Qing-Bin Lu, of Canada’s University of Waterloo, says NASA
> > satellites and laboratory measurements show cosmic rays are the real
> > cause of the seasonal hole in the earth’s ozone layer over the
> > Antarctic. Cosmic rays are tiny, invisible, high-energy particles from
> > exploding stars which constantly strike the earth — and people. Cosmic
> > rays probably cause some of our cancers, by altering the DNA inside
> > our bodies.
>
> > However, if Dr. Qing-Bin Lu and others are correct, they also are
> > connected to climate change. The number of cosmic rays hitting the
> > earth varies sharply based on the activity level of the sun and the
> > size of the magnetic wind it projects out into space. A weak sun means
> > a weak magnetic wind and more cosmic rays striking earth. Britain’s
> > BBC recently reported that the solar wind is now blowing at the
> > weakest rate in more than 50 years, and is also 13 percent cooler than
> > it was 15 years ago.
>
> > The ozone layer is important because it absorbs most of the sun’s high-
> > frequency ultraviolet light, protecting us from skin cancers and
> > cataracts. In the 1980s, eco-activists told us the hole in the
> > Antarctic ozone had been caused by man-made chemicals released from
> > the chlorofluorocarbons once used in our refrigerators and air
> > conditioners.
>
> > Fear of losing the ozone layer’s health protection led to the Montreal
> > Protocol, which has banned CFCs since 1989. But the ban failed to
> > change behavior of the ozone layer over the Antarctic.
>
> > Dr. Lu says that NASA satellites demonstrate that cosmic rays cause
> > drastic reactions in chlorine compounds inside clouds over the Polar
> > Regions. The satellite data now cover two full 11-year solar cycles,
> > from 1980–2007.
>
> > “This finding, combined with laboratory measurements, provides strong
> > evidence of the role of cosmic-ray-driven reactions in causing the
> > ozone hole, and resolves the mystery of why a large discrepancy
> > between the sunlight-related photochemical model and the observed
> > ozone depletion exists,” says Lu.
>
> > Cosmic rays are also connected to climate change. In 1998, Henrik
> > Svensmark of the Danish Space Research Institute filled a reaction
> > chamber with the earth’s mix of atmospheric gases, and turned on a UV
> > light to mimic the sun. He was amazed as the cosmic rays coming
> > through the building’s walls quickly filled the chamber with huge
> > numbers of microscopic, electrically charged droplets of water and
> > sulfuric acid — the “cloud seeds” that help create low, wet, cooling
> > clouds in the earth’s atmosphere. Since such clouds often cover 30
> > percent of the earth’s surface, they can play a crucial role in the
> > planet’s warming or cooling.
>
> > Currently, the World Meteorological Organization uses the
> > photochemical model to predict that the Antarctic springtime ozone
> > hole will increase by another 5–10 percent by 2020. In sharp contrast,
> > Dr. LU says the severest ozone loss will occur over the South Pole
> > this month — with another large ozone-triggered hole occurring around
> > 2019.
>
> > If the South Pole gets an ozone-hole maximum in the coming weeks, it
> > will strengthen the case for cosmic rays, and endorse a Modern Warming
> > driven by solar variations rather than human-emitted CO2. The solar
> > model is already endorsed by oxygen isotopes in ice cores from both
> > Greenland and the Antarctic, by microfossils in the sediments of nine
> > oceans and hundreds of lakes worldwide, and by cave stalagmites from
> > every continent plus New Zealand.
>
> > The case for a solar-driven climate is also strengthened by a drop in
> > global temperatures over the past 18 months: The temperature decline
> > had been forecast by the sunspot index since 2000, but was not
> > predicted by the global climate models.
>
> > 10/01 08:30 AM
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