I thought you guys were all in favor of Darwinism and survival of the fittest.


________________________________
From: lelandj <[email protected]>
To: ProFox Email List <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2011 11:05 PM
Subject: Re: [OT] Global warming is here

On 07/21/2011 05:51 PM, Gary Jeurink wrote:
> OR we WON'T add those billion to the population because by then, the climate
> changes and resulting food shortages and probable natural disasters will
> trim the herd a bunch...

Yeap, but the herd might be trimmed to zero, (eg extinction).

Regards,

LelandJ

> -----Original Message-----
> From: lelandj [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2011 5:06 PM
> To: ProFox Email List
> Subject: Re: [OT] Global warming is here
>
> On 07/21/2011 03:19 PM, Michael Madigan wrote:
>> Who can take seriously the ramblings of a man too lazy to proofread his
> work?
>
> Like you would really take anyone seriously that didn't agree with your
> position on an issue.  That's rich.  LOL
>
> Regards,
>
> LelandJ
>
>> ________________________________
>> From: lelandj<[email protected]>
>> To: ProFox Email List<[email protected]>
>> Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2011 2:05 PM
>> Subject: Re: [OT] Global warming is here
>>
>> So What.  Your one line zingers, usually in the form of insults, add
>> little to a topic being discussed, and aren't exactly literary
>> treasures, but sometime they are hilarious.  LOL
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> LelandJ
>>
>> On 07/21/2011 11:22 AM, Michael Madigan wrote:
>>> Ricardo writes better than you.
>>>
>>>
>>> ________________________________
>>> From: lelandj<[email protected]>
>>> To: ProFox Email List<[email protected]>
>>> Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2011 8:43 AM
>>> Subject: Re: [OT] Global warming is here
>>>
>>> The human spices has been too successful to the point of overrun the
>>> planet with more population than the earth has resources to sustain. We
>>> have destroyed delicate echo system, included plant and animal life,
>>> essential to our long term well being. By the year 2021 we will add
>>> another one billion human inhabitants to our plant.
>>>
>>> What time is it? It's one second before twelve. LOL
>>>
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-QA2rkpBSY
>>>
>>> See article below that appeared in the New York Times yesterday.
>>>
>>> #----------------------------------------------------------
>>>
>>> Op-Ed Contributor
>>> Sizzle Factor for a Restless Climate
>>> By HEIDI CULLEN
>>> Published: July 19, 2011
>>>
>>>
>>> ENJOYING the heat wave? The answer is probably no if you live in
>>> Abilene, Tex., where temperatures have been at or above 100 degrees for
>>> 40 days this summer. It's been a little cooler in Savannah, Ga., where
>>> the mercury hit 90 or more for 56 days in a row. Texas, New Mexico and
>>> Oklahoma are coping with their driest nine-month stretch since 1895.
>>>
>>> Yes, it has been a very hot summer after one of the most extreme-weather
>>> springs on record. It's time to face the fact that the weather isn't
>>> what it used to be.
>>>
>>> Every 10 years, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
>>> recalculates what it calls climate "normals," 30-year averages of
>>> temperature and precipitation for about 7,500 locations across the
>>> United States. The latest numbers, released earlier this month, show
>>> that the climate of the last 10 years was about 1.5 degrees warmer than
>>> the climate of the 1970s, and the warmest since the first decade of the
>>> last century. Temperatures were, on average, 0.5 degrees warmer from
>>> 1981 to 2010 than they were from 1971 to 2000, and the average annual
>>> temperatures for all of the lower 48 states have gone up.
>>>
>>> For climate geeks like me, the new normals offer a fascinating and
>>> disturbing snapshot of a restless climate. The numbers don't take sides
>>> or point fingers. They acknowledge both powerful natural climate
>>> fluctuations as well as the steady drumbeat of warming caused by roughly
>>> seven billion people trying to live and prosper on a small planet,
>>> emitting heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the process.
>>>
>>> Even this seemingly modest shift in climate can mean a big change in
>>> weather. Shifting weather patterns influence energy demand, affect crop
>>> productivity and lead to weather-related disasters. In the United
>>> States, in any given year, routine weather events like a hot day or a
>>> heavy downpour can cost the economy as much as $485 billion in crop
>>> losses, construction delays and travel disruptions, a recent study by
>>> the National Center for Atmospheric Research found. In other words, that
>>> extra 1.5 degrees might be more than we can afford.
>>>
>>> And while the new normals don't point to a cause, climate science does.
>>> Drawing from methods used in epidemiology, a field of climate research
>>> called "detection and attribution" tests how human actions like burning
>>> fossil fuels affect climate and increase the odds of extreme weather
> events.
>>> Heat-trapping pollution at least doubled the likelihood of the infamous
>>> European heat wave that killed more than 30,000 people during the summer
>>> of 2003, according to a study in the journal Nature in 2004. And if we
>>> don't ease our grip on the climate, summers like that one will likely
>>> happen every other year by 2040, the study warned. Human actions have
>>> warmed the climate on all seven continents, and as a result all weather
>>> is now occurring in an environment that bears humanity's signature, with
>>> warmer air and seas and more moisture than there was just a few decades
>>> ago, resulting in more extreme weather.
>>>
>>> The snapshots of climate history from NOAA can also provide a glimpse of
>>> what's in store locally in the future. Using climate models, we can
>>> project what future Julys might look like. For example, by 2050,
>>> assuming we continue to pump heat-trapping pollution into our atmosphere
>>> at a rate similar to today's, New Yorkers can expect the number of July
>>> days exceeding 90 degrees to double, and those exceeding 95 degrees to
>>> roughly triple. Sweltering days in excess of 100 degrees, rare now, will
>>> become a regular feature of the Big Apple's climate in the 2050s.
>>>
>>> The next time NOAA calculates its new temperature normals will be in
>>> 2021 - when there will be about another billion people on the planet.
>>> Lady Gaga may no longer be hot. But the climate almost surely will be.
>>>
>>> Heidi Cullen, a scientist at Climate Central, a journalism and research
>>> organization, is the author of "The Weather of the Future: Heat Waves,
>>> Extreme Storms, and Other Scenes From a Climate-Changed Planet."
>>>
>>>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/20/opinion/20cullen.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadli
> nes&emc=tha212
>>> or
>>>
>>> http://tinyurl.com/3dvnh9p
>>>
>>> #-----------------------------------------------
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>>
>>> LelandJ
>>>
>>>
>>> On 07/21/2011 01:59 AM, Micha[excessive quoting removed by server]

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