KNEAT
Actually I was tired from driving all day and only read down the the start of the nuclear study. I just read it and can't say I agree with much of it.
Moltenmetal,
You can say "the greenhouse effect is a fact" until we all die, and without data that is far less ambiguous than I've seen to date (and I've looked very hard) I won't accept that "fact". I've actually seen a lot of data that supports the hypotheses that increasing CO2 in the atmosphere is a lagging indicator (i.e., a consequence of warming, not a cause) and always has been. Taking the tactic from the Intelligent Design guys and saying that the hypothesis that you "believe" is a "fact" over and over does not make it true any more than the data available data makes it true. What we have on this subject is manipulated data, outrageous computer models, a series of unsupported hypotheses, and way too much rhetoric.
As to whether I have a right to an opinion on the climate, it seems to me that every air-breathing organism has that right. Certainly every tax payer that will be raped by Cap & Trade and Carbon Taxes has that right. I have every right to evaluate the data in the public record and form my own opinions on its quality, level of internal consistency, and whether it leads to the conclusions that the authors have drawn from it. In fact, the API paid me a considerable amount of money last year to write a series of papers on an EPA regulation of the upstream Oil & Gas industry that included an attempt by the EPA to slip in limitations on "greenhouse gases" to a VOC regulation. The API thought I was qualified and paid me to do it, that seems to make me a professional. Universally I find that the conclusions of the members of the religion of AGW do not hold water.
It is like I were to look in a mirror and conclude that I am fat. On closer examination I find that I have much more hair in my ears than I did when I was 40 years old. I could then form an hypotheses that increasing hair in your ears makes you fat. I didn't take careful measurements of my ear hair between age 40 and age 59, but I have some photographs that might be helpful. Careful examination of those photographs shows that at 2 or 3 intermediate points in my life I have had more ear hair than the photographs show for younger ages and have gotten progressively heavier in each photograph. Ergo, ear hair causes obesity and eating fats and sweets is not a factor. I think this dataset is complete and comprehensive proof that my hypotheses is a fact.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
"Belief" is the acceptance of an hypotheses in the absence of data.
"Prejudice" is having an opinion not supported by the preponderance of the data.
"Knowledge" is only found through the accumulation and analysis of data.