I will postulate that scientists really don't KNOW how long the changes took in the past. They will proclaim theories, but it seems that nearly everything about the past is measured by the yardstick of observable changes happening today. In other words, if a beach is eroding at a tenth of an inch today, then evidence of a beach having eroded in the past is merely extrapolated out using that same formula. It PRESUMES no other changes have taken place compared to what is happening right now. Catastrophic changes to the earth appear to be a forbidden topic, therefore ALL changes are measured in "millions of years" in order to sidestep any allowed discussions otherwise. If a beach eroded 300 FEET, then by the currently approved yard stick of today, that erosion had to have taken 3000 years to happen.
I do have to chuckle reading about stuff like the "big bang" theory. Probably pretty much like bacteria trying to explain a human body they are living within.
Sorry, but no one can authoritatively claim that any change seen today has NEVER happened before in the past. Simply because THEY weren't THERE then and have nothing beyond theories to analyze the past. There is ample evidence that catastrophic changes happened to our planet and did so RAPIDLY. Why science is reluctant to admit this is puzzling, to say the least. The holy grail of determining the age of anything on this planet is carbon-14 dating, isn't it? Why is it being studiously ignored that there are influences that can invalidate this process? Carbon-14 relies on "constants" that really have not been constant throughout the history of this planet. Heck, I read an article a year or three ago talking about the output of the sun having changed such that it is already skewing carbon-14 readings because today's "yardstick" is different than yesterday's. And our sun is supposedly known to be a "variable star". A HINT maybe?
Sorry, but I am just not buying into the government telling me that by instituting a carbon tax (and yet another bureaucracy that will result) is going to help in any way except line their own pockets. Heck, it wasn't all that long ago that the very same scientists yelping about global warming were yelping about a rapidly approaching ice age. But I guess that's what happens when you look at data points on a graph that might encompass a couple of hundred years (at best) and try to extrapolate that as a change that must maintain a linear path unless the government steps in and DOES something.
Is SOMETHING going on? Sure it is. Is the climate getting warmer? Yes, apparently in SOME places. Are we being given all the facts? Of course not. Can the government really do something about it to change the environment? Oh, are we talking about the very same government that can't even figure out what "budget" and "spending caps" mean and are already driving this country into bankruptcy? Puhleeze.....
I do have to chuckle reading about stuff like the "big bang" theory. Probably pretty much like bacteria trying to explain a human body they are living within.
Sorry, but no one can authoritatively claim that any change seen today has NEVER happened before in the past. Simply because THEY weren't THERE then and have nothing beyond theories to analyze the past. There is ample evidence that catastrophic changes happened to our planet and did so RAPIDLY. Why science is reluctant to admit this is puzzling, to say the least. The holy grail of determining the age of anything on this planet is carbon-14 dating, isn't it? Why is it being studiously ignored that there are influences that can invalidate this process? Carbon-14 relies on "constants" that really have not been constant throughout the history of this planet. Heck, I read an article a year or three ago talking about the output of the sun having changed such that it is already skewing carbon-14 readings because today's "yardstick" is different than yesterday's. And our sun is supposedly known to be a "variable star". A HINT maybe?
Sorry, but I am just not buying into the government telling me that by instituting a carbon tax (and yet another bureaucracy that will result) is going to help in any way except line their own pockets. Heck, it wasn't all that long ago that the very same scientists yelping about global warming were yelping about a rapidly approaching ice age. But I guess that's what happens when you look at data points on a graph that might encompass a couple of hundred years (at best) and try to extrapolate that as a change that must maintain a linear path unless the government steps in and DOES something.
Is SOMETHING going on? Sure it is. Is the climate getting warmer? Yes, apparently in SOME places. Are we being given all the facts? Of course not. Can the government really do something about it to change the environment? Oh, are we talking about the very same government that can't even figure out what "budget" and "spending caps" mean and are already driving this country into bankruptcy? Puhleeze.....