Someone forgot to drink the global warming Kool Aid
From a book written by an environmentalist:
Is fighting pollution good? Yep. Is using less fossile fuel good? Yep. Is acting like the Earth will be destroyed if we don’t start living like we did before we starting using fire because we’ve fallen for a scam based on pseudo-science a good idea? Nope.
Also:
Is Wingham a flake, a denier in league with flat-earthers? Only if you think the chair of the department of space and climate physics and head of earth sciences at University College London, and a member of the Earth Observation Experts Group, among other qualifications, qualifies for such a label.
The most intriguing part of The Deniers is the attempt by dozens of credible scientists to point out what should be common-sense obvious: The sun might affect Earth’s climate.
“We understand the greenhouse effect pretty well,” Solomon writes, “we know little about how the sun — our main source of energy driving the climate — affects climate change.”
But the IPCC refuses to even consider the sun’s influence on Earth’s climate — it conceives of its mission only to investigate possible man-made effects upon climate. But that’s akin to a hit-and-run investigation where police rule out all cars except one model before they even question witnesses.