When the hell did I say that ?
Except the guy I'm replying to, it seems he can't admit that the climate changes outside our intervention.
Right here, and a few more times earlier on. I think what claes, and myself, and some others are saying, is that you can't have your cake and eat it too.
The scientific consensus about periodic temperature changes on a long term scale is just that. Nobody I think is contesting that fact - its pretty hard to deny ice ages and all that. The contest is about how
much influence humans have on that curve. You've just admitted that there is
some influence to be had. This is also what claes, I believe, is saying.
Its about what your starting position is, more so than the actual argument. The idea that we can't influence that curve 'enough' for anything to matter, is a nihilistic view, and if we place that in the perspective of the actual human output and effect on the Earth and its ecosystems - all of them
not present in the same (long term) historical curve we all believe in - and the way this ramps up and correlates with shorter term temperature increases AND accompanying effects on ecosystems that cascade on, its very hard to deny what we're doing doesn't at least amount to something substantial.
In the end I think it all comes down to how much belief we feel we can place in human ingenuity to keep systems going and still not blow shit up.
Or, put differently: do you choose the path of least resistance and keep doing what you always did, or do you try your hardest to make a change to improve.