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JackSarfatti
Posted: Fri May 12, 2006 11:03 pm
Joined: 06 Oct 2005 Posts: 602 Location: Toon Town
6.5 billion people now - cannot be sustained.

Upcoming NPR
Fri, May 12, 2006 -- 8:00pm

Global Warming: Field Notes From a Catastrophe -- New Yorker climate
journalist Elizabeth Kolbert offers her take on whether increasingly
fierce hurricanes, changing animal migration patterns, and disappearing
glaciers signal that we're headed for global meltdown. She shares what
she's learned from camping on ice fields in Greenland and talking to
natives in the Artic Circle -- the people who are watching their worlds
disappear -- in her attempt to unearth as much information as she can
about climate change and man's role in making the planet a bit too warm
for comfort.
http://www.kqed.org/programs/program-landing.jsp?progID=RD16

35 foot sea level rise, drought in agriculture heartlands - end of
civilization - most people will not survive. Eskimo ecology first to go
- then comes the rest of us.

Only hope is my Metric Engineering SMI^2LE.

Better hope http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0602022 and that ET is here

or it's all over by end of 21st Century -- most likely.
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Gib Bogle
Posted: Fri May 12, 2006 11:15 pm
Guest
Would global cooling be better?
Dan Bloomquist
Posted: Sat May 13, 2006 12:48 am
Guest
Jack Sarfatti wrote:
Quote:
6.5 billion people now - cannot be sustained.

Upcoming NPR
Fri, May 12, 2006 -- 8:00pm

I listen to npr, I'll go back as I missed it.

You know, a dear friend cut an article from SFGate a dozen years ago
about you and gave it to me.

Quote:
Only hope is my Metric Engineering SMI^2LE.

Better hope http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0602022 and that ET is here

or it's all over by end of 21st Century -- most likely.

You seem to be coming around. There are on 'observable' ETs and the
human condition is so easily disputed in the philosophical realm.

Real world, humans treat the planet's resources like they are limitless,
but they are not.

That old saying, 'Mother nature doesn't care what we think...'

Best, Dan.

--
"We need an energy policy that encourages consumption"
George W. Bush.

"Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue, but it is not a
sufficient basis for a sound, comprehensive energy policy."
Vice President Dick Cheney
George
Posted: Sat May 13, 2006 6:20 am
Guest
"Dan Bloomquist" <public21@lakeweb.com> wrote in message
news:Rqe9g.774$oa1.432@news02.roc.ny...
Quote:


Jack Sarfatti wrote:
6.5 billion people now - cannot be sustained.

Upcoming NPR
Fri, May 12, 2006 -- 8:00pm

I listen to npr, I'll go back as I missed it.

You know, a dear friend cut an article from SFGate a dozen years ago
about you and gave it to me.

Only hope is my Metric Engineering SMI^2LE.

Better hope http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0602022 and that ET is here

or it's all over by end of 21st Century -- most likely.

You seem to be coming around. There are on 'observable' ETs and the human
condition is so easily disputed in the philosophical realm.

Real world, humans treat the planet's resources like they are limitless,
but they are not.

That old saying, 'Mother nature doesn't care what we think...'

Best, Dan.

--
"We need an energy policy that encourages consumption"
George W. Bush.

"Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue, but it is not a
sufficient basis for a sound, comprehensive energy policy."
Vice President Dick Cheney

Mother nature doesn't care one way or the other, and I suspect that any
alleged ETs feel the same way.

george
Dan Bloomquist
Posted: Sat May 13, 2006 10:10 am
Guest
George wrote:
Quote:
"Dan Bloomquist" <public21@lakeweb.com> wrote in message
news:Rqe9g.774$oa1.432@news02.roc.ny...


Jack Sarfatti wrote:

6.5 billion people now - cannot be sustained.

Upcoming NPR
Fri, May 12, 2006 -- 8:00pm

I listen to npr, I'll go back as I missed it.

You know, a dear friend cut an article from SFGate a dozen years ago
about you and gave it to me.


Only hope is my Metric Engineering SMI^2LE.

Better hope http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0602022 and that ET is here

or it's all over by end of 21st Century -- most likely.

You seem to be coming around. There are on 'observable' ETs and the human
condition is so easily disputed in the philosophical realm.

Real world, humans treat the planet's resources like they are limitless,
but they are not.

That old saying, 'Mother nature doesn't care what we think...'

Best, Dan.

--
"We need an energy policy that encourages consumption"
George W. Bush.

"Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue, but it is not a
sufficient basis for a sound, comprehensive energy policy."
Vice President Dick Cheney


Mother nature doesn't care one way or the other, and I suspect that any
alleged ETs feel the same way.

The above should have read, 'There are no 'observable'...

Meaning that even after the 50 years Jung wrote about it, UFOs remain an
attribute of humanness, a soft science if science at all...

Quote:
george

Best, Dan.

--
"We need an energy policy that encourages consumption"
George W. Bush.

"Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue, but it is not a
sufficient basis for a sound, comprehensive energy policy."
Vice President Dick Cheney
Nog
Posted: Sat May 13, 2006 6:29 pm
Guest
Jack Sarfatti wrote:

Quote:
6.5 billion people now - cannot be sustained.

Upcoming NPR
Fri, May 12, 2006 -- 8:00pm

Global Warming: Field Notes From a Catastrophe -- New Yorker climate
journalist Elizabeth Kolbert offers her take on whether increasingly
fierce hurricanes, changing animal migration patterns, and disappearing
glaciers signal that we're headed for global meltdown. She shares what
she's learned from camping on ice fields in Greenland and talking to
natives in the Artic Circle -- the people who are watching their worlds
disappear -- in her attempt to unearth as much information as she can
about climate change and man's role in making the planet a bit too warm
for comfort.
http://www.kqed.org/programs/program-landing.jsp?progID=RD16

35 foot sea level rise, drought in agriculture heartlands - end of
civilization - most people will not survive. Eskimo ecology first to go
- then comes the rest of us.

Only hope is my Metric Engineering SMI^2LE.

Better hope http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0602022 and that ET is here

or it's all over by end of 21st Century -- most likely.

We already survived global warming you idiot. The Mammoth and sabertooth did
not. It was a lot colder 10k years ago. It has warmed a hell of a lot more
than 1 degree. Warming will continue wheather or not humans are present,
until the next ice age. Environmental morons think they have discovered
something new?
Joseph Hertzlinger
Posted: Mon May 15, 2006 12:52 am
Guest
Global warming can be easily reversed with a little nuclear winter.

On Sat, 13 May 2006 04:03:10 GMT, Jack Sarfatti <sarfatti@pacbell.net>
wrote:

Quote:
35 foot sea level rise, drought in agriculture heartlands

Won't they be replaced by other agriculture heartlands?

--
http://hertzlinger.blogspot.com
Dan Bloomquist
Posted: Wed May 17, 2006 1:25 pm
Guest
I liked this one, touching...

The Silver Lining
http://www.beyondpeak.com/scenarios/grandnana.html

All of them at:
http://www.beyondpeak.com/scenarios/winners.html

A letter from 2101:
http://www.museletter.com/archive/110.html

--
"We need an energy policy that encourages consumption"
George W. Bush.

"Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue, but it is not a
sufficient basis for a sound, comprehensive energy policy."
Vice President Dick Cheney
 
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