Global warming or just a cycle?

@jmhall (143)
United States
September 4, 2008 11:01am CST
I was listening to the radio early this moring and they were talking about the weather and some climate guru was going on about how over the past decade or two the weather and changes in it can all be blamed on global warming. I am not so sure that all the weather changes and differences are as a result of global warming. I find fault in this arguement for one thing 10-20 years is not very long when speaking about weather patterns when the planet itself is so much older. The recording for accurate climate info is only a fraction of the age of the planet. How are we to know that the weather changes are just not patterns that happen in nature. I have seen and heard other information that points to changes in our planets weather that are just as extreme as we are having today, so who is to say that it is so wrong to have these changes occur. I know people worry about the world changing and peoples enviroments changing and animals diening off, but we live in an ever changing world and things are not going to always remain the same whether they be changes for the good or the bad, just depends on your perspective. I m not saying that man has not made some of the changes, but are we not apart of nature?
1 person likes this
3 responses
• United States
4 Sep 08
I can't think what the name of the people who studied it is it is some government thing but anyway they are 99 % sure that 50% of the warming is caused by humans.
@flowerchilde (12529)
• United States
4 Sep 08
Anything presented as having no argument in answer to it, always makes me skeptical.. Besides wasn't there global warming before? Otherwise we'd still be in the ice age wouldn't we?
@stroibis (40)
• Sweden
4 Sep 08
I believe the same as you. A long time ago the world where wormer and the planet will always change. But I do believe that our discharge is speeding up the process of it all. As you said the animals are dieing and they have done that for ages but we do hunt more that the nature can handle and they die out faster than they should, particulary the fishes.