Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.
Or maybe you've just revealed that Platytudes is right. You have no feelings, Borg!
Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.
I'm not going to lie, after reading all nine pages, I'm pretty upset with this thread.
I was aiming to find conversations about the species that were involved and what species where in critical conditions in terms of being wiped out, not hearing about how destructive the human race is as a whole, or what even caused it. We will truly never understand what really caused this drought, we may have facts of what may have contributed to the cause but in the end WE really don't know.
My main problem with Heiko's article is his use of hyperbole, ie "global warming is 100X worse than we are told"I'm sorry it upsets you that this thread focused on the second part of the title much more than the first - Global Warming Facts. If you start up a thread with a title like that, you are bound to get a lot of attention on the more controversial issue.
I agree with Inka that another thread about the Amazon River disaster (minus climate change discussion) would be interesting.
I'm sure you read Heiko's piece. He seems to have no doubt about global warming being real, and much worse than we think. I quote:
"The fact is that global warming has, from what I have seen during the last decade while doing research in aquatic habitats around the globe, increased by at least tenfold and I think that global warming is 100 times worse than what we are told."
His article lists other reasons (not just global warming) for the present Amazon River disaster, especially the 100 dams Brazil's president authorized.
So really, I have to disagree with you on the "we will truly never understand what really caused this drought, we may have facts ... but in the end WE really don't know"
We do know - a mixture of manmade destruction (which is likely rooted in greed, lack of foresight, and ignorance) and natural calamity.
I'm fairly certain that no matter how much evidence piles up to support global warming (and evolution, for that matter) it will always be one of those "we don't really know" subjects, like why dinosaurs became extinct. Similar to the way Columbus will always have been the one to discover America, even if history disproves it.