Did you read my previous linked article? It states that the increased winds have decreased global temperatures by up to .2 degrees since 2001. That isn't shown on your chart. Where the data comes from is important because a lot of the sensors have been put in locations that show increases because of what is around them (ie in the middle of a parking lot instead of in the country) because they didn't move with urban growth.
No, you are correct, the chart by the NOAA shows a more modest decrease, but you have already stated you believe they are fudging the data to forward a government agenda of exerting more control over your life, so you can be skeptical of their research and throw your support behind the 10 scientists conducting the study that Alex reports on because they have no such hidden agenda.
Also, your charts don't add up. If CO2 is such the bad thing, the chart shows the warming starting in around 1910. CO2 didn't start increasing until 1960. So the temperature was increasing before the CO2 went up. Looks like we were cooling before that.
No, CO
2 accelerated after 1960, it was increasing before that (according to your own chart) and the Keeling curve starts in 1956 when the CO
2 levels were already over 315ppm (higher than the previous peak over 300k YBP) and it began accelerating in the late 1800s when the industrial revolution saw human caused increases in CO
2 levels.
If you look at graphs showing stuff going back much further than 100 years, we have been a little hotter but it doesn't indicate a significant change in patterns.
But we have never had CO
2 levels this high before (25% more than any other time in the last half a million years) and it doesn't show any signs of slowing down (quite the opposite if you have your way and we do nothing).
Current CO2 levels are just a little higher than the peak in previous years. Compare that to Sandman's picture. We are right about the 390 level. Industry wasn't around for those previous jumps and yet they occurred naturally. It isn't like jumps in CO2 level are new. Current CO2 levels have been climbing since what, 20,000 years ago?
I repeat: However, we have
never had CO
2 levels this high before (25% higher than at any other time in the last half a million years is hardy "a little higher").
If all the cars put out was H2O, it wouldn't be enough because then we would be altering the humidity in the air which will affect plant life and animals. A lot of the most vocal people will only be happy when you don't have electricity in your house, you don't burn anything, you don't drive anywhere and you aren't breathing.
This is a logical fallacy (Red Herring) and and an appeal to emotion (fear) has no place in a constructive debate (these are tactics of politicians) and the last phrase is just nonsense. The most vocal people would be happy if the electricity we used in your house was created in a clean sustainable way (ie: solar), and that if you did burn anything, it was burned as cleanly as possible . You said it yourself, that the only reason the engines today have emission controls is because people vocally demanded it and the government (those bastards) made it a requirement.
Instead of running around like the sky is falling, fix what we know is broken for sure without relying on models that obviously aren't giving accurate results. Man affects the environment obviously. Make it so we aren't giving our kids cancer or destroying entire swaths of land by dumping chemicals on them.
Does inundating the land with sea water constitute "dumping chemicals"? If the polar ice caps do melt as a result of man made global warming (and I realize that is a big IF for you), then the rising sea levels would do just that, forcing the relocation of hundreds of millions of people. I suspect that these people would rather we not wait until we are absolutely sure the sea is rising (it has indeed risen 19 centimeters this century or about 1.7mm a year and this rate has doubled to 3.2mm/yr since 1993) before we try to "fix" the problem (at which point it will be too late to stop the flooding of our grand-children's land by seawater). While there are other equally important man made impacts that we need to address, the presence of other harms, does not mitigate the harm of man made contributions to global warming.