The planet will be fine, the problem is for humanity. A change over tens of thousands of years is easy to manage, society and ecology adapt with no intervention required. A change over 10s or a 100 years will create havoc. Eco systems do not adapt, eg coral reefs collapse due to ocean acidification. Societies don't respond effectively, eg coastal erosion due to increased storms causes housing loss, increased hurricane frequency results in human tragedy in the Caribbean, more flooding in Gulf of Mexico etc.
Even if I play along and agree it's unclear what is causing climate change, should we do nothing and hope for the best, or should we be studying the heck out of it, trying to understand it, and then doing something to respond to it to minimise the negative impact it is likely to have on many billions of human beings in the future?
I'm totally fine with the personal position of not caring about things that will occur outside ones lifetime, or that the influence on them will be positive, ie the UK will be warmer, I live away from the coast and I can grown my vegetables for longer each year. But ignoring the data and saying, it's not happening and it's not going to impact millions of people, or that it's being created to control society is at best having ones head in the sand.
Having ranted and now feeling better
I'm actually really interested in the alternate view point. Do you agree the climate is changing and the earth is warming, what do you think is causing it, what should we be doing to respond to it?
Fitz,
BTW : The evidence is clear that the climate is warming at an unprecedented rate, and that this is due to human activity due to the build-up of CO2 and methane in the atmosphere. There is no debate on this in any group or individual who considers all available data. Debate only occurs when only partial data sets are considered and studies are 'cherry picked'. Yes the UK used to be tropical, and at that time CO2 levels were much higher than they are now, CO2 increase, global warming...... Additionally the current thinking may be wrong, that's the power of science it's ambivalent to change as more data emerges, however we're not seeing that data. Back to the point of sit and do nothing or respond to the situation aligned with our best current understanding.