Quote:
Originally Posted by Schwarzer Ritter
Reading and comprehension: never said anything about "climate change" having any effect on volcanoes or wildfires. You think I'm A democrat? What I said was that volcanoes and wildfires affect what you call climate change. The exact opposite. When Pinatubo went up the experts equated the volume of the eruption to 50,000 years of human activity.
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It's amusing...though not at all surprising... that you had to insult me both directly and by misusing my words. Words which you do not seem to have fully understood.
While I could have phrased my OP more accurately, I believe that you know very well that I was not saying that I thought you believed that climate change affected volcanic eruptions. Playing dumb is not a good technique for insult either.
Wildfires, though? They absolutely ARE affected by climate change. There are major affects, both in frequency and severity. Not to mention the increase in length of "fire season" in many places.
I also did not imply that your statement that volcanoes and wildfires affect climate change was incorrect. Or that you did not understand this. My point was that these effects are mostly tolerated by the mechanisms of the CO2 cycle.
Please notice the use of the word "mostly"in the above sentence (I used the phrase "generally tolerated" in my OP).
Because events like Pinatubo are exceptions. It caused global effects that overloaded the normal carbon cycle for years. And it was a small fart compared to eruptions that have occurred during other eras. Some say that the Yellowstone Caldera could produce an extinction level event at any time. But in general, we've been pretty lucky for the past several thousand years.
Everyone that can discuss climate science coherently knows these things.
Hence, my problem with MAGA logic - too many deniers want to say "hey, volcanoes and wildfires are a bigger problem than we are."
But statistically, over the course of our existence, this is not accurate. And we cannot live with these fatalistic, simplistic ideas. We should be living in the hopes that we continue to be lucky, that we are not destroyed by a massive eruption or other event.
Ut instead, we are adding excessive amounts of carbon to the environment in ways that cannot be processed. We are tipping the balance of a cycle that was mostly in equilibrium.
If you want to discuss this more, you need to up your game a bit. I have understood every point that you have made. You seem to have failed to understand the ones I have made that are beyond them.
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