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15. March 2010, 10:48:12
Mort 
Subject: Re: I have no idea what the Apollo missions or a DNA test have to do with determining the correct method/means of interpreting the data on global warming.
Modified by Mort (15. March 2010, 12:25:44)
Artful Dodger: Going to the moon was so abound with risks. The % chance of a fatal failure was pretty significant. The science was not 100% as it was no-one had done it before. Yet your country still sent people and spent billions on what could have been a complete failure.

It's called risk assessment, at what point is the risk of an devastating event worth being ignored. It's like with an asteroid strike, the probability of being hit is very, very small. Yet we still plan in case that one in a trillion comes to be a certainty. Billions are spent on watching the skies as the cost of a big strike is unmeasurable.

We are talking about probability.

I've worked on a secret project that by all accounts will not be needed, yet the cost was worth it in case a certain countries troops were put in a situation that the need of the device that was made would save lives on the battlefield.

DNA.. so many women/men I've seen on a certain prog state that there is no way 'X' is biologically related and they have been 90% sure.. even to putting another name/not putting the name, etc on the birth certificate... ie you say that the science on global warming is flawed... ok, there is a chance that we will not have any major significant extreme weather changes.

But who's life would you bet on that? Which resource could you live without? We are already facing problems via India through over farming draining the water table of a significant food production area in aid of cheap food.

As for weather here.. when we had snow forecasts recently, they could not be 100% on how much and where it would fall. But the % chance still led to warnings.

15. March 2010, 15:59:09
Mousetrap 
Subject: Re: Apollo missions
(V): The more I read about the first mission to the moon the less I believe they ever really went.

15. March 2010, 17:36:43
The Col 
Subject: Re: Apollo missions
Tuesday: It's right up there in the list of conspiracy theories, some say Stanley Kubrick was involved.

15. March 2010, 19:28:54
Ferris Bueller 
Subject: Re: Apollo missions
Mousetrap:  That "theory" has been debunked many times over.

15. March 2010, 22:01:40
Mort 
Subject: Re: Apollo missions
Mousetrap: Well, the rocket launched.. they went somewhere. Maybe the aliens watching us invited them in for coffee!!

15. March 2010, 22:06:43
Mort 
Subject: Re: I have no idea what the Apollo missions or a DNA test have to do with determining the correct method/means of interpreting the data on global warming.
Artful Dodger: The only way we can be sure it's a purely natural cycle is for us to stop producing the gasses that can cause harm.

Even if it is a natural cycle it has to be that our impact on the environment is part of the math and science. If nature is producing 99% of our weather, we are still responsible for 1%... The old adage of a straw and camels back comes to mind.

15. March 2010, 22:50:20
The Col 
Subject: Re: I have no idea what the Apollo missions or a DNA test have to do with determining the correct method/means of interpreting the data on global warming.
(V): I'm with astute broadcaster Bill O'Reilly on this one.Even if global warming is a natural cycle,cleaning up the earth isn't a terrible idea anyway.I mean honestly,I can't think of a better error in judgement.

15. March 2010, 23:19:48
Bernice 
Subject: Re: I have no idea what the Apollo missions or a DNA test have to do with determining the correct method/means of interpreting the data on global warming.
Modified by Bernice (15. March 2010, 23:28:04)
Jim Dandy: last weekend was "Clean up Australia" day...it is held every year, is voluntary for helpers and is a great success and has been for about??? 20 years.

http://www.cleanupaustraliaday.org.au/about/about-the-event/history

15. March 2010, 23:36:36
The Col 
Subject: Re: I have no idea what the Apollo missions or a DNA test have to do with determining the correct method/means of interpreting the data on global warming.
Bernice: Cleaning up garbage is a start,we Canadians are used to the typical "your cities are so clean" comments, it's almost considered a stereotype now.I think emmissions are the next mountain to climb.If I was a global warming naysayer, if losing the argument means cleaner air,I think I could live with that defeat

15. March 2010, 23:30:26
Mort 
Subject: Re: I have no idea what the Apollo missions or a DNA test have to do with determining the correct method/means of interpreting the data on global warming.
Jim Dandy: Not only that, but reuse as much as possible. We've become too much of a throw away society!!

The cold frame I'm making.. 99% recycled material. Even the plastic is what a local yard chucks away (law says they cannot reuse stuff they have removed to make a new build) not only is it very cheap, but the plastic is 6 layers deep giving very good heat retention.
Just takes a little imagination.

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