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Title: How much longer will California remain a part of the United States?
Source: www.dvorak.org
URL Source: http://www.dvorak.org/blog/2010/06/ ... n-a-part-of-the-united-states/
Published: Jun 6, 2010
Author: Dvorak
Post Date: 2010-06-06 11:50:16 by Mind_Virus
Keywords: None
Views: 5513
Comments: 283

How much longer will California remain a part of the United States?

Published on June 6th, 2010

California’s white population has declined since 2000 at an unprecedented rate, hastening the day when Hispanics will be the state’s largest population group, according to newly released state figures.

Analysts said the decline can be attributed to two main causes – a natural population decrease as Baby Boomers enter their later years and die at a faster rate than younger whites have children, and a migration from California since 2001 among whites who sought affordable housing as real estate costs soared.

The study also confirmed projections that a steadily growing Hispanic population will surpass whites as the state’s largest racial demographic in 2016. Hispanics are expected to become a majority of all Californians in 2042, Heim said.

A University of New Mexico Chicano Studies professor predicts a new, sovereign Hispanic nation within the century, taking in the Southwest and several northern states of Mexico.

Truxillo, 47, has said the new country should be brought into being “by any means necessary,” but recently said it was unlikely to be formed by civil war. Instead, its creation will be accomplished by the electoral pressure of the future majority Hispanic population in the region, he said. (1 image)

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 108.

#1. To: Mind_Virus (#0)

Just wait until the next two earthquakes flatten the state. They will also be plagued by race riots as soon as the US dollar collapses and debt increases will not buy more free stuff. You cannot project our past to predict our future.

Horse  posted on  2010-06-06   12:59:43 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Horse (#1)

Just wait until the next two earthquakes flatten the state.

Just wait till the Mexicans take over "Atzlan" (their fictional land). They will turn it into the same kind of $#ithole they are trying to escape.

James Deffenbach  posted on  2010-06-06   13:22:57 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: James Deffenbach, Horse, abraxas (#3)

I've had some recent contacts in the CA food industry, and many crops that were normally grown in the state are started to get imported directly from Mexico. They pay laborers less down in Mexico than growers are obligated legally to pay them here, and I imagine there is less agricultural oversight to have to deal with too.

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-07   1:19:10 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: AGAviator (#6)

Where are they getting the water? I actually have been seeing more produce from Mexico too.

abraxas  posted on  2010-06-07   13:55:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: abraxas (#7)

Where are they getting the water? I actually have been seeing more produce from Mexico too.

Water in CA is being depleted, polluted, and there are also government regulations to try to spread what remains around more equitably. So the agribusinesses are complaining, but generally speaking there has not been much of a focus on getting anybody anywhere to use and conserve wisely.

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-07   15:36:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: AGAviator, abraxas (#8)

Water in CA is being depleted, polluted, and there are also government regulations to try to spread what remains around more equitably. So the agribusinesses are complaining, but generally speaking there has not been much of a focus on getting anybody anywhere to use and conserve wisely.

bullshit

farmfriend  posted on  2010-06-07   15:40:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: farmfriend (#10)

Water in CA is being depleted, polluted, and there are also government regulations to try to spread what remains around more equitably. So the agribusinesses are complaining, but generally speaking there has not been much of a focus on getting anybody anywhere to use and conserve wisely.

bullshit

Mono Lake?

Salinas Valley?

Sacramento Delta?

Bakersfield, Taft?

Any reason for running sprinklers in the daylight instead of night, potty mouth?

More With Less: Agricultural Water Conservation & Efficiency in California A Special Focus on the Delta

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-07   17:50:20 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: AGAviator (#12)

potty mouth?

Environmental kool-aide drinker.

farmfriend  posted on  2010-06-07   19:09:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: farmfriend (#13)

Environmental kool-aide drinker.

Says the self-styled farmer who can't figure out any benefits running sprinklers at night.....

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-07   20:00:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: AGAviator, farmfriend (#14) (Edited)

Just a quick point: farmfriend has consistently updated the water shortage issues in California based upon federal restriction guidelines, particularly in the central valley area which used to be the breadbasket of the world (now just a dustbowl with farming communities dying and where unemployment runs as high as 25%).

She knows what she is talking about when the federal government steps in and restricts private farming/ranching productive efforts when the government has some kind of new fish or game to save.

BTW, I have always enjoyed your posts (as I do farmfriend's). Please keep doing so on 4um.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-07   20:17:52 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: buckeroo (#16) (Edited)

She knows what she is talking about when the federal government steps in and restricts private farming/ranching productive efforts when the government has some kind of new fish or game to save.

I don't believe we have an either/or choice where it's choosing production or saving species.

All across the US the entire ecosystem has been trashed in little more than 100 years. When the Great Plains were first cultivated there was over 12-18 inches of topsoil just about everywhere. Then by the 1930's we had the "Dust Bowl," and today the norm for good soil there is about 4 inches. The silt has clearly washed down the Mississippi/Missouri river basin and dozens of miles into the Gulf - where now it gets mixed with oily goo. People back then just didn't care about the future, until big bad government decided to make them care. Not that the government choices thesmelves were always right, but at least it was movement into the right direction.

So all this talk about the goodness of private enterprise and the badness of govenment control is really a big joke.

Then take Colorado/Nevada/Arizona/Imperial Valley. The same type of waste and trashing of water resources. Added to this the violation of water treaties promising a certain amount of water to go into Mexico they can use for their own agriculture. The US has never delivered on those commitments to Mexico. Then some Americans complain when Mexican farm labor comes north to where the water is.

Working west, the misuse of Sierra water for placer mining in the Gold Rush, then the construction of huge inefficient irrigation projects to move San Joaquin Delta water into parts of the Central Valley where lots of it evaporated, and some of the rest leached poisons into toxic cesspools like Kesterson.

Even further west, over pumping of Salinas River Valley water causing salt water intrusion into the ground water table. Meanwhile in all these places listed above there has been heavy and sprawling construction activity with a heavy bias to generating sprawling urban and suburban tracts going in all directions.

Last but not least, massive sheep and cattle raising in nearly every state which has seriously destroyed ground cover, making both water conservation more difficult, and major flooding easier.

All these practices could have and should have been done more carefully and more with an eye to conserving for future generations. They weren't done that way because so-called free market forces were allowed to run rampant. And now we have the consequences of this systematic destruction of what was only 200 years ago was pristine agricultural land from sea to sea.

Bottom line is the government is going to step in, and there are some people who are motivated to keeping and even improving what is left, and any people who don't like it are just going to have to get off the train and walk to where they're going. Because the train is not going to stop to please them. All the blather about eco-weenies, smelt-lovers, Gaia worshippers, leftists, property rights, Brave New World, government tyranny, etc. is not going to cut it because the "free market" forces have made a substantial hole in the system in little more than 100 years, and there are enough people wanting to see that hole start to get plugged that it will happen.

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-07   22:25:27 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: AGAviator (#17)

Meanwhile in all these places listed above there has been heavy and sprawling construction activity with a heavy bias to generating sprawling urban and suburban tracts going in all directions.

Last but not least, massive sheep and cattle raising in nearly every state which has seriously destroyed ground cover, making both water conservation more difficult, and major flooding easier.

Why? Because of greedy, tight-fisted local farmers/ranchers or the demands based upon world markets?

Mark Mlcoch: No water, no fish, no jobs

I grew up in Redding. As any Californian who has ever picked up a fishing rod knows, the region around this small north state city supports some of the best angling in the state. Lake Shasta and Whiskeytown Reservoir are literally in our backyard. The Trinity River, home to fine steelhead fishing, is an hour’s drive to the west. The Upper Sacramento River, Trinity Lake, the small, alpine lakes of the Trinity Alps Wilderness, Lake Shastina, Lake Almanor, the Pit River, the McCloud River and Hat Creek are all nearby, and all afford spectacular trout fishing.

But it is the Lower Sacramento River — the portion that begins just north of Redding, below Keswick Dam — that historically has been the biggest draw for sport anglers. For one thing, this section supports a lunker native rainbow trout fishery. Drift boaters come from around the West to float the 30-mile stretch between Redding and Red Bluff, hoping — and usually succeeding — to tie into some of our football-size ‘bows.

More to the point, the “Lower Sac” has long been sacred water to salmon fishermen. In 2008 and 2009, California’s salmon season was closed entirely due to low numbers of fish. This year, we’re having a very limited season — salmon numbers have bumped up a little, but not enough to warrant any celebration. Not so long ago, however, hundreds of thousands of big, beautiful, fall-run chinook salmon ran up this river to spawn. There were plenty of fish to sustain the runs, with plenty left over to catch. Each year, the anglers would be there in the thousands to greet the homecoming salmon.

I was one of that crowd, both as a fishermen and a professional guide. I’ve always loved fishing for salmon — but more than that, as a guide, the salmon put (so to speak) meat and potatoes on my table. The salmon fishery on the Lower Sac was a recreational fishery, but it wasn’t just about recreation: It was about jobs. And jobs are a deadly serious issue in the north state.

High unemployment is a relatively recent development in the San Francisco Bay area and Southern California, but it has been a concern with us for decades. The recreational salmon industry was big business in this area. Further, it was reliable, sustainable business. As long as the fish got what they needed — mainly adequate downstream flows — they returned, giving us what we needed: income. A 1992 University of California at Davis study concluded that each salmon caught in the sport fishery was worth $900 to $1,200 to the local economy. So when I boated a client’s salmon, I wasn’t the only one getting paid. The motel owners, the restaurateurs, the waiters and cooks who worked in those restaurants, the gas station owners — everybody got a cut

And that’s just direct expenditures from the clients. The guides who fish this river also put a lot of money into the local economy. I run a $50,000 jet boat. Local mechanics work on that boat. I buy my fuel and tackle locally — and when the salmon are running, believe me, I buy a lot of fuel and tackle. So we can’t just view our salmon as noble, attractive, hard-fighting fish that happen to be incredibly delicious — certainly, they’re all those things. But they’re also something more than all that: They’re revenue multipliers. They generate wealth. Each fish represents life for Redding and all the other towns along the river.

When we had full salmon seasons, some full-time guides made $70,000 to $80,000 a year — very good money for this part of the state.

Guiding supported my family, and helped support the community. But now, more than 90 percent of my guide business has vanished — gone with the salmon closures. And it’s not just a matter of losing my salmon trips. Guiding is synergistic — I booked many of my trout trips while salmon fishing. The clients would get so excited after hooking into a few big fall-run chinook that they’d want to come back and try for our monster trout. If you don’t have that ongoing face-to-face interaction with your clients, if you don’t constantly cultivate and follow up contacts, if you don’t get that word-of-mouth buzz going, you’re not going to make it as a fishing guide. A fishing closure is like a monkey wrench thrown into a jet engine — everything stops, and it can be impossible to get things going again. It took me 20 years to build up my client base. Even if we eventually go back to full salmon seasons, it’s going to take me a long time to get back to where I was.

What am I doing today? Like everybody else in this area, whatever it takes to survive: construction, remodeling, anything. My income, obviously, has fallen dramatically. These are tough times on the river — both for the fish and the fishing industry.

Somehow, this debate over water has become characterized as a matter of “fish versus jobs.” The argument is that we can have salmon or we can have farming in the Central Valley, but we can’t have both. I think this is ridiculous. We can have both a healthy salmon fishery and a vigorous agricultural sector — we just have to allocate the water fairly and rationally. We need to change the way water is delivered, we need more habitat restoration, and we need to emphasize crops and technologies that conserve water.

We also need to adjust water deliveries to accommodate the basic biological requirements of the fish. Spawning salmon need cold water in the river to successfully reproduce, and the young fish need adequate flows to ensure their successful migration to the sea. These baseline conditions must be met if we want to save our salmon and the jobs they generate. Unlike human beings, salmon are unable to compromise or to adjust: they simply need what they need. And what they need isn’t all that much — we can conserve them without disrupting, or even adversely affecting, state agriculture. Recent agreements on the Klamath River and the San Joaquin River have resulted in true “win-win” situations that accommodate both fisheries and farmers. We can do the same for the Sacramento River and the Delta.

For my business, the bottom line is this: If we take care of the salmon, they’ll take care of us. Let’s quit all this bickering and get on with it.

Mark Mlcoch is president of the Northern California Guides Association.

The fact is, California *IS* running out of water. And the reason is because of the HUGE population increases over the last 60 years, drying up the once MEGA-ECONOMY into one in deadthroes and destined into national shock. Remember the once popular polititical quote by MSM pundits... "where California goes, so does the rest of the nation"????/

The water table has been seriously lowered EVERYWHERE simultaneously with an increasing average temperature while the demands of a swelling, unsustainable population base has eroded our quality life.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-07   23:44:07 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: buckeroo, farmfriend, James Deffenbach, AGAviator (#18)

The water table has been seriously lowered EVERYWHERE simultaneously with an increasing average temperature while the demands of a swelling, unsustainable population base has eroded our quality life.

Bravo Buckie! I just love the way you slid the disinformation in at the end first by setting up with a sob story and some true information, such as the draining of the aquifer in the Imperial Valley, with the assumption that it is true and therefore what follows logical - even when it is not.

"... with an increasing average temperature ..."

Har, har, har, har. Such a humorist you are. With declining average temperatures over the last decade your song remains the same. Declining temperature? Why it's glowbull warming. Every glacier on Mt. Shasta growing? Why it's Glowbull Warming. You're such a card Buckie.

And why has the population in Kahlifornyah increased so much? Why, you guessed, massive illegal immigration which the corrupt government not only will not stop but wants in order to disrupt our culture and separate us into groups. All the easier to turn into a totalitarian slave state.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-08   0:33:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#42. To: Original_Intent, farmfriend, James Deffenbach, AGAviator (#20)

T&A: California Weather Long Range: Rainfall, Temperature

The water table has been seriously lowered EVERYWHERE simultaneously with an increasing average temperature while the demands of a swelling, unsustainable population base has eroded our quality life. -- buckeroo

In response to my general comment, Mr. O_I contends:

Bravo Buckie! I just love the way you slid the disinformation in at the end first by setting up with a sob story and some true information, such as the draining of the aquifer in the Imperial Valley, with the assumption that it is true and therefore what follows logical - even when it is not.

According to NOAA:

So, for the last past century the Earth has been generally experiencing increasing temperatures, year after year. Now, the rate of increase of change for temperature increase has flattened somewhat over the past few years, the upward trend is climbing.

Har, har, har, har. Such a humorist you are. With declining average temperatures over the last decade your song remains the same. Declining temperature? Why it's glowbull [sic] warming. Every glacier on Mt. Shasta growing? Why it's Glowbull [sic] Warming. You're such a card Buckie.

Single point phenomena doesn't discount the general phenomena just because you have found an almost manic shangri-la to cling to concerning over-all temperature changes.

The temperature changes in California are diverse, so let's start off with a recent picture for your viewing pleasure to set the facts:

Those changes are in just one year. Now, lets talk about the general changes:

| NAVIGATE HOME |

SITE MAP | PUBLISHER |

CONTACT INFORMATION

|
Published November 2004 / (updated) October 2005 All Rights Reserved

California Weather Predictions

Show Higher Rainfall Rates,
Warmer Temperatures

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-08   14:14:25 ET  (5 images) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#45. To: buckeroo, farmfriend, abraxas, James Deffenbach, AGAviator (#42)

Spam.

Climate has throughout geologic history been variable. A short window of time, and geologically that could be as much as several thousand years, is barely sufficient to establish a clear trend.

Temperartures go up, temperatures go down. Climate is variable and cyclical. And as usual your climate model maps are curiously cut off and the scale contracted to manipulate the data to fit the conclusion.

The beginning of your graph is the end of a several century period known as "The Little Ice Age". What happens at the end of an ice age that lets us know it is over?

Hands Please!?

Correct! It warms up and that is how we know the ice age is over.

If we look at a graph of a longer period of time the picture becomes clearer - note that the graph before and after the little ice age is very similar i.e., about the same temperature ranges we experienced throughout much of the 20th century.



Note: I just love the way your graph cuts out the little ice age and the cooling period we are in now.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-08   14:37:30 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#50. To: Original_Intent (#45)

Climate has throughout geologic history been variable. A short window of time, and geologically that could be as much as several thousand years, is barely sufficient to establish a clear trend.

Yeah .... and you neglect to add the HUGH, burgeoning population growth in just past few decades.

This same human population base is sucking up the resources while simultaneously aiding global warming phenomena.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-08   16:17:30 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#52. To: buckeroo (#50)

This same human population base is sucking up the resources while simultaneously aiding global warming phenomena.

Again an ASSertion absent any proof.

We know now that the Glowbull Warming propagandists have been falsifying data, excluding data, and Scientists, which provide contradictory confirmation etc., ...

Oh, and where's that Nobel Prize winning liar Al Bore these days?

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-08   16:39:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#54. To: Original_Intent, buckeroo (#52)

This same human population base is sucking up the resources while simultaneously aiding global warming phenomena.

Again an ASSertion absent any proof.

So you want to ASSert that burning 19 million barrels of oil per day every day year in year out, while deforesting 214,000 acres per day - an area larger than New York City, every day year in year out - have nothing to do with climate change.

Or the fact that the ice caps over the North Pole have shrunk so much that polar bears who live on them year round are drowning because they have to swim so far to find food they become exhausted. Just a coincidence with all other human activity, no?

Slam Gore and Gaia all you want, most people aren't going to wait until the disasters caused by these factors are undeniable to every denying soul on the planet.

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-08   16:54:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#55. To: AGAviator (#54)

A. We do have environmental problems.

B. Antropogenic Glowbull Warming is not one of them. It is a distraction from the real problems - such as toxic pollutants both water borne and atmospheric. Hydrogen Sulfide and Mercury from Coal Fired Power Plants IS real, however Glowbull warming is a distraction and is a stalking horse for other hidden agendas.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-08   17:03:43 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#57. To: Original_Intent, buckeroo (#55) (Edited)

Antropogenic Glowbull Warming is not one of them. It is a distraction from the real problems - such as toxic pollutants both water borne and atmospheric

Burning millions of barrels of oil every day, which introduces thousands of tons of pollutants into the atmosphere, while at the same time deforesting hundreds of thousands of acres of vegetation, removing the capacity of that vegetation to absorb increased thousands of tons of extra CO2 and other by products, causes additional burdens and pollutants to go into the ecosphere/atmosphere.

This increased pollutant load also interferes with radiation of heat into space, besides temperature increases coming from the burning fuel itself.

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-08   19:20:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#58. To: AGAviator, Original_Intent, buckeroo (#57)

Burning millions of barrels of oil every day, which introduces millions of tons of pollutants into the atmosphere, while at the same time deforesting hundreds of thousands of acres of vegetation, removing the capacity of that vegetation to absorb increased millions of tons of extra CO2 and other by products, causes additional burdens and pollutants to go into the ecosphere/atmosphere.

CO2 is not a pollutant. It is necessary for life. BTW, the forests, especially the rain forests, are not the major sink for CO2 anyway. The biggest sink for CO2, also the biggest source of CO2, is by far the oceans.

The only deforestation that is taking place is in third world countries thanks to the NGOs that shut down domestic forestry.

farmfriend  posted on  2010-06-08   19:28:10 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#77. To: farmfriend, buckeroo, Original_Intent (#58)

CO2 is not a pollutant. It is necessary for life. BTW, the forests, especially the rain forests, are not the major sink for CO2 anyway. The biggest sink for CO2, also the biggest source of CO2, is by far the oceans.

CO2 is poison. You seem to be confusing it with oxygen.

While algae in the oceans does convert CO2 into organic food, some of that algae like the red is poison itself. And when algae levels get too high, either from over fishing or from allowing farming chemicals and by products to slosh into the waterways, the algae mass becomes toxic itself.

Lower Ocean Oxygen Levels Predict Catastrophic Change

There is a cascade failure going on in the world’s oceans that promises nothing but trouble in the future, and the problem stems in part from agricultural practices developed over the last half-decade aimed at growing more food on the same amount of land to feed rising populations.

A cascade failure is the progressive collapse of an integral system. Many scientists also call them negative feedback loops, in that unfortunate situations reinforce one another, precipitating eventual and sometimes complete failure.

The agricultural practices relate to “factory farming,” in which farmers grow crops using more and more chemical fertilizers, specifically nitrogen and phosphorus, which are the first two ingredients (chemical symbols N and P) listed on any container or bag of fertilizer. The last is potassium, or K. But farmers aren’t the only culprits. Lawn enthusiasts add to the problem with their massive applications of fertilizer designed to maintain a species of plant that doesn’t provide either food or habitat, and is grown merely to add prestige. And groundskeepers at parks and large corporate headquarters are equally guilty. In fact, a whole generation needs to rethink its addiction to lawns.

Whoever is guilty of applying the fertilizer, these megadoses are eventually washed off the fields and lawns and into waterways. From there, they migrate to the nearest large bodies of water, where they spark such tremendous and unnatural growth in aquatic plants that the result is eutrophication , or lack of oxygen in the water as bacteria act to reduce the sheer mass of dying organic matter.

One of these aquatic growths is algae, or phytoplankton. Moderate algal growth can produce higher fish yields and actually benefit lakes and oceans, but over- stimulation leads to a whole host of problems whose integral relationship to one another threatens not only aquatic but human life.

A classic example would be the Baltic Sea, where phytoplankton are raging out of control. The Baltic Sea is, as a result, home to seven out of ten of the world’s largest “dead zones,” aquatic areas where nothing survives.

One of the other three is the Gulf of Mexico, where a 2008 dead zone the size of Massachusetts is expected to grow in future years thanks to the U.S. government’s biofuel mandate. Most of the crops for biofuel are grown along the Mississippi River, which drains directly into this dead zone.

In the Baltic, as elsewhere, overfishing has exacerbated the problem. Fish feed on smaller aquatic organisms, which themselves feed on the algae. Take the fish out of the equation, and the balance is lost. It’s very much like removing the wolves that keep down the deer population in order to protect the sheep, and it doesn’t work in the ocean any better than it works on land.

The only deforestation that is taking place is in third world countries thanks to the NGOs that shut down domestic forestry.

Absolutely false. Brazil's government personnel attempting to rein in slash burning and cutting of Amazonian rain forest are vastly outnumbered by would-be settlers and often try to stop the madness at the risk of their lives.

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-09   23:37:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#79. To: AGAviator, buckeroo, Original_Intent (#77)

CO2 is poison. You seem to be confusing it with oxygen.

Right, that's why greenhouses increase CO2 to 1000 ppmv. It is fertilizer for plants. Currently CO2 is at historic lows for the planet. Mankind even does better at higher CO2 levels because we evolved when levels were higher. Without CO2 we have no forests, no agriculture, no life on this planet.

farmfriend  posted on  2010-06-10   1:57:28 ET  (2 images) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#80. To: farmfriend, buckeroo (#79) (Edited)

CO2 is poison. You seem to be confusing it with oxygen.

Right, that's why greenhouses increase CO2 to 1000 ppmv

Do I need to amplify by saying CO2 is poison for humans?

Are you better off breathing in an environment that has more CO2, or less CO2?

How can you accuse anybody else of pseudo science after making a statement like you just did.

Flies eat waste. This does not mean waste is food for people.

Comprende?

AGAviator  posted on  2010-06-10   2:13:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#81. To: AGAviator, buckeroo, Original_Intent (#80)

Do I need to amplify by saying CO2 is poison for humans?

Are you better off breathing in an environment that has more CO2, or less CO2?

Actually according to the US Navy you are better off breathing an atmosphere of around 500 ppmv. That's higher than what we have on the planet. Man evolved at higher CO2 levels and has better brain function at higher levels. Yes if the levels get too high it will kill you but then too much water will kill you as well.

farmfriend  posted on  2010-06-10   2:52:54 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#84. To: farmfriend, AGAviator, buckeroo, Buckmonster Fullofit, James Deffenbach, all (#81) (Edited)

Do I need to amplify by saying CO2 is poison for humans?

Are you better off breathing in an environment that has more CO2, or less CO2?

Actually according to the US Navy you are better off breathing an atmosphere of around 500 ppmv. That's higher than what we have on the planet. Man evolved at higher CO2 levels and has better brain function at higher levels. Yes if the levels get too high it will kill you but then too much water will kill you as well.

Unfortunately you are arguing with people to whom facts are irrelevant. Over and over and over again the validating data keeps coming in that an increase in global CO2 levels would be a net benefit. However, since the "true beeeelieeeeeeevers", like any other rube taken in by some huckster, have totally accepted the falsehoods of the PsyOps selling Glowbull Warming from (((((shudder))))) (Cue scary theme music) antropogenic CO2, and any and all data contrary to their irrational fixations is rejected. They have a fixed idea predicated upon false data and so reject true data which is contrary to their false fixations.

An old aphorism from toxicology is appropriate here: "The dose makes the poison."

The argument that CO2 is increasing global temperatures, while founded upon multiple fallacies, is also predicated upon a false assumption that a change in CO2 level will have only the effects predicted by the Glowbull Warming hypothesis and no others. In other words it is a self limiting hypothesis that excludes all other known affects of an increase in CO2 levels while exaggerating its importance as a greenhouse gas. Methane, such as is coming out of the Gulf Oil blowout and rupture is a much more powerful greenhouse gas, but you don't hear the Glowbull Warming Mouthpieces talking about that. (Interesting datum that.) When Algore starts talking about Methane Credits, which he won't because it gores too many profitable activities, I might listen (but truthfully not likely as he is a proven liar and phony).

However, we do not live in a static environment and an infinity of equilibrium states exist. As you rightly point out an increase in atmospheric CO2 also acts as a growth stimulant for plant life. And what do plants do with CO2 - they respirate and use it to metabolize nutrients. And what do they give off as their "waste" product from respiration? Hands please. Yes, that is correct they give off O2 otherwise known as free oxygen and upon which all animal life depends for their metabolic functions. In other words an increase in CO2 results in accelerated plant respiration which removes an increasing amount of CO2 from the atmosphere while at the same time boosting the availability of free oxygen. In addition to being at historically low levels of CO2 we are also at historically low levels of O2. Funny how that works out. The key point here is that levels of free oxygen are in direct relationship to the availability of carbon dioxide for a plant's normal respiratory cycle. As well humans evolved in not only a higher mix of CO2 but a higher level of O2.

So, the Chicken Little Brigades who have been led down a wrong path with CO2 as a deadly greenhouse gas, with their supposed mitigation efforts (which are highly profitable to those trading in "carbon credits), are also mitigating the levels of O2 available to animal life.

As J.E. Lovelock pointed out, before he was brow beat into joining the Glowbull Warming Hysteria, the planet operates in its normal range as a self stabilizing system i.e., you knock the system out of equilibrium in one direction and it reacts globally to reestablish an equilibrium state returning to a balance point.

However, science, true science, is irrelevant to the ignoratti of Glowbull Warming, and as we saw with the Climate Research Unit e-mails, the top scientists pushing Glowbull Warming KNOW that it is a fraud being perpetrated for political reasons not environmental. We have many more pressing environmental issues that CO2 which is nothing more that a political distraction established to divert from the real problems. We are not seeing the die off of Bees, Snakes, Bats, Frogs, etc., due to an increase in CO2 and those are much stronger indicators of problems in the environment.

The Glowbull Warming caused by Antropogenic CO2 is a false paradigm and the suckers who have bought on to it are just that S-U-C-K-E-R-S.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-10   12:45:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#88. To: Original_Intent, farmfriend, AGAviator, James Deffenbach, all (#84)

Unfortunately you [farmfriend] are arguing with people [AGAviator, buckeroo] to whom facts are irrelevant.

Lets see now....... earlier up the thread I asked a couple of questions that are relevant and to the point of the topic discussion. In review......

So what is it? Human population can be sustained infinitely in growth? Or is there a finite threshold, somewhere? And, if human population growth is finite, where is that threshold that may sustain humanity with a high quality of life style?

I say, with about seven BILLION people, mankind has already surpassed the capability to enjoy a good level of life style much less a high one.

So, let's go back to the original article of this thread. Why do you think some college professor suggests that a new nation shall be born in the near future, encompassing the Southwest of the US and Northern Mexico? I say, it is because certain people want a high quality of lifestyle typically afforded in the Southwest of the US. And, they want to take it away from those that already have it. --buckeroo, two days ago.

And how did you respond? You didn't or the response was BS beyond the bounds of my questions.

Now, here you are talking about CO2. Do you feel better delivering hot aire to us?

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-10   12:53:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#91. To: buckeroo, Buckmonster Fullofit, abraxas, farmfriend, James Deffenbach (#88)

Your question then, as now, was unresponsive and irrelevant to the discussion at hand. In short your question is naught more than a childish and ignorant attempt to divert the discussion and play "gotcha".

Blow me.

I am not obligated in any fashion to respond to hostile and irrelevant bullshit questions.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-10   13:01:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#93. To: Original_Intent (#91)

Blow me.

Are you a real live queer? Because I am not interested in homosexuals (as you admit you are in publick soliciting for some kind of thrill.) Now, let's take a peek at the rest of your most recent response ...

Your [buckeroo] question then, as now, was unresponsive and irrelevant to the discussion at hand. In short your question is naught more than a childish and ignorant attempt to divert the discussion and play "gotcha".

I pulled the questions right into the thread topic, wherein you have consistently played around like a child or some flamer.

Once again ...... here is the hard to answer question(s)from post #72:

So what is it? Human population can be sustained infinitely in growth? Or is there a finite threshold, somewhere? And, if human population growth is finite, where is that threshold that may sustain humanity with a high quality of life style?

I say, with about seven BILLION people, mankind has already surpassed the capability to enjoy a good level of life style much less a high one.

So, let's go back to the original article of this thread. Why do you think some college professor suggests that a new nation shall be born in the near future, encompassing the Southwest of the US and Northern Mexico? I say, it is because certain people want a high quality of lifestyle typically afforded in the Southwest of the US. And, they want to take it away from those that already have it.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-10   13:09:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#95. To: buckeroo, Buckmonster Fullofit, farmfriend, abraxas, James Deffenbach (#93) (Edited)

Let the record show that Buckmonster Fullofit is unwilling and unable to refute the points contained in my post to farmfriend and thus finds is necessary to engage in disinformation tactics in an attempt to wipe the egg off of his face.

I again repeat the post to farmfriend:

Unfortunately you are arguing with people to whom facts are irrelevant. Over and over and over again the validating data keeps coming in that an increase in global CO2 levels would be a net benefit. However, since the "true beeeelieeeeeeevers", like any other rube taken in by some huckster, have totally accepted the falsehoods of the PsyOps selling Glowbull Warming from (((((shudder))))) (Cue scary theme music) antropogenic CO2, and any and all data contrary to their irrational fixations is rejected. They have a fixed idea predicated upon false data and so reject true data which is contrary to their false fixations.

An old aphorism from toxicology is appropriate here: "The dose makes the poison."

The argument that CO2 is increasing global temperatures, while founded upon multiple fallacies, is also predicated upon a false assumption that a change in CO2 level will have only the effects predicted by the Glowbull Warming hypothesis and no others. In other words it is a self limiting hypothesis that excludes all other known affects of an increase in CO2 levels while exaggerating its importance as a greenhouse gas. Methane, such as is coming out of the Gulf Oil blowout and rupture is a much more powerful greenhouse gas, but you don't hear the Glowbull Warming Mouthpieces talking about that. (Interesting datum that.) When Algore starts talking about Methane Credits, which he won't because it gores too many profitable activities, I might listen (but truthfully not likely as he is a proven liar and phony).

However, we do not live in a static environment and an infinity of equilibrium states exist. As you rightly point out an increase in atmospheric CO2 also acts as a growth stimulant for plant life. And what do plants do with CO2 - they respirate and use it to metabolize nutrients. And what do they give off as their "waste" product from respiration? Hands please. Yes, that is correct they give off O2 otherwise known as free oxygen and upon which all animal life depends for their metabolic functions. In other words an increase in CO2 results in accelerated plant respiration which removes an increasing amount of CO2 from the atmosphere while at the same time boosting the availability of free oxygen. In addition to being at historically low levels of CO2 we are also at historically low levels of O2. Funny how that works out. The key point here is that levels of free oxygen are in direct relationship to the availability of carbon dioxide for a plant's normal respiratory cycle. As well humans evolved n not only a higher mix of CO2 but a higher level of O2.

So, the Chicken Little Brigades who have been led down a wrong path with CO2 as a deadly greenhouse gas, with their supposed mitigation efforts (which are highly profitable to those trading in "carbon credits), are also mitigating the levels of O2 available to animal life.

As J.E. Lovelock pointed out, before he was brow beat into joining the Glowbull Warming Hysteria, the planet operates in its normal range as a self stabilizing system i.e., you knock the system out of equilibrium in one direction and it reacts globally to reestablish an equilibrium state returning to a balance point.

However, science, true science, is irrelevant to the ignoratti of Glowbull Warming, and as we saw with the Climate Research Unit e-mails, the top scientists pushing Glowbull Warming KNOW that it is a fraud being perpetrated for political reasons not environmental. We have many more pressing environmental issues that CO2 which is nothing more that a political distraction established to divert from the real problems. We are not seeing the die off of Bees, Snakes, Bats, Frogs, etc., due to an increase in CO2 and those are much stronger indicators of problems in the environment.

The Glowbull Warming caused by Antropogenic CO2 is a false paradigm and the suckers who have bought on to it are just that S-U-C-K-E-R-S.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-10   13:16:52 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#102. To: Original_Intent (#95)

Where is my little buddy answering my two days old question?

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-10   14:58:39 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#103. To: Original_Intent, farmfriend, AGAviator, James Deffenbach, all (#102)

Where is 4um's little flamer, O_I, answering a simple post from way up the thread from two days ago? Are you out dancing on the streets because you are gay and beg to come out of the closet?

So what is it? Human population can be sustained infinitely in growth? Or is there a finite threshold, somewhere? And, if human population growth is finite, where is that threshold that may sustain humanity with a high quality of life style?

I say, with about seven BILLION people, mankind has already surpassed the capability to enjoy a good level of life style much less a high one.

So, let's go back to the original article of this thread. Why do you think some college professor suggests that a new nation shall be born in the near future, encompassing the Southwest of the US and Northern Mexico? I say, it is because certain people want a high quality of lifestyle typically afforded in the Southwest of the US. And, they want to take it away from those that already have it. --buckeroo, two days ago.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-10   15:23:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#104. To: buckeroo, Buckmonster Fullofit, farmfriend, AGAviator, James Deffenbach, all (#103)

Uh, Buckie? If you think you have been flamed you're wrong. I have restrained myself, and will continue to do so as I learned sometime back that flame is counterproductive. However, when you insist posting flagarantly puerile pathetic inanities pulled from the dim realm of your gaping sphincter and then crowing like you have laid an asteroid you can expect that you will receive, if only tepidly compared to what I could do, a "suitable" response. That is, should I deign to even respond.

Have a nice day.

P.S. Blow me.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-10   16:02:05 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#105. To: Original_Intent (#104)

P.S. Blow me.

You are a queer .. there is no question about it.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-10   16:05:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#107. To: buckeroo (#105)

Metaphors are not your strong suit are they?

Of course neither is sound argumentation free of false assumptions so it really comes as no surprise.

And that is about all the time I am willing to waste on responding to your ankle biting.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-10   16:13:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#108. To: Original_Intent (#107) (Edited)

And that is about all the time I am willing to waste on responding to your ankle biting.

You are a lamer. You tell me to blow you when I have asked for a response to my earlier questions.

So what is it? Human population can be sustained infinitely in growth? Or is there a finite threshold, somewhere? And, if human population growth is finite, where is that threshold that may sustain humanity with a high quality of life style?

I say, with about seven BILLION people, mankind has already surpassed the capability to enjoy a good level of life style much less a high one.

So, let's go back to the original article of this thread. Why do you think some college professor suggests that a new nation shall be born in the near future, encompassing the Southwest of the US and Northern Mexico? I say, it is because certain people want a high quality of lifestyle typically afforded in the Southwest of the US. And, they want to take it away from those that already have it. --buckeroo, two days ago.

What is your response?

Blow me.

ankle biter

You are a fucked upped, little queer unable AND incapable of answering direct questions.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-06-10   16:24:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 108.

#109. To: buckeroo (#108)

Had you asked one intelligent question relevant to the discussion I likely would have answered. As for now ...

...Go Fish.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-06-10 16:51:27 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 108.

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