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Carbon dioxide is invisible, which allows for stories to be made up about its impact on the climate. However, there is no evidence to support the claim that it is causing a climate emergency. Looking back at the Earth's history, it was actually warmer than it is today for most of the time. The slight warming trend we have experienced in the last 300 years began before the use of fossil fuels. Despite the exponential increase in CO2 emissions, it has not affected the temperature. CO2 is essential for life and should be seen as a positive rather than a negative.

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The ice core surveys in Antarctica show a correlation between carbon dioxide (CO2) and temperature, but the relationship is more complex than Al Gore suggests. The data reveals that temperature increases precede rises in CO2 levels by about 800 years. This indicates that temperature changes drive CO2 changes, not the other way around. Furthermore, carbon dioxide is a natural gas produced by all living things, and humans contribute only a small fraction of it compared to sources like volcanoes, animals, bacteria, and the oceans. The oceans, in particular, play a significant role in CO2 emissions and absorption, with warmer temperatures leading to more CO2 production. Earth's long climate history does not support the idea that CO2 determines global temperatures.

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No evidence has been shown to prove that human emissions of carbon dioxide cause global warming. If it could be proven, it would also need to be shown that the natural emissions, which make up 97% of the total, do not drive global warming. This is a scientific fraud. The idea that increased levels of carbon dioxide will lead to disastrous global warming is not supported by chemistry or historical data from ice cores. The inverse solubility of carbon dioxide has been known for 200 years, and ice core samples show that carbon dioxide levels increased after natural warming periods. Temperature drives carbon dioxide levels, not the other way around.

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Human emissions of carbon dioxide do not drive global warming. Natural emissions make up 97%, showing carbon dioxide does not cause warming. Claims of a disaster from increased carbon dioxide are false. Chemistry proves carbon dioxide cools, not warms. Ice core data reveals temperature rises before carbon dioxide levels. Temperature drives carbon dioxide levels, not the other way around.

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There is no scientific evidence that human emissions of carbon dioxide cause global warming. Despite extensive research, no correlation between temperature and carbon dioxide has been found throughout history. In fact, the opposite is true. We have experienced six major ice ages, all of which occurred when there was more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than there is now. Therefore, it is clear that carbon dioxide does not and cannot drive global warming.

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There is no scientific proof that carbon dioxide (CO2) is responsible for the slight warming of the global climate in the last 300 years. The idea that human emissions are the main cause of climate change is just a hypothesis, not a universally accepted theory. It is important to be skeptical of those who claim the science is settled and the debate is over. However, it is certain that CO2 is essential for life on Earth, and without it, the planet would be uninhabitable. Despite this, children and the public are being taught that CO2 is a toxic pollutant that will harm life and civilization.

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There is no scientific proof that carbon dioxide (CO2) is responsible for the slight warming of the global climate in the last 300 years. The idea that human emissions are the main cause of climate change is just a hypothesis, not a universally accepted theory. It is important to be skeptical of those who claim the science is settled and the debate is over. However, it is certain that CO2 is essential for life on Earth, and without it, the planet would be uninhabitable. Despite this, children and the public are being taught that CO2 is a toxic pollutant that will harm life and civilization.

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There is no scientific evidence that human emissions of carbon dioxide cause global warming. Despite extensive research, no correlation between temperature and carbon dioxide has been found throughout history. In fact, the opposite is true. We have experienced six major ice ages in the past, all of which occurred when there was more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than there is now. Therefore, it is clear that carbon dioxide does not and cannot drive global warming.

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Climate change is a fact, but humans are not causing it. NASA knows that over 90% of the CO2 is coming from the oceans. Is there more CO2 now than ten, twenty, fifty, or a hundred years ago? The answer is absolutely yes. Is it a bad thing? The answer is no. We're right about 440 parts per million right now. In geologic history, Cretaceous and Jurassic were over a thousand parts per million; Triassic, 2,000 parts per million. The earth was lush. CO2 levels and temperatures are not always one-to-one. Where's the CO2 coming from? NASA knows: the CO2 is coming from the oceans warming from underneath. Warm water holds less gas. The oceans are warming from underneath from tectonic processes every twelve thousand five hundred years, beginning in the core and causing more tectonic and volcanic activity, which is exactly what we're seeing.

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The speaker argues that life on Earth is in crisis due to crop failure, social and ecological collapse, and mass extinction, framing these as part of Extinction Rebellion’s climate alarmist narrative and a broader political and financial “climate industrial complex” that aims to control purchases, diet, and travel in the name of sustainability and net-zero emissions. They contend that people rely on governments and the media rather than data, and promise to show that temperatures fluctuate, are not unprecedented, and that natural disasters are not getting worse. They claim climate data is unreliable and that CO2 plays a small role in climate, while presenting scientific evidence that we are not in a climate crisis. Using a 65-million-year temperature graph, the speaker states the Earth today is in a cool period and is coming out of an ice age, noting that life thrived in much warmer times without human CO2 emissions. They assert that over the last two thousand years there have been two warm periods and two cold periods, including the Roman warm period, the cold Dark Ages, the medieval warm period, and the Little Ice Age, with current warming described as a recovery from the Little Ice Age. The three degrees Fahrenheit of warming cited by scientists and the media is described as not unprecedented and not cause for alarm due to ongoing fluctuations. The speaker argues that warming and CO2 emissions have not made natural disasters more frequent or violent, citing hurricane and wildfire data. They reference a graph from the Bulletin of the American Urological Society showing a slight downward trend in US hurricanes per year since 1900, and a North Atlantic hurricane intensity graph from 1920 to 2016 showing no trend. They claim the 2014 US National Climate Assessment presents an illusory upward trend by focusing on a red-highlighted portion. They also claim that US and global acres burned by wildfires have been decreasing since 1900. Regarding data reliability, the speaker highlights a gap between climate model predictions and observed data, noting that temperature measurements from weather balloons align with satellite data, while climate models over-predict warming. They discuss the urban heat island effect, giving Paris as an example where city temperatures are much higher than surrounding rural areas, suggesting data can be biased to frighten the public. The speaker argues CO2 is not the climate control knob, as it is only 0.04% of the atmosphere, and that historical CO2 levels have been far higher than today. They cite MIT oceanographer Carl Wunsch (spelled as Karl Wench) to claim that when oceans warm, more CO2 is released, and when oceans are cold, CO2 is absorbed. A graph is described showing CO2 rising centuries after temperature increases, implying temperature drives CO2 more than the reverse. They acknowledge CO2 may have some small influence but emphasize many other factors—volcanic activity, cosmic rays, and the sun—and claim limiting CO2 would largely stunt biodiversity with little effect on temperature. The speaker argues CO2 is essential for photosynthesis and that farmers use high CO2 in greenhouses to boost crop yields, illustrating CO2 as a life-giving gas and stating it would green the planet and increase food supply if CO2 increases. They conclude that climate change is an existential threat in Western discourse but offer this as historical context from Aztecs to the Salem witch trials. They mention carbon taxes and individual CO2 budgets as signs of climate issues infiltrating daily life and frame their conclusion as pursuing truth by examining data themselves. In summary, the speaker presents historical temperature variability, critiques of data and models, downplays CO2’s role, highlights CO2’s benefits to plant growth, and asserts that the climate crisis is a hoax to be opposed by scrutinizing data personally.

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Climate is always changing, with measurable changes in temperature and rainfall. The planet has been warming and cooling for 4.567 billion years, and for most of that time, it has been warmer and wetter with higher sea levels than now. Warmings and coolings are driven by the Earth's distance from the sun, which changes due to its orbit shifting from circular to elliptical, its axis changing, and its wobbling. Unless you can change the magnetic fields of the sun or the Earth's orbit, you cannot change the climate. Throughout Earth's history, there have been millions of climate changes, none of which have been identified as driven by changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide. There is no record of carbon dioxide driving climate in the past, so there is no logical reason to think that current climate change is driven by changes in carbon dioxide. The past is the key to the present.

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CO2, a small part of the atmosphere, is one of many greenhouse gases. Ice core data shows temperature changes before CO2 levels, contradicting the idea that CO2 drives climate. Historical CO2 levels did not cause temperature changes. Recent industrial CO2 output does not align with temperature records, with most warming occurring before the 1940s. The 1930s and 1940s were unusually warm, despite lower human influences. After World War 2, CO2 increased while temperatures decreased, leading to concerns about a possible ice age.

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200 years ago, the temperature was only 1.5 degrees Celsius cooler than now, so claiming a 1.5-degree increase will be catastrophic is ridiculous. In the past, temperatures were much higher, yet CO2 levels were decreasing. There is no clear relationship between temperature and CO2 levels based on historical data.

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CO2 levels are often portrayed as dangerously high, but when looking at the Earth's history, they are actually quite low. The current level of 420 parts per million is only one-sixth of the average throughout history. While mainstream sources consider this level alarming, it is important to question what truly constitutes a dangerous level of CO2. OSHA sets danger levels at 8,000 parts per million, while research suggests that plant growth benefits peak at around 1,200 parts per million. In fact, during the last ice age, CO2 levels dropped to near the line of death at 182 parts per million, where plant life cannot survive. Increasing CO2 levels have led to record-breaking crop growth and thriving ecosystems.

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The ice core surveys in Vostok, Antarctica, show a correlation between carbon dioxide (CO2) and temperature, but the relationship is more complex than Al Gore suggests. The data reveals that temperature increases first, followed by a rise in CO2, with an 800-year lag. This pattern is consistent across multiple ice core surveys. CO2 is not the cause of warming; rather, it is a product of temperature changes. Additionally, humans contribute only a small fraction of CO2 emissions compared to natural sources like volcanoes and the oceans. The oceans, in particular, have a memory of temperature changes and release or absorb CO2 accordingly. Earth's long climate history provides no evidence that CO2 has ever determined global temperatures.

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Over the past 4000 years, the planet has been cooling down. In the last 38 years, there has been no change in temperature. In the last 150 years, there have been 3 warming periods and 3 cooling periods, resulting in a total warmth of about 0.6 degrees Celsius. The warming after the little ice age in 1850 is expected, and if measurements are taken from that time, we have been warming. However, if measurements are taken from the medieval warming or the Roman warming, we have actually been cooling by about 5 degrees. So, when someone says it's warming, the question to ask is, since when?

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Scientists have found a link between temperature and CO2, but it's the opposite of what many believe. In the past, temperature has risen first, followed by a rise in CO2 levels. Ice ages start when CO2 is at its maximum and end when it's at its minimum, contradicting the idea that CO2 controls temperature. Looking back over millions of years, CO2 levels have changed drastically, but they have never driven temperature changes.

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According to the transcript, Al Gore correctly stated that there is a link between carbon dioxide and temperature, but he got the direction of the link wrong. Ice core records from Vostok and other major surveys show temperature increases preceding rises in CO2 levels by approximately 800 years. Therefore, CO2 cannot be the cause of warming; rather, warming produces increases in carbon dioxide. This evidence contradicts the fundamental assumption that human-caused CO2 increases drive climate change. Carbon dioxide is a natural gas produced by all living things, and humans only produce a small fraction of it.

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"The average temperature of the planet does seem to be going steadily upwards." "Since the mid eighties." "It went down in the seventies." "Since then, it's warmed at about a quarter of a degree per decade on average across the last thirty, forty years." "And it's maybe they say it's 1.5 degrees above pre industrial levels now." "So we're not in a period of unprecedented warmth." "We're not in a period of increasing extreme weather." "Floods, droughts, storms, there's no increase in either frequency or severity." "But at the same time, the carbon dioxide we're putting in the air is having a very measurable effect that's beneficial." "There is there is more green vegetation on the planet now compared with the nineteen eighties equivalent to a continent the size of North America that's been added of green vegetation."

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Carbon dioxide absorbs energy from the sun, creating a greenhouse effect necessary for life on Earth; without it, the average temperature would be -18 Celsius. Carbon dioxide acts as a thermostat; a slight increase can significantly raise temperatures. Data shows that since 1950, the Earth's temperature has risen at a constant rate, correlating with the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Burning fossil fuels seems to lead to a temperature rise, making this the hottest the planet has been in 200,000 years. A common argument suggests that concerns about burning fossil fuels are unnecessary because they will eventually run out, negating the need to change our behavior. For a long time, we've been told that we have twenty five years worth of oil and we've reached peak oil and we're gonna run out.

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Over the past 4000 years, the planet has been cooling down. In the last 38 years, there has been no change in temperature. In the last 150 years, there have been 3 warming periods and 3 cooling periods, resulting in a total warmth of about 0.6 degrees Celsius. The warming after the Little Ice Age in 1850 was expected, and since then, we have been warming. However, if we consider measurements from the medieval and Roman warmings, we have actually cooled about 5 degrees. So, when someone claims it's warming, the question to ask is, "since when?"

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The ice core surveys in Vostok, Antarctica, show a correlation between carbon dioxide (CO2) and temperature, but the relationship is more complex than Al Gore suggests. The ice core data reveals that temperature increases precede rises in CO2 levels by about 800 years. This indicates that temperature changes lead to CO2 increases, not the other way around. Furthermore, humans are not the main source of CO2 emissions; volcanoes, animals, bacteria, and the oceans contribute significantly more. The oceans, in particular, have a memory of temperature changes and release or absorb CO2 accordingly. Earth's long climate history does not support the idea that CO2 determines global temperatures.

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People shouldn't panic about global warming because current changes are normal based on Earth's natural history. Over the last 10,000 years, temperatures have fluctuated by about one degree at the Equator and two degrees at the poles every thousand years. The current rate of rise is about one degree per century, which is not unusual. The IPCC's models are flawed because they assume no natural change. The greenhouse effect is small compared to other atmospheric factors like solar radiation and gravity, with oceans and clouds primarily controlling climate stability. The pre-industrialization period used as a baseline by the IPCC was the lowest point in the last ten thousand years. It is currently one degree above that low but two degrees cooler than the warmest period in the last eight to ten thousand years. During the last interglacial period, it was six degrees warmer, and hippos and elephants lived in England.

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A 1.5 degrees Celsius increase in global atmospheric temperature is not a disaster. It's less than the temperature difference between breakfast and lunch and will open up vast areas of farmland. During the Eocene thermal maximum, the temperature was at least 5 to 7 degrees Celsius warmer than now, maybe even more. At the same time, CO2 was going in the exact opposite direction of the temperature. There is no clear relationship between CO2 and temperature.

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For the past 4000 years, the planet has been cooling. In the last 38 years, there has been no temperature change. Over the last 150 years, there have been 3 warming periods and 3 cooling periods, with a total warmth increase of 0.6 degrees Celsius. The end of the Little Ice Age in 1850 marked the start of warming. Since then, we have warmed due to the Industrial Revolution. If we measure from the medieval and Roman warmings, we have actually cooled by about 5 degrees each. So, when someone says it's warming, ask them since when?
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