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	<title><![CDATA[Grist - Comment Feed for Is the IPCC so wrong their theories contradict a basic laws of physics?]]></title>
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            <title>Comment #1 by Russ</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 12 Sep 2008 04:04:54 -0700</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/1</guid>
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				<p><strong>A simpler way of saying this</strong></p><p>(which also works vs. the anti-evolution cretins, who sometimes make a similar entropy argument), is to say that the 2nd Law applies to closed systems, while the earth is constantly receiving a massive infusion of new energy from the sun, and this overrides entropy.</p>
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				<p><strong>A simpler way of saying this</strong></p><p>(which also works vs. the anti-evolution cretins, who sometimes make a similar entropy argument), is to say that the 2nd Law applies to closed systems, while the earth is constantly receiving a massive infusion of new energy from the sun, and this overrides entropy.</p>
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            <title>Comment #2 by KenG</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 12 Sep 2008 04:15:57 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Applicability of Second Law</strong></p><p>Russ, if you try that argument with someone who has actually studied thermodynamics, you're going to get laughed at. The second law is applicable to both open and closed cycles. It's usually demonstrated with closed cycles because that's much simpler. Neither the Kelvin-Planck or the Clausius statement of the second law has any restriction on the type of cycle involved.</p><p>
"overrides Entropy"?? What on earth does that mean? </p>
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				<p><strong>Applicability of Second Law</strong></p><p>Russ, if you try that argument with someone who has actually studied thermodynamics, you're going to get laughed at. The second law is applicable to both open and closed cycles. It's usually demonstrated with closed cycles because that's much simpler. Neither the Kelvin-Planck or the Clausius statement of the second law has any restriction on the type of cycle involved.</p><p>
"overrides Entropy"?? What on earth does that mean? </p>
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            <title>Comment #3 by Russ</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 12 Sep 2008 21:43:44 -0700</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/3</guid>
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				<p><strong>keng</strong></p><p>This is not a physics seminar, but a political battleground. For those purposes, the "simpler" conception is sufficient.</p><p>
Thus (from Wikipedia):</p><p>
<br>
In general, according to the second law, the entropy of a system that is not isolated may decrease... </p><p>
As the second law of thermodynamics shows, in an isolated system internal portions at different temperatures will tend to adjust to a single uniform temperature and thus produce equilibrium...</p><p>
A simple and more concrete visualisation of the second law is that energy of all types changes from being localized to becoming dispersed or spread out, if it is not hindered from doing so...</p><p>
Entropy is one of the factors that determines the free energy of the system. This thermodynamic definition of entropy is only valid for a system in equilibrium (because temperature is defined only for a system in equilibrium), while the statistical definition of entropy (see below) applies to any system. Thus the statistical definition is usually considered the fundamental definition of entropy...</p><p>
In the big scheme of things the universe is a closed system, and the sun is expending its finite energy and thus increasing entropy, and the 2nd Law is operative.</p><p>
But for our purposes, our eyeblink of existence in geological, let alone solar time, we can say the sun is an infinite outside driver of what would otherwise be a closed system, the earth.</p><p>
So for me the salient concepts in the above description would be: "not isolated", "not hindered", "equilibrium".</p><p>
So I emphasize the "thermodynamic" rather than the "statistical" definiton. Sue me. </p><p>
"overrides Entropy"?? What on earth does that mean?</p><p>
From the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary:</p><p>
<br>
1over&#183;ride &nbsp;<br>
Pronunciation: <br>
-&#712;r&#299;d <br>
Function: <br>
transitive verb <br>
Inflected Form(s): <br>
over&#183;rode &nbsp;-&#712;r&#333;d ; over&#183;rid&#183;den &nbsp;-&#712;ri-d&#601;n ; over&#183;rid&#183;ing &nbsp;-&#712;r&#299;-di&#331; <br>
Date: <br>
before 12th century <br>
1: to ride over or across : trample2: to ride (as a horse) too much or too hard3 a: to prevail over : dominate b: to set aside : annul &lt;override a veto&gt; c: to neutralize the action of (as an automatic control)4: to extend or pass over ; especially : overlap<br>
</p><p>
The relevant definiton here would be 3a.</p><p>
Entropy (wikipedia again):</p><p>
<br>
In thermodynamics (a branch of physics), entropy, symbolized by S,[3] is a measure of the unavailability of a system's energy to do work.[4][5]</p><p>
It is a measure of the randomness of molecules in a system and is central to the second law of thermodynamics and the fundamental thermodynamic relation, which deal with physical processes and whether they occur spontaneously. Spontaneous changes, in isolated systems, occur with an increase in entropy. Spontaneous changes tend to smooth out differences in temperature, pressure, density, and chemical potential that may exist in a system, and entropy is thus a measure of how far this smoothing-out process has progressed.</p><p>
The word "entropy" is derived from the Greek &#949;&#957;&#964;&#961;&#959;&#960;&#943;&#945; "a turning toward" (&#949;&#957;- "in" + &#964;&#961;&#959;&#960;&#942; "a turning").[6]</p><p>
So the sun "overriding entropy" would be its new energy input "prevailing over...the randomness of molecules" and the consequent "smoothing out differences", which would otherwise defeat the greenhouse effect. </p><p>
As we have added to the greenhouse effect, the planet's surface must now warm until it reaches a new equilibrium temperature high enough to radiate out as much again as it is now receiving.</p><p>
</p><p>
Glad I could help.</br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></p>
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				<p><strong>keng</strong></p><p>This is not a physics seminar, but a political battleground. For those purposes, the "simpler" conception is sufficient.</p><p>
Thus (from Wikipedia):</p><p>
<br>
In general, according to the second law, the entropy of a system that is not isolated may decrease... </p><p>
As the second law of thermodynamics shows, in an isolated system internal portions at different temperatures will tend to adjust to a single uniform temperature and thus produce equilibrium...</p><p>
A simple and more concrete visualisation of the second law is that energy of all types changes from being localized to becoming dispersed or spread out, if it is not hindered from doing so...</p><p>
Entropy is one of the factors that determines the free energy of the system. This thermodynamic definition of entropy is only valid for a system in equilibrium (because temperature is defined only for a system in equilibrium), while the statistical definition of entropy (see below) applies to any system. Thus the statistical definition is usually considered the fundamental definition of entropy...</p><p>
In the big scheme of things the universe is a closed system, and the sun is expending its finite energy and thus increasing entropy, and the 2nd Law is operative.</p><p>
But for our purposes, our eyeblink of existence in geological, let alone solar time, we can say the sun is an infinite outside driver of what would otherwise be a closed system, the earth.</p><p>
So for me the salient concepts in the above description would be: "not isolated", "not hindered", "equilibrium".</p><p>
So I emphasize the "thermodynamic" rather than the "statistical" definiton. Sue me. </p><p>
"overrides Entropy"?? What on earth does that mean?</p><p>
From the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary:</p><p>
<br>
1over&#183;ride &nbsp;<br>
Pronunciation: <br>
-&#712;r&#299;d <br>
Function: <br>
transitive verb <br>
Inflected Form(s): <br>
over&#183;rode &nbsp;-&#712;r&#333;d ; over&#183;rid&#183;den &nbsp;-&#712;ri-d&#601;n ; over&#183;rid&#183;ing &nbsp;-&#712;r&#299;-di&#331; <br>
Date: <br>
before 12th century <br>
1: to ride over or across : trample2: to ride (as a horse) too much or too hard3 a: to prevail over : dominate b: to set aside : annul &lt;override a veto&gt; c: to neutralize the action of (as an automatic control)4: to extend or pass over ; especially : overlap<br>
</p><p>
The relevant definiton here would be 3a.</p><p>
Entropy (wikipedia again):</p><p>
<br>
In thermodynamics (a branch of physics), entropy, symbolized by S,[3] is a measure of the unavailability of a system's energy to do work.[4][5]</p><p>
It is a measure of the randomness of molecules in a system and is central to the second law of thermodynamics and the fundamental thermodynamic relation, which deal with physical processes and whether they occur spontaneously. Spontaneous changes, in isolated systems, occur with an increase in entropy. Spontaneous changes tend to smooth out differences in temperature, pressure, density, and chemical potential that may exist in a system, and entropy is thus a measure of how far this smoothing-out process has progressed.</p><p>
The word "entropy" is derived from the Greek &#949;&#957;&#964;&#961;&#959;&#960;&#943;&#945; "a turning toward" (&#949;&#957;- "in" + &#964;&#961;&#959;&#960;&#942; "a turning").[6]</p><p>
So the sun "overriding entropy" would be its new energy input "prevailing over...the randomness of molecules" and the consequent "smoothing out differences", which would otherwise defeat the greenhouse effect. </p><p>
As we have added to the greenhouse effect, the planet's surface must now warm until it reaches a new equilibrium temperature high enough to radiate out as much again as it is now receiving.</p><p>
</p><p>
Glad I could help.</br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></br></p>
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            <title>Comment #4 by Delay And Deny</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 12 Sep 2008 21:49:23 -0700</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/4</guid>
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				<p><strong>Is The Earth Cooler from Outer Space?</strong></p><p>Is a corollary of the Greenhouse Effect that the Earth should be cooler when seen from outer space?</p><p>
That is, imagine a CO2 layer, one molecule deep, that has a density such that 5% of all infrared energy is absorbed and re-emitted (I say one molecule because I don't want to deal with it being bounced to other Co2 molecules within the layer itself).</p><p>
So, an infrared ray, has a </p><p>
0.05 x 1/2 = 0.025 chance re-emitted to Earth.<br>
0.025 re-emitted to outer space.<br>
0.95 passing right through CO2 to outer space.</p><p>
0.975 total chance outer space.</p><p>
Now double the density of the CO2 layer:</p><p>
0.10 x 1/2 = 0.5 re-emitted to Earth.<br>
0.5 re-emitted to outer space<br>
0.90 pass through to outer space</p><p>
0.95 total chance outer space.</p><p>
So has the Earth been "cooling" when viewed from, say, the Moon?</br></br></br></br></p>
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				<p><strong>Is The Earth Cooler from Outer Space?</strong></p><p>Is a corollary of the Greenhouse Effect that the Earth should be cooler when seen from outer space?</p><p>
That is, imagine a CO2 layer, one molecule deep, that has a density such that 5% of all infrared energy is absorbed and re-emitted (I say one molecule because I don't want to deal with it being bounced to other Co2 molecules within the layer itself).</p><p>
So, an infrared ray, has a </p><p>
0.05 x 1/2 = 0.025 chance re-emitted to Earth.<br>
0.025 re-emitted to outer space.<br>
0.95 passing right through CO2 to outer space.</p><p>
0.975 total chance outer space.</p><p>
Now double the density of the CO2 layer:</p><p>
0.10 x 1/2 = 0.5 re-emitted to Earth.<br>
0.5 re-emitted to outer space<br>
0.90 pass through to outer space</p><p>
0.95 total chance outer space.</p><p>
So has the Earth been "cooling" when viewed from, say, the Moon?</br></br></br></br></p>
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            <title>Comment #5 by SamHec</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 03:16:07 -0700</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/5</guid>
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				<p><strong>Depends</strong></p><p>jabailo,<br>
It depends upon which Layer of the Earth you are looking at. &nbsp;The Troposphere, closest to the surface, is warming. &nbsp;But the Stratosphere, next layer up, is cooling a little; likely this is because less heat is transferring to the outer atmosphere due to increasing greenhouse gasses preventing as much. &nbsp;If the Sun's luminosity were increasing, the Stratosphere would be warmer too.</p><p>
Models have predicted all this, observations confirm it. &nbsp;And of course, the Climate Cranks use the cooling stratosphere to argue that GW is a myth.

<p>This is STILL not a Signiature!</p></br></p>
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				<p><strong>Depends</strong></p><p>jabailo,<br>
It depends upon which Layer of the Earth you are looking at. &nbsp;The Troposphere, closest to the surface, is warming. &nbsp;But the Stratosphere, next layer up, is cooling a little; likely this is because less heat is transferring to the outer atmosphere due to increasing greenhouse gasses preventing as much. &nbsp;If the Sun's luminosity were increasing, the Stratosphere would be warmer too.</p><p>
Models have predicted all this, observations confirm it. &nbsp;And of course, the Climate Cranks use the cooling stratosphere to argue that GW is a myth.

<p>This is STILL not a Signiature!</p></br></p>
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            <title>Comment #6 by Delay And Deny</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 04:11:46 -0700</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/6</guid>
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				<p><strong>No, Total</strong></p><p>No, I'm not saying look at individual layers.</p><p>
I'm saying, from the Moon, the total amount of infrared allowed to escape should be decreasing as the Earth "traps" infrared according the Greehouse Effect.</p><p>
So, infrared sensors on the Moon, would see a total decrease as more infrared is retained on Earth.</p><p>
Are you saying that observations from the Moon or another distant location have shown the Earth as a cooler body over the 30 or 40 years of cooling? &nbsp;Haven't we ever sent up a satellite at a high enough orbit to measure this?</p>
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				<p><strong>No, Total</strong></p><p>No, I'm not saying look at individual layers.</p><p>
I'm saying, from the Moon, the total amount of infrared allowed to escape should be decreasing as the Earth "traps" infrared according the Greehouse Effect.</p><p>
So, infrared sensors on the Moon, would see a total decrease as more infrared is retained on Earth.</p><p>
Are you saying that observations from the Moon or another distant location have shown the Earth as a cooler body over the 30 or 40 years of cooling? &nbsp;Haven't we ever sent up a satellite at a high enough orbit to measure this?</p>
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            <title>Comment #7 by GreyFlcn</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 05:26:16 -0700</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/7</guid>
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				<p><strong>Yes Bailo<p>The total amount of heat leaving the earth is going down.<p>
Thats why the stratosphere is cooling.<p>
Because there's less heat exiting through the stratosphere at any given time.<p>
Less heat? More Cold.<p>
<a href="http://greyfalcon.net/forcing2.png" rel="nofollow">http://greyfalcon.net/forcing2.png

<p>-David Ahlport</p></a></p></p></p></p></p></strong></p>
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				<p><strong>Yes Bailo<p>The total amount of heat leaving the earth is going down.<p>
Thats why the stratosphere is cooling.<p>
Because there's less heat exiting through the stratosphere at any given time.<p>
Less heat? More Cold.<p>
<a href="http://greyfalcon.net/forcing2.png" rel="nofollow">http://greyfalcon.net/forcing2.png

<p>-David Ahlport</p></a></p></p></p></p></p></strong></p>
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            <title>Comment #8 by GreyFlcn</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 05:27:24 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Oh yeah</strong></p><p>And over 99% of the earth's atmosphere is represented by the troposphere, and the stratosphere.</p><p>
It's basically a vacuum after the stratosphere.

<p>-David Ahlport</p></p>
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				<p><strong>Oh yeah</strong></p><p>And over 99% of the earth's atmosphere is represented by the troposphere, and the stratosphere.</p><p>
It's basically a vacuum after the stratosphere.

<p>-David Ahlport</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #9 by Delay And Deny</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 08:55:09 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>CO2, Tea or Heat</strong></p><p>Seems like there'd be some optimal CO2 density at which that layer would start to retain a whole lot of the increased heat.</p><p>
I just made some tea and poured it into a thick ceramic cup. &nbsp;The tea cooled a bit as the cup heated and became drinkable. &nbsp; Eventually the tea got cold even as the cup remained warm.</p><p>
Now if I used a more perfect insulator like a Styrofoam cup, the cup would be cold, and the tea maximally hot. &nbsp; That is with 100% CO2 every infrared would hit a Co2 molecule and the bounce would be (assume the Earth absorbs 1/2 and reflects 1/2) 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 ...</p><p>
But with some other density where the infrared can get "into" the CO2 layer, it could be 1/4 + 1/32 + ...</p><p>
So do we end up with a heated layer of CO2 gas surrounding the planet which maximally keeps infrared both from the stratosphere and from the Earth body?</p>
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				<p><strong>CO2, Tea or Heat</strong></p><p>Seems like there'd be some optimal CO2 density at which that layer would start to retain a whole lot of the increased heat.</p><p>
I just made some tea and poured it into a thick ceramic cup. &nbsp;The tea cooled a bit as the cup heated and became drinkable. &nbsp; Eventually the tea got cold even as the cup remained warm.</p><p>
Now if I used a more perfect insulator like a Styrofoam cup, the cup would be cold, and the tea maximally hot. &nbsp; That is with 100% CO2 every infrared would hit a Co2 molecule and the bounce would be (assume the Earth absorbs 1/2 and reflects 1/2) 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 ...</p><p>
But with some other density where the infrared can get "into" the CO2 layer, it could be 1/4 + 1/32 + ...</p><p>
So do we end up with a heated layer of CO2 gas surrounding the planet which maximally keeps infrared both from the stratosphere and from the Earth body?</p>
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            <title>Comment #10 by Coby Beck</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 14:38:32 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>energy in must equal energy out</strong></p><p>jabailo,</p><p>
No matter what the the content of the atmosphere, when at equilibrium, the earth will be radiating out as much energy as is coming in. &nbsp;Right now, during a state of disequilibrium, the radiation leaving the top of the atmosphere should be less, the difference going into warming the surface layers. &nbsp;Elevated CO2 will cause infrared to stay in the system longer, but ultimately the same amount will escape (aagain, once the sutem has acheived a new equilibrium)<br>


<p>"What if this weren't a hypothetical question?"
-- unknown</p></br></p>
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				<p><strong>energy in must equal energy out</strong></p><p>jabailo,</p><p>
No matter what the the content of the atmosphere, when at equilibrium, the earth will be radiating out as much energy as is coming in. &nbsp;Right now, during a state of disequilibrium, the radiation leaving the top of the atmosphere should be less, the difference going into warming the surface layers. &nbsp;Elevated CO2 will cause infrared to stay in the system longer, but ultimately the same amount will escape (aagain, once the sutem has acheived a new equilibrium)<br>


<p>"What if this weren't a hypothetical question?"
-- unknown</p></br></p>
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            <title>Comment #11 by amazingdrx</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 15:45:35 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Good job Coby</strong></p><p>Thanks so much for your valiant efforts, over so many articles. &nbsp;You have some titanic patience!

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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				<p><strong>Good job Coby</strong></p><p>Thanks so much for your valiant efforts, over so many articles. &nbsp;You have some titanic patience!

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #12 by MAD MAC</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 15:54:17 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>I still think it should be possible........</strong></p><p>........ to modify the troposphere or the stratosphere in order to reduce the energy coming to the surface and thus mitigating the problem via this method. </p><p>
Also, it seems we really need to put more effort into CO2 "washing" to remove CO2 that is already in the atmosphere. </p><p>
These two actions could go a long way towards cooling the climate and achieving equilibrium, but I don't hear climate scientists beating the drums for them. Why not?</p><p>
Truth be told, even if the west reduces its greenhouse gases, the Developing world is just going to take our place in &nbsp;outputs. The oil is giong to be used until it's gone. That's pretty obvious.

<p>Victory in Pattani</p></p>
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				<p><strong>I still think it should be possible........</strong></p><p>........ to modify the troposphere or the stratosphere in order to reduce the energy coming to the surface and thus mitigating the problem via this method. </p><p>
Also, it seems we really need to put more effort into CO2 "washing" to remove CO2 that is already in the atmosphere. </p><p>
These two actions could go a long way towards cooling the climate and achieving equilibrium, but I don't hear climate scientists beating the drums for them. Why not?</p><p>
Truth be told, even if the west reduces its greenhouse gases, the Developing world is just going to take our place in &nbsp;outputs. The oil is giong to be used until it's gone. That's pretty obvious.

<p>Victory in Pattani</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #13 by Delay And Deny</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 15:58:36 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>No, Doesn't Follow</strong></p><p>" Elevated CO2 will cause infrared to stay in the system longer"</p><p>
On that we may may possibly agree.</p><p>
"but ultimately the same amount will escape (aagain, once the sutem has acheived a new equilibrium)"</p><p>
Not necessarily. &nbsp; With a thick enough layer of Co2, it would be the Co2 itself that husbands the energy. &nbsp; </p><p>
So, it radiates up, hits on Co2 molecule, then another, then another. &nbsp; The odds of it "coming out" decreases with its efficiency as an infrared capturing layer, and the odds of it "staying in" -- constantly hitting other CO2 molecules rises.</p><p>
Another result of this is that the heat would be spread with infrared travelling sideways in the layer. &nbsp; This could explain why the tropics aren't heating much, the temperate zones more and the polar zones a lot.</p><p>
..in addition, any natural radiation from the Earth itself will also be trapped there, so the result at this optimal Co2 density would be a cooling of the planet with an ever hotter Co2 layer.</p>
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				<p><strong>No, Doesn't Follow</strong></p><p>" Elevated CO2 will cause infrared to stay in the system longer"</p><p>
On that we may may possibly agree.</p><p>
"but ultimately the same amount will escape (aagain, once the sutem has acheived a new equilibrium)"</p><p>
Not necessarily. &nbsp; With a thick enough layer of Co2, it would be the Co2 itself that husbands the energy. &nbsp; </p><p>
So, it radiates up, hits on Co2 molecule, then another, then another. &nbsp; The odds of it "coming out" decreases with its efficiency as an infrared capturing layer, and the odds of it "staying in" -- constantly hitting other CO2 molecules rises.</p><p>
Another result of this is that the heat would be spread with infrared travelling sideways in the layer. &nbsp; This could explain why the tropics aren't heating much, the temperate zones more and the polar zones a lot.</p><p>
..in addition, any natural radiation from the Earth itself will also be trapped there, so the result at this optimal Co2 density would be a cooling of the planet with an ever hotter Co2 layer.</p>
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            <title>Comment #14 by SamHec</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 16:22:23 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Sequestration</strong></p><p>of carbon molecules which store energy in their connections can eat up some of the expected outgoing IR radiation....but Eventually there will -otherwise- be equilibrium, as other Climate mechanisms stop reacting to the CO2 temp forcings, and give up latent energy as heat.</p><p>
WRT satellites to measure such changes....well Al Gore wanted to launch DSCVR aka Triana aka GoreSat to do just that. &nbsp;But a certain political faction, who was in love with Hating Al Gore, would have nothing of it...that and the Shuttle crashed again.

<p>This is STILL not a Signiature!</p></p>
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				<p><strong>Sequestration</strong></p><p>of carbon molecules which store energy in their connections can eat up some of the expected outgoing IR radiation....but Eventually there will -otherwise- be equilibrium, as other Climate mechanisms stop reacting to the CO2 temp forcings, and give up latent energy as heat.</p><p>
WRT satellites to measure such changes....well Al Gore wanted to launch DSCVR aka Triana aka GoreSat to do just that. &nbsp;But a certain political faction, who was in love with Hating Al Gore, would have nothing of it...that and the Shuttle crashed again.

<p>This is STILL not a Signiature!</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #15 by amazingdrx</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 16:32:26 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Manufacturing and ag</strong></p><p>"...even if the west reduces its greenhouse gases, the Developing world is just going to take our place in &nbsp;outputs."</p><p>
In the developing world is already doing this, wether we reduce GHG or not. &nbsp;A lot of it to produce goods we use. &nbsp;All the cheap food and cheap junk at places like Walmart for instance.</p><p>
They burn rain forest, vomit toxins, and spew coal emmisions elsewhere to stock the shelves here in the US.</p><p>
The way to change this is to lead. &nbsp;We invent and mass produce and use rewable/conservation energy devices and those nations will rush to copy us and do it cheaper. &nbsp;And in the process realize these devices are a better deal economically for them too.</p><p>
Saving the climate wouuld be a byproduct. &nbsp;When they see it makes money for them to be green, they will pretend to do it for the environment, then that takes on a self fullfilling nature. You might call it psychological/cutural postive feedback effect, hehey. &nbsp;So it goes.

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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				<p><strong>Manufacturing and ag</strong></p><p>"...even if the west reduces its greenhouse gases, the Developing world is just going to take our place in &nbsp;outputs."</p><p>
In the developing world is already doing this, wether we reduce GHG or not. &nbsp;A lot of it to produce goods we use. &nbsp;All the cheap food and cheap junk at places like Walmart for instance.</p><p>
They burn rain forest, vomit toxins, and spew coal emmisions elsewhere to stock the shelves here in the US.</p><p>
The way to change this is to lead. &nbsp;We invent and mass produce and use rewable/conservation energy devices and those nations will rush to copy us and do it cheaper. &nbsp;And in the process realize these devices are a better deal economically for them too.</p><p>
Saving the climate wouuld be a byproduct. &nbsp;When they see it makes money for them to be green, they will pretend to do it for the environment, then that takes on a self fullfilling nature. You might call it psychological/cutural postive feedback effect, hehey. &nbsp;So it goes.

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #16 by Russ</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 17:59:16 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>shared emission responsibility</strong></p><p>drx says<br>
In the developing world is already doing this, wether we reduce GHG or not. &nbsp;A lot of it to produce goods we use. &nbsp;All the cheap food and cheap junk at places like Walmart for instance.</p><p>
Which is in part why the delayer catch-22 talking point that America shouldn't impose a carbon price until China's willing to do so as well is fraudulent - a significant part of China's emissions are also America's emissions.</br></p>
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				<p><strong>shared emission responsibility</strong></p><p>drx says<br>
In the developing world is already doing this, wether we reduce GHG or not. &nbsp;A lot of it to produce goods we use. &nbsp;All the cheap food and cheap junk at places like Walmart for instance.</p><p>
Which is in part why the delayer catch-22 talking point that America shouldn't impose a carbon price until China's willing to do so as well is fraudulent - a significant part of China's emissions are also America's emissions.</br></p>
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            <title>Comment #17 by amazingdrx</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 18:14:26 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Yep Russ</strong></p><p>Delay and go the way of the all other empire.</p><p>
Lead, follow, or get out of the way. &nbsp;With Palin/ McCain we will be in the way, as under duuhbya.</p><p>
We still might be a contendor in terms of positive historical leadership. &nbsp;But that window will close with more of this drill, baby, drill and oil warrior bunk.</p><p>
Gore's revenue neutral carbon tax/income tax cut for those under 200k is the way to go. &nbsp;And diverting carbon subsidies to GHG free subsidy.

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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				<p><strong>Yep Russ</strong></p><p>Delay and go the way of the all other empire.</p><p>
Lead, follow, or get out of the way. &nbsp;With Palin/ McCain we will be in the way, as under duuhbya.</p><p>
We still might be a contendor in terms of positive historical leadership. &nbsp;But that window will close with more of this drill, baby, drill and oil warrior bunk.</p><p>
Gore's revenue neutral carbon tax/income tax cut for those under 200k is the way to go. &nbsp;And diverting carbon subsidies to GHG free subsidy.

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #18 by Russ</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2008 18:55:51 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>positive historical leadership</strong></p><p>That's what I've always said - enough already with these cost-benefit obsessions, all these accountants banging away like monkeys with typewriters trying to replicate Shakespeare.</p><p>
What's needed is a grand historical gesture to break out of this morass, and even after all the damage eight years of aggressive idiot rule has done, the idea of America still commands enough respect, admiration, and hope worldwide that a grand moral gesture on America's part could still turn the tide around the world.</p><p>
America should have, not the miserable myopia of a money-changer, but the pride of a leader.</p>
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				<p><strong>positive historical leadership</strong></p><p>That's what I've always said - enough already with these cost-benefit obsessions, all these accountants banging away like monkeys with typewriters trying to replicate Shakespeare.</p><p>
What's needed is a grand historical gesture to break out of this morass, and even after all the damage eight years of aggressive idiot rule has done, the idea of America still commands enough respect, admiration, and hope worldwide that a grand moral gesture on America's part could still turn the tide around the world.</p><p>
America should have, not the miserable myopia of a money-changer, but the pride of a leader.</p>
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            <title>Comment #19 by amazingdrx</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 00:58:04 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Subsidy diversion</strong></p><p>If Obama and the democratic controlled legislative branch would take a leap and divert the 10s of billions in corporate welfare and subsidies for fossil and nuclear and agribizz fuel farming to provide direct subsidies to homeowners and businesses to install solar panels and switch to plugin hybrids and ground source heating/cooling, that would get this energy revolution going.</p><p>
It would mean turning on lobbyists and the powerful interests they support. &nbsp;</p><p>
With direct subsidies utilities could build out smart grids to handle the power from solar, wind, and biogas and store it in plugin hybrid batteries and as heat or cold in building mass. &nbsp;They could even start to incorporate wind pumped hydro storage in existing hydro dams and super conducting electromagnetic energy storage systems. </p><p>
With some of the subsidy money diverted, government could negotiate orders for millions of plugin hybrids, solar systems, and ground source heating/cooling systems, spurring mass production right here in the US. &nbsp;Stimulating our manufacturing, job, and tax base. &nbsp;</p><p>
Subsidy diversion is a revenue neutral plan that could pay down our debts public and private. &nbsp;Russia has payed down it's debt in the last decade. &nbsp;How?</p><p>
With oil and gas revenue, on the backs of European and US citizens. &nbsp;They are becoming a financial and world power again. &nbsp;We can see the danger that presents with the incursion into Georgia and the necon shill palin response. &nbsp;War!</p><p>
The Palin/Mccain plan? &nbsp;Drill and wage war and go bankrupt with debt owed to China and OPEC nations, we see how that plan is working.</p><p>
That's not change. &nbsp;That's more of the same. &nbsp;Hehehey. &nbsp;Oh, we got our slogans too. &nbsp;But they actually make sense.

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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				<p><strong>Subsidy diversion</strong></p><p>If Obama and the democratic controlled legislative branch would take a leap and divert the 10s of billions in corporate welfare and subsidies for fossil and nuclear and agribizz fuel farming to provide direct subsidies to homeowners and businesses to install solar panels and switch to plugin hybrids and ground source heating/cooling, that would get this energy revolution going.</p><p>
It would mean turning on lobbyists and the powerful interests they support. &nbsp;</p><p>
With direct subsidies utilities could build out smart grids to handle the power from solar, wind, and biogas and store it in plugin hybrid batteries and as heat or cold in building mass. &nbsp;They could even start to incorporate wind pumped hydro storage in existing hydro dams and super conducting electromagnetic energy storage systems. </p><p>
With some of the subsidy money diverted, government could negotiate orders for millions of plugin hybrids, solar systems, and ground source heating/cooling systems, spurring mass production right here in the US. &nbsp;Stimulating our manufacturing, job, and tax base. &nbsp;</p><p>
Subsidy diversion is a revenue neutral plan that could pay down our debts public and private. &nbsp;Russia has payed down it's debt in the last decade. &nbsp;How?</p><p>
With oil and gas revenue, on the backs of European and US citizens. &nbsp;They are becoming a financial and world power again. &nbsp;We can see the danger that presents with the incursion into Georgia and the necon shill palin response. &nbsp;War!</p><p>
The Palin/Mccain plan? &nbsp;Drill and wage war and go bankrupt with debt owed to China and OPEC nations, we see how that plan is working.</p><p>
That's not change. &nbsp;That's more of the same. &nbsp;Hehehey. &nbsp;Oh, we got our slogans too. &nbsp;But they actually make sense.

<p>http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog     John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin</p></p>
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            <title>Comment #20 by Delay And Deny</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 04:53:47 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Hybrid Shills</strong></p><p>"It would mean turning on lobbyists and the powerful interests they support. "</p><p>
Har. &nbsp;It's so hypocritical of you to disparage one industry simply to shift funds to your own favorite group of cronies: T. Boone Pickens and the Wind Combine, or the Solar Cartel or the Hybrid Hunta.</p><p>
You clearly are taking a side, not offering some panacea. &nbsp;(I do the same, but I admit it...openly).</p><p>
Why not hydrogen. &nbsp;Why not fuel cells. &nbsp; Why not cars that only have one engine...run on hydrogen generated from water using the Nocera method?</p><p>
Yes, brush all that under the rug, Democrats, because it prevents you from getting the pork and earmarks put into your blue wallets!<br>
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				<p><strong>Hybrid Shills</strong></p><p>"It would mean turning on lobbyists and the powerful interests they support. "</p><p>
Har. &nbsp;It's so hypocritical of you to disparage one industry simply to shift funds to your own favorite group of cronies: T. Boone Pickens and the Wind Combine, or the Solar Cartel or the Hybrid Hunta.</p><p>
You clearly are taking a side, not offering some panacea. &nbsp;(I do the same, but I admit it...openly).</p><p>
Why not hydrogen. &nbsp;Why not fuel cells. &nbsp; Why not cars that only have one engine...run on hydrogen generated from water using the Nocera method?</p><p>
Yes, brush all that under the rug, Democrats, because it prevents you from getting the pork and earmarks put into your blue wallets!<br>
</br></p>
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            <title>Comment #21 by Delay And Deny</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 04:57:37 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Clarify</strong></p><p>"but Eventually there will -otherwise- be equilibrium, as other Climate mechanisms stop reacting to the CO2 temp forcings, and give up latent energy as heat."</p><p>
Well, I think I understand you, but I get worried when things start to drift from technical descriptions to semi-metaphor.</p><p>
Could this be said: &nbsp;At some point the total number of CO2 molecules will be active, charged up from an infrared ray, and unable to absorb any more?</p><p>
At that point, any infrared heading into the Troposphere's CO2 layer would freely pass into the Stratosphere, unable to find an "open" Co2 molecule.</p><p>
However, when you say "Climate mechanisms stop reacting", I really need a bit more specifics...</p>
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				<p><strong>Clarify</strong></p><p>"but Eventually there will -otherwise- be equilibrium, as other Climate mechanisms stop reacting to the CO2 temp forcings, and give up latent energy as heat."</p><p>
Well, I think I understand you, but I get worried when things start to drift from technical descriptions to semi-metaphor.</p><p>
Could this be said: &nbsp;At some point the total number of CO2 molecules will be active, charged up from an infrared ray, and unable to absorb any more?</p><p>
At that point, any infrared heading into the Troposphere's CO2 layer would freely pass into the Stratosphere, unable to find an "open" Co2 molecule.</p><p>
However, when you say "Climate mechanisms stop reacting", I really need a bit more specifics...</p>
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            <title>Comment #22 by GRLCowan</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 06:32:11 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Oil can be leapfrogged<p>... we really need to put more effort into CO2 "washing" to remove CO2 that is already in the atmosphere.<p>
So far, the only large-scale permanent CO2 removal that has been happening, has been happening as a side effect of mining. More <a href="http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2008/03/air-capture/#comment-87160" rel="nofollow">here, including numerous comments by me up and down thread.<p>
These two actions could go a long way towards cooling the climate and achieving equilibrium, but I don't hear climate scientists beating the drums for them. Why not?<p>
They tend to think once CO2 has dispersed in the atmosphere, condensing it to a solid must be very difficult, because its entropy in the solid will be less. Fortunately, they are wrong, because the heat released by the condensation increases total entropy more. So grains of pulverized alkaline earth silicate minerals are consumed by, and consume, atmospheric CO2 over a period of one to five years. Here's <a href="ftp://ftp.geog.uu.nl/pub/posters/2008/Let_the_earth_help_us_to_save_the_earth-Schuiling_June2008.pdf" rel="nofollow">Schuiling again saying one year (but he wants it to happen in warm places, where it's quicker).<p>
Truth be told, even if the west reduces its greenhouse gases, the Developing world is just going to take our place in &nbsp;outputs. The oil is giong to be used until it's gone. <p>
Western governments are already taking enough special revenues on oil and gas to pay for removing CO2 by the above-mentioned methods at a greater rate than it is being injected from all fossil fuels worldwide. We could carry the developing world.<p>
Also, in some markets, we know oil can be beaten, because <a href="http://atomicinsights.blogspot.com/2008/07/energy-input-into-us-electricity.html" rel="nofollow">it has been. Natural gas is next, as soon as its wind-power figleaf can be stripped away.</a></p></p></p></a></p></p></a></p></p></strong></p>
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				<p><strong>Oil can be leapfrogged<p>... we really need to put more effort into CO2 "washing" to remove CO2 that is already in the atmosphere.<p>
So far, the only large-scale permanent CO2 removal that has been happening, has been happening as a side effect of mining. More <a href="http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2008/03/air-capture/#comment-87160" rel="nofollow">here, including numerous comments by me up and down thread.<p>
These two actions could go a long way towards cooling the climate and achieving equilibrium, but I don't hear climate scientists beating the drums for them. Why not?<p>
They tend to think once CO2 has dispersed in the atmosphere, condensing it to a solid must be very difficult, because its entropy in the solid will be less. Fortunately, they are wrong, because the heat released by the condensation increases total entropy more. So grains of pulverized alkaline earth silicate minerals are consumed by, and consume, atmospheric CO2 over a period of one to five years. Here's <a href="ftp://ftp.geog.uu.nl/pub/posters/2008/Let_the_earth_help_us_to_save_the_earth-Schuiling_June2008.pdf" rel="nofollow">Schuiling again saying one year (but he wants it to happen in warm places, where it's quicker).<p>
Truth be told, even if the west reduces its greenhouse gases, the Developing world is just going to take our place in &nbsp;outputs. The oil is giong to be used until it's gone. <p>
Western governments are already taking enough special revenues on oil and gas to pay for removing CO2 by the above-mentioned methods at a greater rate than it is being injected from all fossil fuels worldwide. We could carry the developing world.<p>
Also, in some markets, we know oil can be beaten, because <a href="http://atomicinsights.blogspot.com/2008/07/energy-input-into-us-electricity.html" rel="nofollow">it has been. Natural gas is next, as soon as its wind-power figleaf can be stripped away.</a></p></p></p></a></p></p></a></p></p></strong></p>
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            <title>Comment #23 by SamHec</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/greenhouse-theory-violates-the-laws-of-thermodynamics/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 10:33:38 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>Replies</strong></p><p>"the Hybrid Hunta."</p><p>
iz spelld 'Junta'. &nbsp;;)</p><p>
"Yes, brush all that under the rug, Democrats, because it prevents you from getting the pork and earmarks put into your blue wallets!"</p><p>
My oft repeated proposalis to simply end ALL energy subsidies and market protections, and replace subsidies for renewable energy by simply having our governments pay Certified Carbon Offsets for their own greenhouse gas wastes. &nbsp;It pays for itself, it's self-deleting, and the Free-MarketTM figures out where best to spend the money. &nbsp;It's probabvly not enough to get us back down to 350ppm of CO2, but it's a good start. &nbsp;And while we're at it, kill the Farm Bill; the changing climate will be too weird to be picking winners and be wrong anyway.</p><p>
"Could this be said: &nbsp;At some point the total number of CO2 molecules will be active, charged up from an infrared ray, and unable to absorb any more?"</p><p>
That is a very interesting question, I don't have an answer, but it probably relates to logarithmic (not one-to-one) relation between CO2 Levels and Global Temperature.</p><p>
"However, when you say "Climate mechanisms stop reacting", I really need a bit more specifics..."</p><p>
Inertia. To be more exemplific (NEW WORD!), the brakes in your car don't create an instantaneous stop.

<p>This is STILL not a Signiature!</p></p>
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				<p><strong>Replies</strong></p><p>"the Hybrid Hunta."</p><p>
iz spelld 'Junta'. &nbsp;;)</p><p>
"Yes, brush all that under the rug, Democrats, because it prevents you from getting the pork and earmarks put into your blue wallets!"</p><p>
My oft repeated proposalis to simply end ALL energy subsidies and market protections, and replace subsidies for renewable energy by simply having our governments pay Certified Carbon Offsets for their own greenhouse gas wastes. &nbsp;It pays for itself, it's self-deleting, and the Free-MarketTM figures out where best to spend the money. &nbsp;It's probabvly not enough to get us back down to 350ppm of CO2, but it's a good start. &nbsp;And while we're at it, kill the Farm Bill; the changing climate will be too weird to be picking winners and be wrong anyway.</p><p>
"Could this be said: &nbsp;At some point the total number of CO2 molecules will be active, charged up from an infrared ray, and unable to absorb any more?"</p><p>
That is a very interesting question, I don't have an answer, but it probably relates to logarithmic (not one-to-one) relation between CO2 Levels and Global Temperature.</p><p>
"However, when you say "Climate mechanisms stop reacting", I really need a bit more specifics..."</p><p>
Inertia. To be more exemplific (NEW WORD!), the brakes in your car don't create an instantaneous stop.

<p>This is STILL not a Signiature!</p></p>
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