My general impression is that there may be something to the claims of GW. I don't work in that field, so I can't really make a firm statement. I do watch it though.
I do get the impression that the public advocacy of GW is much more ardent than what scientists say. Also that even in science there is some push to spin things in the proper light to get grant funding.* I have a Ph.D. in chemistry so I have a general feel for quality of research and "how the game is played".
*I'm not accusing anybody of lying about experiments. It's more subtle than that. How you discuss your findings in the conclusion and the introduction, where scientist often make statements about the policy implications of their work. As an example, saw a very good paper on subject of global ice breakoff from Antarctica. Overall take of the paper was that this danger was not very high...even if temps rise a fair amount more. But the author felt the need to down play this and to mention other dangers from global warming. If the results had gone the other way, he would not have including an opposite set of caveats...
I do get the impression that the public advocacy of GW is much more ardent than what scientists say. Also that even in science there is some push to spin things in the proper light to get grant funding.* I have a Ph.D. in chemistry so I have a general feel for quality of research and "how the game is played".
*I'm not accusing anybody of lying about experiments. It's more subtle than that. How you discuss your findings in the conclusion and the introduction, where scientist often make statements about the policy implications of their work. As an example, saw a very good paper on subject of global ice breakoff from Antarctica. Overall take of the paper was that this danger was not very high...even if temps rise a fair amount more. But the author felt the need to down play this and to mention other dangers from global warming. If the results had gone the other way, he would not have including an opposite set of caveats...

do flame wars contribute to GW ?
).


Prepare for lengthy response of a slightly personal nature: how I arrived at some beliefs. I grew up in a very apolitical household. Until I was old enough to vote I did not even know what party(s) my parents were registered as. They had expressed opinions about Carter's opposition to nuclear power (my Dad's job) before the '76 election, and that was the extent of "indoctrination" from them.
It was the first time I saw a straightforward technical matter highjacked by Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt. It was an ugly thing to behold, and I learned to watch carefully for the technique. I see the same team at work wherever political correctness dominates. They are step-brothers of the horsemen of the Apocolypse, who threaten war and famine and pestilence but have no power to bring it upon us.
Please, debeest, stop right there. My point has been that such a "consensus" is a fiction. Gw is fact. Speculation on effects in the future is not fact. There is only a consensus of opinion on causation among scientists who are vocal in their beliefs about the causes; and so for effects. See reference to academia above. If you do not understand the difference I might as well stop here. See reference to "evidence, worldview, etc." above.
If eeeevil corporations lie they all lie, all the time, and then those whom they oppose don't ignore evidence, lie, exaggerate, or jump to unwarranted conclusions for ideological or political reasons? Ah, rhetoric; how refreshing.
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