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Archive for the 'Global Warming' Category

The Green Bible?

Posted by Melody on 2nd January 2009

Here is a quote from a really good review of the newly issued Green Bible: 

 Augustine said in 397 A.D. that the “most expert investigator of the divine scriptures” will both have read all the Scriptures and also have “a good knowledge” of them. This will protect the interpreter so that others “will then be unable to take possession of his unprotected mind and prejudice him in any way against sound interpretations or delude him by their dangerous falsehoods and fantasies.”3 Heresies thrive on emphasizing only a part of Scripture (e.g., saying Jesus was God, but not man), but a knowledge of the whole militates against heresies.

Read the rest of the is review here.

Posted in Uncategorized, Global Warming, Emerging Church | 1 Comment »

Bye, Bye Light As We Know It

Posted by Melody on 19th December 2007

The incandescent light bulb, one of the most venerable inventions of its era but deemed too inefficient for our own, will be phased off the U.S. market beginning in 2012 under the new energy law just approved by Congress. Although this will reduce electricity costs and minimize new bulb purchases in every household in America, you may be feeling in the dark about the loss of your old, relatively reliable source of light. Here’s a primer on the light bulb phase-out and what will mean to you:
Why are they taking my light bulbs away? Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Uncategorized, Global Warming | No Comments »

Worried about Global Warming? - Read This

Posted by Melody on 27th October 2007

“While science and technology have the potential to create an ideal habitat for humanity over the next millennium, there is the possibility of a monumental genetic hangover over the subsequent millennia due to an over-reliance on technology reducing our natural capacity to resist disease, or our evolved ability to get along with each other. Human race will ’split into two different species’
By NIALL FIRTH -

The human race will one day split into two separate species, an attractive, intelligent ruling elite and an underclass of dim-witted, ugly goblin-like creatures, according to a top scientist.

100,000 years into the future, sexual selection could mean that two distinct breeds of human will have developed.

The alarming prediction comes from evolutionary theorist Oliver Curry from the London School of Economics, who says that the human race will have reached its physical peak by the year 3000. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Uncategorized, Global Warming | No Comments »

Al Gore vs. The British

Posted by Melody on 18th October 2007

Who would have thought that the British Royal Court of Justice would have been the official ones to debunk the silliness of Al Gore? 

“The unraveling of Gore’s fabrications began when Mr. Stuart Dimmock, an English truck driver and father of two children, asked the Royal Courts of Justice to declare unlawful the decision of the secretary of state for education to distribute to every state secondary school in the U.K. a copy of An Inconvenient Truth.   The Judge found that An Inconvenient Truth promotes “partisan political views.”  In other words, it is not a scientific documentary.  It is a political platform devoid of scientific merit.

 

The High Court of Justice found several substantive factual errors and/or false statements, including:

 

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Global Warming | No Comments »

Bono vs. Borlaug

Posted by Melody on 25th July 2007

“Only five people in history have ever won the Nobel Peace Prize, the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Godl Medal: Martin Luther King Jr., Mother Teresa, Nelson Mandela, Elie Wiesel … and Norman Borlaug.” *

What, you’ve never heard of Norman Borlaug? Me neither. And I’m really surprised that as a Christian I don’t know more about him. Especially now that Bono, who is supposedly a Christian, Tony Campolo and Rick Warren are out to end world hunger. “For Borlaug…to win more notice, he would have to make his next trip to Africa in the company of Angelina Jolie.”*

Okay, so who is this guy? Only the man who has saved at least a BILLION people from starvation over the last 60-plus years. How? Through biotechnology. Yes, that scientific practice of crossing genetic make-up of plants or organisms to create disease and pest resistant crops. In the 1940’s and 50’s he developed a hybrid called “dwarf wheat” that tripled grain production. This was the begining of the ‘Green Revolution’ - (not Greenpeace or the Green Party who, oddly enough, despise this man). The ‘Green Revolution’ has done more to end world hunger than any other event in history. “In 1960 about 60 percent of the world’s people experienced some hunger every year. By 2000 that number was 14 percent…”*

Amazingly, one of the biggest criticisms of this great man is his desire to create roads in impoverished areas so that people who are starving can have access to food and be able to become self-sustaining. According to Norman Borlaug, “Supplying food to sub-Saharan African countries is made very complex because of a lack of infrastructure. For example, you bring fertilizer into a country like Ethiopia, and the cost of transporting the fertilizer up the mountain a few hundred miles to Addis Ababa doubles its cost. All through sub-Saharan Africa, the lack of roads is one of the biggest obstacles to development–and not just from the standpoint of moving agricultural inputs in and moving increased grain production to the cities. That’s part of it, but I think roads also have great indirect value. If a road is built going across tribal groups and some beat-up old bus starts moving, in seven or eight years you’ll hear people say, “You know, that tribe over there, they aren’t so different from us after all, are they?”
And once there’s a road and some vehicles moving along it, then you can build schools near a road. You go into the bush and you can get parents to build a school from local materials, but you can’t get a teacher to come in because she or he will say, “Look, I spent six, eight years preparing myself to be a teacher. Now you want me to go back there in the bush? I won’t be able to come out and see my family or friends for eight, nine months. No, I’m not going.” The lack of roads in Africa greatly hinders agriculture, education, and development.”**

Do you suppose this man will be invited to visit APU as a guest lecturer?

*Newsweek, July 30, 2007 (p. 39)
**Reason Magazine, April 2000

Posted in Global Warming, APU Concerns | No Comments »

Scientists With Too Much Time and Money On Their Hands

Posted by Melody on 8th June 2007

While I respect the field of scientific research, this story just exhibits where so much of research is today. It seems to me that if one desires to understand child development one would look at a real child rather than a robotic poor representation of one. But when you have government or grant money to spend, you come up with something to do with that money, no matter how ridiculous.

“A group of scientists in Japan have developed a humanoid that acts like a toddler to better understand child development.

The Child-Robot with Biomimetic Body, or CB2, was developed by a team of researchers at Osaka University in western Japan and is designed to move just like a real child aged between one and three years old.

CB2, 4.3 feet tall and weighing 73 pounds, changes facial expressions and crawls on the floor.

The robot’s movements are smooth fitted with 56 actuators in lieu of muscle. It has 197 sensors for touch, small cameras working as eyes, and an audio sensor.

CB2 can also speak using an artificial vocal cord.

When it stands on its feet, the robot wobbles like a child who is learning how to walk.

Minoru Asada, a professor at Osaka University who leads the project, said the robot was developed to learn more about child development.

“Our goal is to study human recognition development such as how the child learns a language, recognizes objects and learns to communicate with his father and mother,” he said.”

Posted in Uncategorized, Global Warming | No Comments »

Is Global Warming Contributing To California’s Wildfires?

Posted by Melody on 16th May 2007

Here is an interesting article on the history of California’s wildfires. Azusa Pacific has a history of fire and flood. (I know, there’s a spiritual parallel here, and if you want we can go there.)
Anyway, I found this interesting:

The ashes are still smoldering from Southern California’s second major wildfire in a week, a sign of what authorities warn could be one of the drought-plagued state’s worst fire years.

But to the locals, the burning hills have also long been a part of life and key ingredient in the state’s folklore and identity — immortalized in art and popular culture from Nathanael West’s 1939 novel “The Day of The Locust” to “L.A. Woman,” 1960s rock band The Doors’ dark homage to the city.

Wildfires are inevitable in the bone-dry brush around Southern California, where early summer is known as the start of “Fire Season” and hot Santa Ana winds blow in from the desert — signaling that thick black smoke will soon pour over cities and ash will fall in the streets.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Global Warming | No Comments »

Global Warming Denier

Posted by Melody on 20th April 2007

MADISON - Roy Spencer is speaking up about his belief that Earth is not headed toward a global warming disaster.

Spencer, a principal research scientist at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and former NASA scientist, Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Uncategorized, Global Warming | No Comments »

Global Warming Stupidity - No Cremation and No Fake Snow!

Posted by Melody on 18th April 2007

Two stories spaced less than five minutes apart on Yahoo News page. The stupidity of the global warmists knows no bounds.

First story:
SYDNEY (AFP) - An Australian scientist called Wednesday for an end to the age-old tradition of cremation, saying the practice contributed to global warming.

Professor Roger Short said people could instead choose to help the environment after death by being buried in a cardboard box under a tree.

The decomposing bodies would provide the tree with nutrients, and the tree would convert carbon dioxide into life-giving oxygen for decades, he said.

“The important thing is, what a shame to be cremated when you go up in a big bubble of carbon dioxide,” Short told AFP.

“Why waste all that carbon dioxide on your death?”

Short said the cremation of the average male in Australia, during which the body is heated to 850 degrees Celsius (1,562 degrees Fahrenheit) for 90 minutes, produced more than 50 kilograms (110 pounds) of carbon dioxide.

And that doesn’t include the carbon cost of fuel, or the cost of the emissions released during the production and burning of the wooden casket.

Short, a reproductive biologist at the University of Melbourne, said the contribution of cremation to harmful greenhouse gases was small, and he did not wish to prevent people from choosing how their body was disposed of according to their religion.

But to bury the hatchet with environmentalists, he suggested it would not be a bad idea to bequeath one’s body as food for a forest.

“You can actually do, after your death, an enormous amount of good for the planet,” he said. “The more forests you plant, the better.”

And Next:

By Karin Strohecker
Wed Apr 18, 10:07 AM ET

VIENNA (Reuters) - Ski resort operators in the snow-deprived Alps should rethink the use of artificial snow as it saps water reserves and could leave an impact well beyond the region, scientists say.

After a very mild winter, they warned laying on artificial snow to satisfy skiers and snowboarders could change seasonal water cycles, hit water supplies and affect fragile ecosystems.

“To make artificial snow all day long and during the whole season is just completely irresponsible for our climate, especially on such a large scale,” said Carmen de Jong, professor and research manager at the Mountain Institute at the University of Savoie in France.

“That is insane, you cannot continue like this,” de Jong told reporters during the annual meeting this week of the European Geosciences Union in Vienna.

Artificial snow is used on around 23,800 hectares — the equivalent of some 35,000 soccer pitches or nearly 30 percent of all Alpine skiing slopes.

Some 95 million cubic meters of water — the annual water consumption of a city of 1.5 million people — are needed to produce one season’s artificial snow for skiers and snowboarders in Italy, France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Slovenia.

Water used for the snow comes from surface streams, artificial reservoirs and increasingly from ground reserves.

De Jong said by keeping water in surface reservoirs instead of in the ground and by spraying it through the air to create the snow, around one third of the water evaporated, forming clouds that often traveled to other regions.

RIVERS RUNNING DRY?

Effects were already visible in some areas, like in parts of French skiing region Les Trois Vallees where water levels of some mountain rivers had dropped by 70 percent, she said.

Some Alpine villages, which previously got most of their drinking water from mountain streams, now needed to pump water out of the ground to ensure drinking supplies. Water taken out of the Alps would be missing for people and industry down the line

“This could also have an enormous impact on the Mediterranean Sea if river discharges continue to fall,” she said.

Ski resort operators argue there is no ecological impact from producing artificial snow.

“The water is not really used up, we simply extend the water cycle,” said Albert Baier, managing director of the Planai ski lift operator in the Austrian resort of Schladming, where nearly all slopes are fitted with snow cannons.

“Everything comes from nature, and if I make snow now and then give it back to nature there is no problem with that,” said Astrid Petri from the marketing department of Tyrolean ski resort Wilder Kaiser-Brixental.

De Jong recognized the economic role winter sports played for the region, but said snow sport enthusiasts and the tourism industry needed to come up with alternatives, like snow-shoe hiking.

“The tourism industry needs to realize that they cannot produce snow and have a skiing season at all costs,” she said.

Posted in Global Warming | No Comments »

“The Planet Is Doomed”

Posted by Melody on 10th April 2007

Venture capitalist John Doerr, who grew rich by placing bets on the future of high technology, is not optimistic about the future of the planet, said Jessi Hempel in Business Week Online. Doerr Last week addressed an audience at the Annual Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) Conference in San Fransicso - a gathering usually known for “Blissfully big ideas bouyed by unrelenting optimisn.” But Doerr, who helped launch Sun Microsystems, Google, and amazon, says he fears that global climate change is irreversible, and that the planet is doomed. He exhorted his fellow financiers to invest heavily in alternative energy and other green technologies. Many already have; venture capitalists invested $727 million in 39 alternative energy start-ups last year, up from $195 million in 18 start-ups in 2005. But Doerr says such efforts aren’t enough, and that the world’s economy must make a radical shift away from greenhouse-gas-producing follis fuels. He worries, though, that the shift may come too late. “I’m really scared,” he said. “I don’t think we’re going to make it.”

source: “The Week” April 1, 2007

Posted in Uncategorized, Global Warming | 2 Comments »

 

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