Thank you. I'm actually far more concerned about a whole slew of other environmental problems before global climate change. If it weren't for the dwindling energy supplies, drying up aquifers, rampant soil and water degradation, loss of biological diversity, and the release of who knows what toxins into the environment then we would probably not even have to worry about climate change!
I'd like to give an example that correlates with global climate change but on a more manageable scale for you to think about. Take a stream, for example, where loss of tree coverage in the riparian zone has increased the average daily temperature of the water. The increased temperature causes the water to have a lower saturation point for dissolved gases. Bottom feeders, fish and amphibians require high concentrations of dissolved oxygen to survive underwater. Due to an increase in sunlight, without which they would also die, the water can no longer support them.
Before you judge scientific theories about climate change, try to understand how the climate works.