Ottawa Mike
New member
I started about 2000 when I first became aware of the "hockey stick" graph. That along with reports of the earth getting hotter, I believed this was a problem that needed addressing.
So I began investigating and I would say that within a year, I started to change my mind. Over the course of the next few years, the two key problems I had was the refusal of Michael Mann to release his data or his methodology and rationale for the graph. The other was the general attitude towards other scientists who either disagreed with CO2 warming in general or had other theories. I had never witnessed that before. I had also never seen scientists resigning because their views or work was suppressed or misrepresented. I became skeptical and remain even more so today. In fact, I'm more concerned with a coming cool period that is not going to good for anybody. I hope I'm wrong.
So what kind of path did you follow to get to where you are today as far as what you think about man-made global warming?
So I began investigating and I would say that within a year, I started to change my mind. Over the course of the next few years, the two key problems I had was the refusal of Michael Mann to release his data or his methodology and rationale for the graph. The other was the general attitude towards other scientists who either disagreed with CO2 warming in general or had other theories. I had never witnessed that before. I had also never seen scientists resigning because their views or work was suppressed or misrepresented. I became skeptical and remain even more so today. In fact, I'm more concerned with a coming cool period that is not going to good for anybody. I hope I'm wrong.
So what kind of path did you follow to get to where you are today as far as what you think about man-made global warming?