Comments by "Capable Glober" (@KoRntech) on "Thunderf00t" channel.

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  182. Yes what was the time span of the previous changes? Was it measured over hundreds of thousands to millions of years? It's not how it's happening it's why it's happening as fast as it has. Extinction level events are sudden, this one a lot slower by comparison but if you look at the Permian since you at least acknowledge the planet is billions of years old unlike some many of the US politicians who deny any and all anthropogenic induced climate change. Who has billions invested over the last century for burning carbon and who stands to lose billions per quarter once we get mostly away from carbon fuels. It will never be fully gone, perhaps if you watch his next three you might have a better informed opinion but I highly doubt you will, nor would you change your thinking on it if you did. Humans don't like change, guess what doesn't like change? Plants agriculture that stuff we feed ourselves and our livestock. It's pretty damn hard to grow a lot of half of our main growing areas are in constant drought conditions. Where do you live that you don't see the climate has changed? I can tell you for a fact with my own eyes in the span of less than 40+ years near one of the snow belt regions of the Great lakes it has changed A LOT especially in the last 20 and way more noticably in the past 10. We no longer have an Ohio winter we have Tennessee winters, yes it's cold but nowhere near like it used to be. The inland lakes that draw down for spring rains are coming up nil almost to the beginning of summer when we get some massive rainfall in a short period of time, all that evaporated water vapor condensing.
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