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That is what the AGW religionists just don't get. When we skeptics--and a skeptic is not the same thing as a denier despite how many times the AGW religionists say they are--when we skeptics observe again and again that what they say is happening doesn't happen, you have to think there is good reason to back up and look at it all more objectively or with a critical eye. If the popular scientific view was that there is no gravity, a great many of us would question that purely based on our observation that nothing that falls ever falls in any direction but down.
When we skeptics can observe that the doomday prophecies of the AGW cult fail to materialize again and again and again, we have to question whether anybody really knows what they are talking about. And when we observe that those promoting the AGW cult themselves do not demonstrate lifestyles that suggest they are in any way personally concerned about AGW, you have to question how deeply they believe it themselves. And when you observe that so very few scientists who are NOT receiving grant monies to promote AGW are buying into the doctrine, you wonder how much politics and money is running the show.
It is not a matter of being anti-science. It is a matter of observing the obvious.
Except a scientist would know that things don't just fall down, they can also continuously fall sideways around the Earth in orbit, just as the Earth is continuously falling into the Sun. Sometimes things are more complicated than the common person may understand and are not quite what they seem.
Btw I would also call you a denier since you use their language and express their views to a T... "AGW religionists", "cultists", "doomsday", politics, grant money conspiracies... You also expouse ignorance on the issue as you claim "prophecies" have come and gone without incidence. No such thing has ever been promoted in mainstream AGW science as disaster scenarios unfolding before 2014 today. If you get past your own hyperbolic strawman you would see the projected effects for what they are.
Effects of climate change on humans - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Climate change and agriculture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia