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D). again there's so much more that it's a lost effort by me. Take the fact that on mountainsides the ecosystems change as you go up the mountain due to the temperature change with altitude. There are researchers who have studied mountainside ecologies for years. They are reporting guess what? The ecosystems are migrating up the mountains as the subtleties of fractional degrees urge them to move to their desired new ranges. In certain ranges, the topmost ecosystems have been pushed right off the top. They don't exist there anymore. Bird breeding ranges are sensitive to fractional seasonal degrees. Several species are moving northward and abandoning old areas. These are simple observable facts by macrobiologists who receive no funding for atmospheric science. They are just reporting what they see. The same thing is happening due to warming waters off the pacific coast for some offshore ecosystems there. You can say "Who cares?" but the point here is that it shows that the GCC trend is sensed by the world's ecosystems clearly. I HAVE found it to be generally true that anti-GCCers don't care squat about such matters.
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And therein lies the issue. I ask you two things OMM:
1. Even if the US cut emissions completely (aka stopped producing any greenhouse gasses, CO2, whatever... just completely stopped doing things that caused GCC) would it matter? Because I guarantee you Mexico, India, China, etc. etc. etc. are not going to and with their burgeoning manufacturing/emissions/whatever they are likely to still continue to cause GCC.
2. When I was working down on the border the Government/EPA/SWFO had all of these ridiculous environmental rules. For instance, we couldn't track dirt from one part of the desert to another... because heaven forbid we mix up dust that naturally blows around. And if these endangered pronghorns came within a couple miles of a site we had to completely shut down work because these animals are so sensitive that we can't even look at them the wrong way or they will refuse to bread and then roll over and die. But literally feet away from us across the border in the same desert Mexico had none of these regulations... so the pronghorns still die, the dust still gets "contaminated" and blows around, and all of the mining operations that were over-regulated by the EPA have just moved right down to Mexico where they have no regulations and are polluting the exact same air.. just worse.
So I hate to be a defeatist... but I guess my question is, even if you do think GCC is a big deal... is there anything we can honestly do about it as a nation? I think the great fallacy is that this is an American problem that we need to fix. It's called global climate change for a reason and I think a lot of unemployed people who used to work in the mines of Ajo, AZ couldn't care less about a couple birds when they're unemployed and watching Mexicans do their job and create more pollution.
