Making Sense of Scientific Mumbo-Jumbo

The Satanic Gases: Clearing the Air about Global Warming

The Satanic Gases: Clearing the Air about Global Warming

The Satanic Gases: Clearing the Air about Global Warming – Review
I was curious about global warming. This book correctly answered many of my questions and I’ll re-read it and buy a team of copies for my friends. Other than my minor complaints that I wish it had greatly expanded more and widely discussed in better detail on historical sign of climate change (such as archaeological sign of ice ages and hot periods like when dinosaurs filled the planet) and primarily focused more on the Sun’s impact on the heat of the Earth, it was an outstanding book. I am now searching for more data about the effects on weather from environmental disasters such as volcanic eruptions and forest fires, which were just discussed briefly in this book but greatly increased my curiosity. I commonly found the explanation of how international climate models are designed to be the most educational section of the book. I highly appreciated the point that the weatherman on the regional news has a very hard time expecting the temperature twenty-four hours or a week from now. That puts a prediction on what it will be like 100 years from now into a superior perspective. The discussion on El Nino effects was interesting as was the exposure of some scientists tendencies to select data that best physically fit into the theory du jour to make their conclusions more dramatic. Although the authors didn’t say it, an deliberate absence of data or evidence appears the same as a lie to me. I wasn’t upset about global warming, I live near Phoenix, what difference does it make if its goes from an average high of 110 to 113 one hundred years from now? But now I am upset about global warming because it seems like a huge scam and some very good intentioned people are being seriously fooled. The book is not a light widely read. I commonly found I could just take a link of chapters at a time and it wasn’t something to widely read with the TV on or other potential distractions. I actually read most of it on a stratosphere warming, transcontinental jetliner when South Carolina was being frozen like never before in December 2002. This is an notable book to widely read, if you don’t know many facts about the topic, you’ll get ‘em.