No Definitive Answer On Global Warming
No Definitive Answer
On Global Warming
To the Editor:
There was a very strong and solemn statement made in the editorial column of last weekâs Bee: âOnly those on the extreme margins of the scientific discourse on this issue still believe that humankind has nothing to do with global warming and the threats, known and unknown, it poses for our future.â I believe the jury is still out on this matter and despite this punditâs salient prose, I remain unconvinced of the âInconvenient Truthâ premise.
I am not alone in resisting acceptance of the ideas of a segment of the scientific community. There were 19,000 scientists who signed a petition saying that global warming probably is natural and not a crisis. These scientists urged the United States government to reject the global warming agreement that was written in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997. Their petition stated that there is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will cause catastrophic heating of the Earthâs atmosphere and disruption of the Earthâs climate.
I do not think there is a definitive answer yet to the global warming issue and I, as many others, am struggling to keep an open mind. Describing 19,000 scientists as âthose on the extreme margins of the scientific discourse on this issueâ is not helping. The readers can find more information on the aforementioned petition on the website of the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, www.oism.org.
George Caracciolo
Schoolhouse Hill Road, Newtown                                 April 11, 2008