Your tax dollars at work: an NCAR cartoon on steroid use in baseball and compared to climate change

From the video description:

AtmosNews takes a lighthearted look at an unexpected analogy, explaining why some people call carbon dioxide (and the other greenhouse gases) the steroids of the climate system. Statistics and extreme behavior are involved, whether we’re talking about baseball or Earth’s atmosphere. NCAR scientist Gerald “Jerry” Meehl explains why.

Video by Noah Besser, produced by UCAR Communications for

AtmosNews: NCAR & UCAR Science

http://www.ucar.edu/atmosnews

Find out more about climate change and extreme weather: http://www2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/attribution

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Gosh.

While there’ no crying in baseball, there certainly is in “climate change” as Bill McKibben tells us.

I’ve spent the last few years working more than full time to organize the first big global grassroots climate change campaign. That’s meant shutting off my emotions most of the time””this crisis is so terrifying that when you let yourself feel too deeply it can be paralyzing. Hence, much gallows humor, irony, and sheer work.

This afternoon I sobbed for an hour, and I’m still choking a little. I got to Copenhagen’s main Lutheran Cathedral just before the start of a special service designed to mark the conference underway for the next week. It was jammed, but I squeezed into a chair near the corner. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, gave the sermon; Desmond Tutu read the Psalm. Both were wonderful.

But my tears started before anyone said a word. As the service started, dozens choristers from around the world carried three things down the aisle and to the altar: pieces of dead coral bleached by hot ocean temperatures; stones uncovered by retreating glaciers; and small, shriveled ears of corn from drought-stricken parts of Africa. As I watched them go by, all I could think of was the people I’ve met in the last couple of years traveling the world: the people living in the valleys where those glaciers are disappearing, and the people downstream who have no backup plan for where their water is going to come from. The people who live on the islands surrounded by that coral, who depend on the reefs for the fish they eat, and to protect their homes from the waves. And the people, on every corner of the world, dealing with drought and flood, already unable to earn their daily bread in the places where their ancestors farmed for generations.

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February 8, 2012 2:55 pm

“…some people call carbon dioxide (and the other greenhouse gases) the steroids of the climate system.”
Why not call CO2 the Homeopathy of the climate system as it is a trace gas and the space occupied by CO2 has gone from 3% of 1% to 4% of 1%. This is an increase of 1% of 1%. In addition steroids work chemically and climate forcing by CO2 is not a chemical process.
It is extraordinary that ‘some people’ call CAGW by CO2 the only show in town.