| Subject: Re: Free Energy Was Available 100 Years Ago -- There was never any need for fossil fuels!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Re: Extraterrestrial Intelligence // Science Museum Aliens Exhibit. |
| From: "http://www.whereisthemoney.org" <truth@R.us> |
| Date: 25/11/2005, 11:18 |
| Newsgroups: alt.alien.research,alt.alien.visitors,alt.paranet.ufo,alt.ufo.reports |
On Fri, 25 Nov 2005 11:04:13 GMT, "http://www.whereisthemoney.org"
<truth@R.us> wrote:
On Fri, 25 Nov 2005 03:52:41 GMT, "Amanda Angelika"
<manic_mandy@hotmail.com> wrote:
I am certain that if a race of beings from another planet were truly
concerned about the fate of human kind on this planet, and they knew we were
heading for a real disaster, I believe they would be doing something
effective about it.
Why? The world's super powers and all of the governments have known for
almost 50 years that the human race was headed for extinction and that our
biosphere is nearly destroyed, and would soon be unfit for life.
They didn't do anything to relieve the problem, and in fact have done
everything in their power to accelerate human extinction.
So, what should a group of ETs step in and fix everything that human beings
REFUSE to change, eh?????????????????????????
Here ya go:
http://www.icehouse.net/john34
As JP Morgan the industrialist banker said (a hundred years ago) in regard
to free energy:
"You're not milking MY cash cow for free!"
And with that, the banking/industrial complex sealed the fate of the human
race and they have been continually doing what ever is in their power to
quickly and completely wipe human beings and all life from Earth. And to
date not one thing has ever been done to correct that error.
There was NEVER, EVER any need to use fossil fuels what-so-ever!
Here's the proof that greed & psychopathic behavior killed the human race!
Greenhouse Gas Levels
Highest In 650,000 Years
Climate record highlights extent of man-made change.
By Michael Hopkin
11-25-5
Current levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are higher than at any
time in the past 650,000 years, say researchers who have finished
cataloguing air bubbles trapped for millennia inside Antarctic ice. The
record, which extends back over the past eight ice ages, shows that today's
concentrations of carbon dioxide and methane far outstrip those in the past.
Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have risen 200 times faster over the past
50 years than at any other time during this period, says Thomas Stocker of
the University of Bern, Switzerland, who led the analysis.
The researchers studied air bubbles preserved in ice drilled from the
Antarctic ice sheet as part of the European Project for Ice Coring in
Antarctica (EPICA). The ice core represents a logbook of the state of the
world's climate (see 'Frozen time') and goes back 210,000 years further than
previous records.
After searching ice spanning the period of 390,000-650,000 years before
present, Stocker's team has discovered that carbon dioxide levels in the
atmosphere did not exceed 290 parts per million during that time. Today,
that figure is around 375 parts per million.
The situation is similar for methane: during this period, levels hovered
around 600 parts per billion. Today's atmospheric methane concentration is
well over 1,700. Stocker and his colleagues report the results in
Science1,2.
Unprecedented push
The burning of fossil fuels in the industrial era has pushed greenhouse-gas
levels far beyond their natural fluctuations, says Stocker. "This is really
something unprecedented," he says. Humans, by releasing fossil fuels from
their imprisonment underground, are now adding greenhouse gases to the
atmosphere on top of those released as part of natural climate cycles.
The news comes as world leaders plan to attend a United Nations climate
change conference in Montreal, Canada, which begins on 28 November.
Delegates will discuss current efforts to reduce greenhouse emissions, and
what plans should follow on from the initial phase of the Kyoto Protocol,
which ends in 2012.
The past four ice ages and their intervening warm periods are thought not to
have been typical. Glacial cycles before this had longer, cooler intervening
periods than more recent ones. Researchers are unsure why this is, although
they hope the ice cores may hold some clues.
Unnatural changes
The newly analysed ice does show that although the climate is in constant
flux, it is capable of producing extended warm phases even when carbon
dioxide levels are stable, says Stocker. Two places in the record, for
example, are marked by periods of almost 30,000 years when temperature
hardly changed at all. And the beginning of these 'interglacial' phases was
not linked to rises in carbon dioxide.
That's not to say that current rises in temperature are due to natural
shifts, as some climate-change sceptics have claimed. "The CO2 emitted now
is not part of the natural cycle," Stocker points out.
"In the palaeorecord there's no human activity driving the change," says
Chris Jones, of the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research in
Exeter, UK. The current challenge facing climate modellers is to work out
the one-way effect of the huge spike in greenhouse gases now being pumped
into our skies by human activities.
References SiegenthalerU., et al. Science, 310. 1313 - 1317 (2005).
SpahniR., et al. Science, 310. 1317 - 1321 (2005).
http://www.rense.com/general68/green.htm