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You missed the boat about the flawed assumption regarding CO2 trend and global temps. You keep wanting to know why they don't correlate. Let's just assume there are OTHER factors that work to lower global temp over a short period. Volcanic eruptions or massive sandstorms (if I remember right, crazy as it sounds, sandstorms actually do have a solid impact) put an unusual amount of particulate into the atmosphere to deflect the sun's light over a short period of time (say 10 years). La Nina is strong and lowers global temp. The melting of the polar ice provides a new sink for CO2 and not as much of the global CO2 is in the atmosphere to act as a greenhouse gas. I have no idea whether some or all of these are correct, but the point is that other forces are at play in determining global temp. Some of them may very well have had a larger impact on decreasing global temp than CO2 had on increasing it during that 10 year period. This doesn't mean that CO2 isn't important -- it just depends on what those other factors might be and the magnitude of their impact.
The weight of the data is in favor of the fact that global warming is occurring and that CO2 plays a major role. I could've post a crazy number of peer reviewed articles that would drown out your plot (that seemed to come from a blog.) I don't think we shut down the economy over the current strong scientific consensus, but we're fools if we don't start trying to address the issue. At the same time, let's gather more data and make some informed decisions. I'd like to think we're not at the point of directing major international policy based on blogs. Twitter maybe, but not blogs.
I'll put the rest of your post in the circular file labelled "econ major pretending to be a scientist".
If you're a scientist, I can see why the bunk being sold as fact is being sold as fact. Find me the actual impact of the "other factors", via data, and what their impact is on temperature.


