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2007-12-10 12:26:54 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Environment Global Warming

What was Al Gore's carbon foot print flying to Oslo for his Nobel, then jaunting to Bali to tell the world we are polluters?

2007-12-13 10:07:59 · update #1

4 answers

I do not think so. He will have gone through at least 18 SUV Escalades, 1679 tons of "Ham-Dingers", 4 Mega Mansions, 1,957,469 tons of natural gas, 23,865,568 KWh of electricity, 23 Jet-Skis, 7 Las Vegas Hookers, 32 lbs of Orville Redenbaker popcorn, 4 lbs of Maui-Wowie, 56 lbs of cheap shake, 78 cases of Moster cola, 34 Illegal Immigrant workers, and 4,976 lbf of old growth California redwood S4S lumber, in that time.

You have to remember that liberals are hypocrites and their motto is "do as I say and not what I do!".

2007-12-10 13:04:11 · answer #1 · answered by Knick Knox 7 · 5 3

Not unless he's cryogenically frozen and manages to live for a few thousand years. The process of global warming is a very slow one, although temperatures are rising faster now than ever before it's still only 0.0177°C per year. It's the sort of temperature change which from year to year is barely noticeable, it's only when you look back over several decades that the changes become apparent.

If it's snowed in the past where you are then it's probable that it will snow there again in the future. There's many parts of the world where temperatures regularly reach -10, -20, -30°C, it will take an awful lot of global warming to warm the planet enough to prevent it snowing in these places.

In some places snowfall has increased. A warmer world means a wetter world due to increaed evapouration from the seas and oceans, this subsequently falls as precipitation - rain where it's warm and snow where it's cold. In parts of Antarctica for example, increased snow fall has led to an accelerated thickening of some parts of the ice cap.

Explaining this would be be complex but the most likely scenario for global warming will be one of rapidly rising temperatures (3 to 4°C in the next century) and then a slowing down even if levels of greenhouse gases continue to rise at record rates (the bahavuour of the greenhouse gases is a complex one). Consequenlty, if we continue at present levels of greenhouse gas emissions, we have at least 1200 years before it stops snowing and more likely several thousand.

2007-12-10 22:35:18 · answer #2 · answered by Trevor 7 · 0 2

I don't like cold or the snow. These continental eastern North American winters are going to kill me. I need a warm ocean current.

2007-12-10 22:56:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

why are u so bent to kill him? did u ask his wife abt this? she will kill u right now!
Live and let others live ! !

2007-12-10 23:21:46 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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