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[Politics] Brexit

If there was a second Brexit referendum how would you vote?


  • Total voters
    1,099


Two Professors

Two Mad Professors
Jul 13, 2009
7,617
Multicultural Brum
FFS.

Hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha

Answered by another poster,but thank you for your erudite,and informative, reply.Perhaps you might not have so many incidents with travellers illegally occupying parks down south with decent controls.But we might also have had the first provable shortages post-Brexit.Just imagine running out of wooden clothes pegs and lucky heather!
 




The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
26,185
West is BEST
OK, so it was poor grammer.

Try reading and understanding this (a portion cut from https://www.thegwpf.org/content/uploads/2018/10/Lindzen-2018-GWPF-Lecture.pdf?utm_source=Media&utm_campaign=0c38ae2652-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_10_09_12_57_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_8f98a37810-0c38ae2652-20197665). By Dr Richard Lindzen.

(Richard S. Lindzen was Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology until his retirement in 2013. He is the author of over 200 papers on meteorology and climatology and is a member of the US National Academy of Sciences and of the Academic Advisory Council of GWPF.)

So yeah, another Flat-Earther who hasn’t got a clue no doubt.
The climate system
The following description of the climate system contains nothing that is in the least contro- versial, and I expect that anyone with a scientific background will readily follow the descrip- tion. I will also try, despite Snow’s observations, to make the description intelligible to the non-scientist.
The system we are looking at consists in two turbulent fluids (the atmosphere and oceans) interacting with each other. By ‘turbulent,’ I simply mean that it is characterized by irregular circulations like those found in a gurgling brook or boiling water, but on the planetary scale of the oceans and the atmosphere. The opposite of turbulent is called laminar, but any fluid forced to move fast enough becomes turbulent and turbulence obviously limits predictabil- ity. By interaction, I simply mean that they exert stress on each other and exchange heat with each other.
These fluids are on a rotating planet that is unevenly heated by the sun. The motions in the atmosphere (and to a lesser extent in the oceans) are generated by the uneven influence of the sun. The sun, itself, can be steady, but it shines directly on the tropics while barely skimming the Earth at the poles. The drivers of the oceans are more complex and include forcing by wind as well as the sinking of cold and salty water. The rotation of the Earth has many consequences too, but for the present, we may simply note that it leads to radiation being distributed around a latitude circle.
The oceans have circulations and currents operating on time scales ranging from years to millennia, and these systems carry heat to and from the surface. Because of the scale and density of the oceans, the flow speeds are generally much smaller than in the atmosphere and are associated with much longer timescales. The fact that these circulations carry heat to and from the surface means that the surface, itself, is never in equilibrium with space. That is to say, there is never an exact balance between incoming heat from the sun and outgoing radiation generated by the Earth because heat is always being stored in and released from the oceans and surface temperature is always, therefore, varying somewhat.
In addition to the oceans, the atmosphere is interacting with a hugely irregular land sur- face. As air passes over mountain ranges, the flow is greatly distorted. Topography therefore plays a major role in modifying regional climate. These distorted air-flows even generate fluid waves that can alter climate at distant locations. Computer simulations of the climate generally fail to adequately describe these effects.
A vital constituent of the atmospheric component is water in the liquid, solid and vapor phases, and the changes in phase have vast impacts on energy flows. Each component also has important radiative impacts. You all know that it takes heat to melt ice, and it takes fur- ther heat for the resulting water to become vapor or, as it is sometimes referred to, steam. The term humidity refers to the amount of vapor in the atmosphere. The flow of heat is reversed when the phase changes are reversed; that is, when vapor condenses into water, and when water freezes. The release of heat when water vapor condenses drives thunder clouds (known as cumulonimbus), and the energy in a thundercloud is comparable to that released in an H-bomb. I say this simply to illustrate that these energy transformations are very substantial. Clouds consist of water in the form of fine droplets and ice in the form of fine crystals. Normally, these fine droplets and crystals are suspended by rising air currents, but when these grow large enough they fall through the rising air as rain and snow. Not only are the energies involved in phase transformations important, so is the fact that both water vapor and clouds (both ice- and water-based) strongly affect radiation. Although I haven’t discussed the greenhouse effect yet, I’m sure all of you have heard that carbon diox- ide is a greenhouse gas and that this explains its warming effect. You should, therefore, understand that the two most important greenhouse substances by far are water vapor and clouds. Clouds are also important reflectors of sunlight.
The unit for describing energy flows is watts per square meter. The energy budget of this system involves the absorption and reemission of about 200 watts per square meter. Doubling CO2 involves a 2% perturbation to this budget. So do minor changes in clouds and other features, and such changes are common. The Earth receives about 340 watts per square meter from the sun, but about 140 watts per square meter is simply reflected back to space, by both the Earth’s surface and, more importantly, by clouds. This leaves about 200 watts per square meter that the Earth would have to emit in order to establish balance. The sun radiates in the visible portion of the radiation spectrum because its temperature is about 6000K. ‘K’ refers to Kelvins, which are simply degrees Centigrade plus 273. Zero K is the lowest possible temperature (−273◦C). Temperature determines the spectrum of the emit- ted radiation. If the Earth had no atmosphere at all (but for purposes of argument still was reflecting 140 watts per square meter), it would have to radiate at a temperature of about 255K, and, at this temperature, the radiation is mostly in the infrared.
Of course, the Earth does have an atmosphere and oceans, and this introduces a host of complications. So be warned, what follows will require a certain amount of concentra- tion. Evaporation from the oceans gives rise to water vapor in the atmosphere, and water vapor very strongly absorbs and emits radiation in the infrared. This is what we mean when we call water vapor a greenhouse gas. The water vapor essentially blocks infrared radiation from leaving the surface, causing the surface and (via conduction) the air adjacent to the surface to heat, and, as in a heated pot of water, convection sets on. Because the density of air decreases with height, the buoyant elements expand as they rise. This causes the buoy- ant elements to cool as they rise, and the mixing results in decreasing temperature with height rather than a constant temperature. To make matters more complicated, the amount of water vapor that the air can hold decreases rapidly as the temperature decreases. At some height there is so little water vapor above this height that radiation from this level can now escape to space. It is at this elevated level (around 5 km) that the temperature must be about 255K in order to balance incoming radiation. However, because convection causes temper- ature to decrease with height, the surface now has to actually be warmer than 255K. It turns out that it has to be about 288K (which is the average temperature of the Earth’s surface). This is what is known as the greenhouse effect. It is an interesting curiosity that had con- vection produced a uniform temperature, there wouldn’t be a greenhouse effect. In reality, the situation is still more complicated. Among other things, the existence of upper-level cirrus clouds, which are very strong absorbers and emitters of infrared radiation, effectively block infrared radiation from below. Thus, when such clouds are present above about 5 km, their tops rather than the height of 5 km determine the level from which infrared reaches space. Now the addition of other greenhouse gases (like carbon dioxide) elevates the emis- sion level, and because of the convective mixing, the new level will be colder. This reduces the outgoing infrared flux, and, in order to restore balance, the atmosphere would have to warm. Doubling carbon dioxide concentration is estimated to be equivalent to a forcing of about 3.7 watts per square meter, which is little less than 2% of the net incoming 200 watts per square meter. Many factors, including cloud area and height, snow cover, and ocean circulations, commonly cause changes of comparable magnitude.
It is important to note that such a system will fluctuate with time scales ranging from sec- onds to millennia, even in the absence of an explicit forcing other than a steady sun. Much of the popular literature (on both sides of the climate debate) assumes that all changes must be driven by some external factor. Of course, the climate system is driven by the sun, but even if the solar forcing were constant, the climate would still vary. This is actually something that all of you have long known – even if you don’t realize it. After all, you have no difficulty rec- ognizing that the steady stroking of a violin string by a bow causes the string to vibrate and generate sound waves. In a similar way, the atmosphere–ocean system responds to steady forcing with its own modes of variation (which, admittedly, are often more complex than the modes of a violin string). Moreover, given the massive nature of the oceans, such variations can involve timescales of millennia rather than milliseconds. El Niño is a relatively short ex- ample, involving years, but most of these internal time variations are too long to even be identified in our relatively short instrumental record. Nature has numerous examples of au- tonomous variability, including the approximately 11-year sunspot cycle and the reversals of the Earth’s magnetic field every couple of hundred thousand years or so. In this respect, the climate system is no different from other natural systems.
Of course, such systems also do respond to external forcing, but such forcing is not needed for them to exhibit variability. While the above is totally uncontroversial, please think about it for a moment. Consider the massive heterogeneity and complexity of the system, and the variety of mechanisms of variability as we consider the current narrative that is commonly presented as ‘settled science.’

——————

But no, it must be the increase in a trace gas from 287 ppm to 405 ppm.

Oh, BTW The Clamp. Flat-earrters were those who agreed with the consensus and were wrong. Much like you on everything :lol:.

Wow. What a comeback. Not having a great day are you fella!
 


Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,827
Uffern
Then they don't have immigration rules applying to them.Exactly what I said.

No, it's not what you said. You said that Irish citizens could move here but there was no reciprocity so UK citizens couldn't move the other way - which just isn't true. In fact, an old work colleague of mine (who's British) moved to Ireland a few years back and is working there (and he didn't move with a company).
 


Two Professors

Two Mad Professors
Jul 13, 2009
7,617
Multicultural Brum
Remainers, let's have a bit of light-hearted fun. How many errors can you spot?

[tweet]1054634712793337856[/tweet]

I can see why nobody under 25 uses Twitter anymore!
 


Two Professors

Two Mad Professors
Jul 13, 2009
7,617
Multicultural Brum
No, it's not what you said. You said that Irish citizens could move here but there was no reciprocity so UK citizens couldn't move the other way - which just isn't true. In fact, an old work colleague of mine (who's British) moved to Ireland a few years back and is working there (and he didn't move with a company).

Well good for him.Know anyone else who's managed it?
 






The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
26,185
West is BEST
It's great on here today. The dream is crumbling round their ears and it's bought the loony leavers out! We even have a climate change denier today, unsurpassed. I was getting a bit worried but sure enough, Two Professors made a storming comeback to attempt to retain the title of biggest cheese on the board. I think the title passes to Larus, in large part down to his "yeah, but what about" comeback.after a public spanking not seen on here since the days of Rosa.

Well done ladies, take a bow.
 


ManOfSussex

We wunt be druv
Apr 11, 2016
15,168
Rape of Hastings, Sussex
OK, so it was poor grammer.

Try reading and understanding this

I'm sure it's fascinating, if you like that sort of thing - He's just another American maverick oddball, anti Kyoto Protocol/anti United Nations Convention on Climate Change, who is funded by a coal mining company. He's even got his doubts on smoking and cancer - I can see why you'd agree with him as a Brexiteer- Farage thinks the doctors are wrong on smoking too and that the ban is 'political correctness gone mad.'
 




Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
31,263
Anyway, thus is more to do with sovereignty and not monetary. The goal of the EU is a superstate akin to a US of E. It’s ever closer union as it has always done since it’s inception. Small steps but that’s the aim. If you don’t agree on that, then may a politely suggest that some of those calling the leavers thickos do some research.

Scaremongering. We aren't in the Euro, we aren't in Schengen and Cameron obtained an opt-out over future EU legislation that binds the EU closer together, so US of E is irrelevant to the UK.
 


The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
26,185
West is BEST
OK, so it was poor grammer.

Try reading and understanding this (a portion cut from https://www.thegwpf.org/content/uploads/2018/10/Lindzen-2018-GWPF-Lecture.pdf?utm_source=Media&utm_campaign=0c38ae2652-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_10_09_12_57_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_8f98a37810-0c38ae2652-20197665). By Dr Richard Lindzen.

(Richard S. Lindzen was Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology until his retirement in 2013. He is the author of over 200 papers on meteorology and climatology and is a member of the US National Academy of Sciences and of the Academic Advisory Council of GWPF.)

So yeah, another Flat-Earther who hasn’t got a clue no doubt.
The climate system
The following description of the climate system contains nothing that is in the least contro- versial, and I expect that anyone with a scientific background will readily follow the descrip- tion. I will also try, despite Snow’s observations, to make the description intelligible to the non-scientist.
The system we are looking at consists in two turbulent fluids (the atmosphere and oceans) interacting with each other. By ‘turbulent,’ I simply mean that it is characterized by irregular circulations like those found in a gurgling brook or boiling water, but on the planetary scale of the oceans and the atmosphere. The opposite of turbulent is called laminar, but any fluid forced to move fast enough becomes turbulent and turbulence obviously limits predictabil- ity. By interaction, I simply mean that they exert stress on each other and exchange heat with each other.
These fluids are on a rotating planet that is unevenly heated by the sun. The motions in the atmosphere (and to a lesser extent in the oceans) are generated by the uneven influence of the sun. The sun, itself, can be steady, but it shines directly on the tropics while barely skimming the Earth at the poles. The drivers of the oceans are more complex and include forcing by wind as well as the sinking of cold and salty water. The rotation of the Earth has many consequences too, but for the present, we may simply note that it leads to radiation being distributed around a latitude circle.
The oceans have circulations and currents operating on time scales ranging from years to millennia, and these systems carry heat to and from the surface. Because of the scale and density of the oceans, the flow speeds are generally much smaller than in the atmosphere and are associated with much longer timescales. The fact that these circulations carry heat to and from the surface means that the surface, itself, is never in equilibrium with space. That is to say, there is never an exact balance between incoming heat from the sun and outgoing radiation generated by the Earth because heat is always being stored in and released from the oceans and surface temperature is always, therefore, varying somewhat.
In addition to the oceans, the atmosphere is interacting with a hugely irregular land sur- face. As air passes over mountain ranges, the flow is greatly distorted. Topography therefore plays a major role in modifying regional climate. These distorted air-flows even generate fluid waves that can alter climate at distant locations. Computer simulations of the climate generally fail to adequately describe these effects.
A vital constituent of the atmospheric component is water in the liquid, solid and vapor phases, and the changes in phase have vast impacts on energy flows. Each component also has important radiative impacts. You all know that it takes heat to melt ice, and it takes fur- ther heat for the resulting water to become vapor or, as it is sometimes referred to, steam. The term humidity refers to the amount of vapor in the atmosphere. The flow of heat is reversed when the phase changes are reversed; that is, when vapor condenses into water, and when water freezes. The release of heat when water vapor condenses drives thunder clouds (known as cumulonimbus), and the energy in a thundercloud is comparable to that released in an H-bomb. I say this simply to illustrate that these energy transformations are very substantial. Clouds consist of water in the form of fine droplets and ice in the form of fine crystals. Normally, these fine droplets and crystals are suspended by rising air currents, but when these grow large enough they fall through the rising air as rain and snow. Not only are the energies involved in phase transformations important, so is the fact that both water vapor and clouds (both ice- and water-based) strongly affect radiation. Although I haven’t discussed the greenhouse effect yet, I’m sure all of you have heard that carbon diox- ide is a greenhouse gas and that this explains its warming effect. You should, therefore, understand that the two most important greenhouse substances by far are water vapor and clouds. Clouds are also important reflectors of sunlight.
The unit for describing energy flows is watts per square meter. The energy budget of this system involves the absorption and reemission of about 200 watts per square meter. Doubling CO2 involves a 2% perturbation to this budget. So do minor changes in clouds and other features, and such changes are common. The Earth receives about 340 watts per square meter from the sun, but about 140 watts per square meter is simply reflected back to space, by both the Earth’s surface and, more importantly, by clouds. This leaves about 200 watts per square meter that the Earth would have to emit in order to establish balance. The sun radiates in the visible portion of the radiation spectrum because its temperature is about 6000K. ‘K’ refers to Kelvins, which are simply degrees Centigrade plus 273. Zero K is the lowest possible temperature (−273◦C). Temperature determines the spectrum of the emit- ted radiation. If the Earth had no atmosphere at all (but for purposes of argument still was reflecting 140 watts per square meter), it would have to radiate at a temperature of about 255K, and, at this temperature, the radiation is mostly in the infrared.
Of course, the Earth does have an atmosphere and oceans, and this introduces a host of complications. So be warned, what follows will require a certain amount of concentra- tion. Evaporation from the oceans gives rise to water vapor in the atmosphere, and water vapor very strongly absorbs and emits radiation in the infrared. This is what we mean when we call water vapor a greenhouse gas. The water vapor essentially blocks infrared radiation from leaving the surface, causing the surface and (via conduction) the air adjacent to the surface to heat, and, as in a heated pot of water, convection sets on. Because the density of air decreases with height, the buoyant elements expand as they rise. This causes the buoy- ant elements to cool as they rise, and the mixing results in decreasing temperature with height rather than a constant temperature. To make matters more complicated, the amount of water vapor that the air can hold decreases rapidly as the temperature decreases. At some height there is so little water vapor above this height that radiation from this level can now escape to space. It is at this elevated level (around 5 km) that the temperature must be about 255K in order to balance incoming radiation. However, because convection causes temper- ature to decrease with height, the surface now has to actually be warmer than 255K. It turns out that it has to be about 288K (which is the average temperature of the Earth’s surface). This is what is known as the greenhouse effect. It is an interesting curiosity that had con- vection produced a uniform temperature, there wouldn’t be a greenhouse effect. In reality, the situation is still more complicated. Among other things, the existence of upper-level cirrus clouds, which are very strong absorbers and emitters of infrared radiation, effectively block infrared radiation from below. Thus, when such clouds are present above about 5 km, their tops rather than the height of 5 km determine the level from which infrared reaches space. Now the addition of other greenhouse gases (like carbon dioxide) elevates the emis- sion level, and because of the convective mixing, the new level will be colder. This reduces the outgoing infrared flux, and, in order to restore balance, the atmosphere would have to warm. Doubling carbon dioxide concentration is estimated to be equivalent to a forcing of about 3.7 watts per square meter, which is little less than 2% of the net incoming 200 watts per square meter. Many factors, including cloud area and height, snow cover, and ocean circulations, commonly cause changes of comparable magnitude.
It is important to note that such a system will fluctuate with time scales ranging from sec- onds to millennia, even in the absence of an explicit forcing other than a steady sun. Much of the popular literature (on both sides of the climate debate) assumes that all changes must be driven by some external factor. Of course, the climate system is driven by the sun, but even if the solar forcing were constant, the climate would still vary. This is actually something that all of you have long known – even if you don’t realize it. After all, you have no difficulty rec- ognizing that the steady stroking of a violin string by a bow causes the string to vibrate and generate sound waves. In a similar way, the atmosphere–ocean system responds to steady forcing with its own modes of variation (which, admittedly, are often more complex than the modes of a violin string). Moreover, given the massive nature of the oceans, such variations can involve timescales of millennia rather than milliseconds. El Niño is a relatively short ex- ample, involving years, but most of these internal time variations are too long to even be identified in our relatively short instrumental record. Nature has numerous examples of au- tonomous variability, including the approximately 11-year sunspot cycle and the reversals of the Earth’s magnetic field every couple of hundred thousand years or so. In this respect, the climate system is no different from other natural systems.
Of course, such systems also do respond to external forcing, but such forcing is not needed for them to exhibit variability. While the above is totally uncontroversial, please think about it for a moment. Consider the massive heterogeneity and complexity of the system, and the variety of mechanisms of variability as we consider the current narrative that is commonly presented as ‘settled science.’

——————

But no, it must be the increase in a trace gas from 287 ppm to 405 ppm.

Oh, BTW The Clamp. Flat-earrters were those who agreed with the consensus and were wrong. Much like you on everything :lol:.


Not covering yourself in glory today....


According to Wikipedia:

Lindzen has given estimates of the Earth's climate sensitivity to be 0.5 °C based on ERBE data.[51] These estimates were criticized by Kevin E. Trenberth and others,[52] and Lindzen accepted that his paper included "some stupid mistakes". When interviewed, he said "It was just embarrassing", and added that "The technical details of satellite measurements are really sort of grotesque." Lindzen and Choi revised their paper and submitted it to PNAS.[53] The four reviewers of the paper, two of whom had been selected by Lindzen, strongly criticized the paper and PNAS rejected it for publication.[54] Lindzen and Choi then succeeded in getting a little known Korean journal to publish it as a 2011 paper.[53][55] Andrew Dessler published a paper which found errors in Lindzen and Choi 2011, and concluded that the observations it had presented "are not in fundamental disagreement with mainstream climate models, nor do they provide evidence that clouds are causing climate change. Suggestions that significant revisions to mainstream climate science are required are therefore not supported.


The Guardian reported in June 2016 that Lindzen has been a beneficiary of Peabody Energy, a coal company that has funded multiple groups contesting the climate consensus.


he claims that lung cancer has only been weakly linked to smoking.[83][84] However, when asked about this during an interview as part of an Australian Broadcasting Company documentary, Lindzen said that while "the case for second-hand tobacco is not very good ... the World Health Organization also said that” (referencing a 1998 study by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) on environmental tobacco smoke (ETS)[85]), on the other hand "With first-hand smoke it's a more interesting issue ... The case for lung cancer is very good but it also ignores the fact that there are differences in people's susceptibilities which the Japanese studies have pointed to."[86] Again, when asked to clarify his position by a climate skeptic blogger, Lindzen wrote, "there was a reasonable case for the role of cigarette smoking in lung cancer, but that the case was not so strong that one should rule that any questions were out of order ... the much, much weaker case against second hand smoke [is] also being treated as dogma."[87]


And point of fact: Flat earthers do not agree with the consensus, they are a purely modern phenomenon. You are thinking of the accepted wisdom of history that the earth was flat, when there was no such phrase as flat earthers. Doh!
 






Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,526
The arse end of Hangleton
Sounds like every thicko brexiteer on this thread. Clueless.

There did used to be a couple but they soon realised they proper chunked this and quite rightly decided to politely withdraw out of shame. We are left with 4 or 5 rabid brexiteers who don’t have the sense to realise they proper ****ed the U.K. but have failed at life so have nothing to lose anyway. Shame. Shame. Shame.

Quite. That pig ****er Cameron couldn’t conceive the British public would be thick enough to vote us out of the Union so didn’t even bother trying to explain such matters. Course he underestimated how moronic 52% of those that voted could be. Now he’s over in France with his trotters up and we are left to the mercy of the idiots here.

Everyone's fault except those who actually voted Leave and created all this nonsense. It's one thing to vote leave in the first place, quite another entirely to try and shift the blame onto others. I suppose it does demonstrate you at least have a sense of shame about your vote. Just not very gallant.

Oh right. Sorry I thought you had come on here for debate. It's just you are always whinging that people are too quick to resort to insults on here yet every single time you go on a little internet rampage on this thread, within a handful of posts you are insulting people. For someone who gets things so spectacularly wrong most of the time you really are quick to put others down.

For a moment it looked like, as misguided as your posts are, you were here to have intellignet debate this time. But alas, I see you have not grown up during your absence. I'm sure I'll live with your opinion of me. It's as inaccurate as anything else you type.

Just amusing watching you get a pummelling. Don't forget, I like rowing on here with morons like you. You're the hypocrite who moans when people don't take you seriously. I couldn't give a tinker's curse wht the likes of you think of me, you're a total irrellevance. Useful merely as an amusing wind-up to pick up and put down at will. And yo haven't disappointed today!!

THWAAAAAP!!

Yeah, that won't wash either. The old "You seriously have problems" thing. It's pathetic. You cannot debate like a grown up, look how quickly you have resorted to pathetic games. You're just plain odd.

:FFSPuncheon

Jeeez, a flat earther to boot. You really are the whole package aren't you! :lolol:

It seems so plausible. That kid's a funny one.

Because your posts are so full of serious intelligent debate aren't they Nibble ? Yet again proving what a hypocrite you are.
 




The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
26,185
West is BEST
eu.jpg
 






Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,827
Uffern
And point of fact: Flat earthers do not agree with the consensus, they are a purely modern phenomenon. You are thinking of the accepted wisdom of history that the earth was flat, when there was no such phrase as flat earthers. Doh!

This isn't quite right: there was no accepted wisdom that the earth was flat - the ancient Greeks discovered that it was spherical and that's been the educated point of view ever since. So Larus is totally wrong when he says that a flat earth was the consensus.
 


Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,526
The arse end of Hangleton
Last edited:


The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
26,185
West is BEST
This isn't quite right: there was no accepted wisdom that the earth was flat - the ancient Greeks discovered that it was spherical and that's been the educated point of view ever since. So Larus is totally wrong when he says that a flat earth was the consensus.

Well, there you go. Every day is a school day.
 






WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,767
Well, there's a surprise.

[MENTION=17469]melias shoes[/MENTION], obviously not wanting to post in case he gets asked a question about his preferred 'no deal' solution and has to run away again, is now limiting himself to giving thumbs up on Climate denial posts.

It's become blatantly obvious that you don't understand any aspect of the 'no deal' solution you've been shouting about so come on melias shoes, do tell us why you think climate change isn't happening ?

I'm aware that a week on, you've haven't been able to come up with anything on 'no deal' but I'm off out for a couple of hours so, with the whole Internet at your fingertips, I'm sure you can manage something worthwhile on your new climate change denial crusade :lolol:
 
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