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Australia Under Fire Worst in Decades..
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Someone:

--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The fuel loading has been increasing because of this cycle, year after year. "Fire seasons" are normal here but this was well overdue (by about 5 years) and little was done to mitigate it. Even the recommendations following Victoria's last severe fires weren't followed. The amount of fuel being added year after year hasn't increased, but the interval between it being removed (either by human intervention or a fire) has.
--- End quote ---
Fuel loads and management of them is a very political subject but a very important one that needs to be discussed in the context of these fires, it certainly has had a big impact on the result. But then you wander back off on your nonsense "argument"

--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The severity of these fires and the loss of homes were directly related to human inaction, nothing else. I shall reserve any future comments on this matter, as I see this thread getting de-railed and locked fairly soon.
--- End quote ---
Human inaction could include failing to act on climate change.... 
MT:

--- Quote from: gabinetex on January 07, 2020, 08:54:40 pm ---Nah, perfectly reasonable.
Also, a quarter of weedkiller a day, keeps the doctor away:
--- End quote ---

I love that one, exemplifies the whole GRETA indoctrination ideology and procedure and after all its been shown its the same people whos behind climate change agenda who sits on the boards and stocks of the companies who manufacturers roundup, oil, weapons, power, food, medicine etc and thats the whole point of this man-made-climate-change hoax!  IT'S a FREKKING FINANCE SCAM! :)

But people dont want to know that because its a conspiracy and we cant talk about conspiracy because it does not exist some blind fooled people on EEVBLOG says!  :)

Dr. Patrick Moore is not and never has been a paid lobbyist for Monsanto," Charla Lord, a spokesperson for Monsanto.
https://www.newsweek.com/patrick-moore-scientist-who-offered-and-then-refused-drink-glyphosate-weed-317289

https://www.gmwatch.org/en/news/latest-news/16027-what-happened-when-patrick-moore-was-challenged-to-drink-a-glass-of-glyphosate



--- Quote from: Someone on January 07, 2020, 09:02:28 pm ---
--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The fuel loading has been increasing because of this cycle, year after year. "Fire seasons" are normal here but this was well overdue (by about 5 years) and little was done to mitigate it. Even the recommendations following Victoria's last severe fires weren't followed. The amount of fuel being added year after year hasn't increased, but the interval between it being removed (either by human intervention or a fire) has.
--- End quote ---
Fuel loads and management of them is a very political subject but a very important one that needs to be discussed in the context of these fires, it certainly has had a big impact on the result. But then you wander back off on your nonsense "argument"

--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The severity of these fires and the loss of homes were directly related to human inaction, nothing else. I shall reserve any future comments on this matter, as I see this thread getting de-railed and locked fairly soon.
--- End quote ---
Human inaction could include failing to act on climate change....

--- End quote ---

You have to make up your mind on which one climate change.
Someone:

--- Quote from: MT on January 07, 2020, 09:02:49 pm ---
--- Quote from: Someone on January 07, 2020, 09:02:28 pm ---
--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The fuel loading has been increasing because of this cycle, year after year. "Fire seasons" are normal here but this was well overdue (by about 5 years) and little was done to mitigate it. Even the recommendations following Victoria's last severe fires weren't followed. The amount of fuel being added year after year hasn't increased, but the interval between it being removed (either by human intervention or a fire) has.
--- End quote ---
Fuel loads and management of them is a very political subject but a very important one that needs to be discussed in the context of these fires, it certainly has had a big impact on the result. But then you wander back off on your nonsense "argument"

--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The severity of these fires and the loss of homes were directly related to human inaction, nothing else. I shall reserve any future comments on this matter, as I see this thread getting de-railed and locked fairly soon.
--- End quote ---
Human inaction could include failing to act on climate change....
--- End quote ---
You have to make up your mind on which one climate change.
--- End quote ---
Why? Fires have many factors affecting their outcomes, trying to distill it down to a single point is ridiculous. Trying to say climate change (or any one aspect of it) is the only thing that mattered is just as stupid as saying any one other thing was the most important point. Add to that the extreme non-linear nature of wild fires, where small changes can have enormous effects.
MT:

--- Quote from: Someone on January 07, 2020, 09:16:31 pm ---
--- Quote from: MT on January 07, 2020, 09:02:49 pm ---
--- Quote from: Someone on January 07, 2020, 09:02:28 pm ---
--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The fuel loading has been increasing because of this cycle, year after year. "Fire seasons" are normal here but this was well overdue (by about 5 years) and little was done to mitigate it. Even the recommendations following Victoria's last severe fires weren't followed. The amount of fuel being added year after year hasn't increased, but the interval between it being removed (either by human intervention or a fire) has.
--- End quote ---
Fuel loads and management of them is a very political subject but a very important one that needs to be discussed in the context of these fires, it certainly has had a big impact on the result. But then you wander back off on your nonsense "argument"

--- Quote from: Halcyon on January 07, 2020, 10:43:09 am ---The severity of these fires and the loss of homes were directly related to human inaction, nothing else. I shall reserve any future comments on this matter, as I see this thread getting de-railed and locked fairly soon.
--- End quote ---
Human inaction could include failing to act on climate change....
--- End quote ---
You have to make up your mind on which one climate change.
--- End quote ---
Why? Fires have many factors affecting their outcomes, trying to distill it down to a single point is ridiculous. Trying to say climate change (or any one aspect of it) is the only thing that mattered is just as stupid as saying any one other thing was the most important point. Add to that the extreme non-linear nature of wild fires, where small changes can have enormous effects.

--- End quote ---

So how are you going to stop volcanoes, tsunamis, earth quakes, sand storms, siberian forest fires larger then Germany etc etc?
nctnico:
There is just one thing to learn from all this: if you don't want your home to burn at some point then don't live in a friggin' forrest. Same goes for volcanos, earth quakes and tsunamis BTW. These are perfectly avoidable; don't live in a place prone to these kind of threats.
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