12 Angry Men: The Acknowledgement Of Climate Change

Words: 1104
Pages: 5

You’ve might have been in a debate where a minority faction refuses to concede on any of their stances, despite all the points you’ve made. It progresses as far as trying to carry a conversation with a brick wall, but there is nothing wrong with this when it about subjective matters. “Favorite 1970s horror film?” I say Alien, you say Halloween. Alright, it’s of personal opinion- doesn’t matter much. But, when debates over critical issues affecting millions are stonewalled between two uncompromising blocks, that’s where problems envelop. Political ideology clashes justify the gridlock, but one issue that shouldn’t be divided among party lines somehow for the most part is is the acknowledgement of climate change.
This isn’t a matter of religion or principle; this is hard science with enough evidence to fill up Olympic swimming pools. No matter how many studies published virtually daily, all concurring that human activity is responsible for global warming, the skeptics remain skeptical. They say the jury’s still out. I say that there was less deliberation in 12 Angry Men. Before I go into exactly how many people are in denial, let’s separate the facts from the fiction.
…show more content…
In actuality there is 97% consensus among the publishing scientific community that climate change is real and humans can be blamed.
They claim that 1934 was the hottest year on record. It was only one of the hottest recorded years for the US, encompassing about 2% Earthly surface area, not exactly appropriate when discussing GLOBAL warming. Also numerous studies have found that the 3 hottest years occurred within the last 3