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Worlds gone f***ing mad!
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<blockquote data-quote="Northernlights" data-source="post: 8178206" data-attributes="member: 81490"><p>Well said there are nearly 60% less cattle in my neck of the woods than there were in the sixties when I was a kid. We are not the problem. At any one time currently there are 283,000 aircraft in the sky round the world .Certainly not 60% less aircraft or human beings or cars, than in the sixties. One of the positives from less aircraft in the skies in the last two years was some of the best ice growth in the Arctic early last winter both in extent and thickness this century. No insulating brown layer of engine gases at the edge of earths atmosphere just as happened in the days after 9/11 which was driven home to me when a photo from space highlighted the brown ring of exhausts gases a few days before 9/11 compared with one taken just a few days after showing a clean white ring at the edge. The planet could heal itself very quickly if we stopped polluting it. At best I think we humans have only about 50 years left on this planet before it becomes uninhabitable. My daughter who has a phd in astrophysics from Edinburgh University agrees with me.</p><p></p><p>Yesterday I watched 6 polar flights heading north leaving their vast contrails in a clear blue sky round about 2.00pm We also have the return of these gigantic cruise liners in the Firth going to Invergordon after an absence of two years. I for one will take nothing to do with carbon reducing nonsense for farmers until all these other sources are subject to the same scrutiny. Doing plenty on farm already with old fashioned 7 course rotation and using lots of red and white clover to elimnate a lot of artificial nitrogen and hence oil use.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Northernlights, post: 8178206, member: 81490"] Well said there are nearly 60% less cattle in my neck of the woods than there were in the sixties when I was a kid. We are not the problem. At any one time currently there are 283,000 aircraft in the sky round the world .Certainly not 60% less aircraft or human beings or cars, than in the sixties. One of the positives from less aircraft in the skies in the last two years was some of the best ice growth in the Arctic early last winter both in extent and thickness this century. No insulating brown layer of engine gases at the edge of earths atmosphere just as happened in the days after 9/11 which was driven home to me when a photo from space highlighted the brown ring of exhausts gases a few days before 9/11 compared with one taken just a few days after showing a clean white ring at the edge. The planet could heal itself very quickly if we stopped polluting it. At best I think we humans have only about 50 years left on this planet before it becomes uninhabitable. My daughter who has a phd in astrophysics from Edinburgh University agrees with me. Yesterday I watched 6 polar flights heading north leaving their vast contrails in a clear blue sky round about 2.00pm We also have the return of these gigantic cruise liners in the Firth going to Invergordon after an absence of two years. I for one will take nothing to do with carbon reducing nonsense for farmers until all these other sources are subject to the same scrutiny. Doing plenty on farm already with old fashioned 7 course rotation and using lots of red and white clover to elimnate a lot of artificial nitrogen and hence oil use. [/QUOTE]
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Worlds gone f***ing mad!
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