Is Bill Gates full of shit?

fd2840ba-e4a9-4512-909c-d876b49c623f-730x487.jpg


Bill Gates, the billionaire left-wing activist wants to save humanity.

He wants to dim the sun.

That’s right, the founder of Microsoft apparently thinks that the sun is the Blue Screen of Death in the sky and is funding research at Harvard University into dimming the sun to cool the earth.

The solar geoengineering project, called Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment (SCoPEx), will be flying a test balloon above Sweden next year as part of this research.

The plan is to eventually release 2 kg of calcium carbonate dust into the atmosphere in a year or two to study how what impact it may have.

You read that correctly.

They want to put chalk dust in the atmosphere. Are you old enough to have ever cleaned blackboard erasers for your teacher? That nasty cloud of chalk dust you inhaled during that process is what they want to put into the atmosphere.

What could possibly go wrong?

Who would have thought that the answer to “man-made climate change” would be more man-made climate change?

That said, environmentalists aren’t entirely on board. “There is no merit in this test except to enable the next step. You can’t test the trigger of a bomb and say ‘This can’t possibly do any harm’,” said Nicklas Hällström, director of the Swedish green think-tank WhatNext?

Of course, Hällström’s biggest issue with this concept is that he thinks that it will create the impression that we can still use fossil fuels.

There are several problems with this whole thing.

For starters, radical environmentalists can’t seem to decide whether "man-made climate change" is causing the earth to warm or cool.

That’s why what was once referred to as “global warming” is now called by the more vague term “climate change.”

Second, even if you ascribe to the idea that climate change is man-made and not part of a natural cycle, even the most radical of predictions refer to its impact of fractions of a degree over many, many decades.

Dimming the sun would likely have a more dramatic impact on global temperatures.

It is widely believed that the reason why dinosaurs were wiped out was an asteroid impact that released particles into the atmosphere, blocking the sun and causing a dramatic drop in global temperatures.

Is this really something we want to try ourselves?

Third, how would adding particles in the air contribute to the "greenhouse effect:?

Do we really want to find out?



https://news.trust.org/item/20201218140025-po1gu


How dare you question one of the richest men in the world? He is merely following the science
 
Maybe, but assembly language is way too easy to learn. DOS was borrowed from others. So it isn't original. He's a thief.

He's not a thief, any more than Ray Crock was with McDonald's. Gates and Crock are examples of aggressive and savvy businessmen who use the ideas and products others have produced in such a way as to massively increase their return on investment and marketability. Such people only need be kept in check and not allowed to create monopolies that stifle competition and innovation because once they corner the market their greed and avarice will inevitably lead to them monopolizing things if they can.
 
How dare you question one of the richest men in the world? He is merely following the science

Science is for sale to the highest bidder.

Scientific research, like farming, manufacturing, or banking, is a business.

Science, like any other business, involves investments of money, property, human resources, facilities, and capital.

Private industry funds the majority of R & D conducted around the world.

In the US, 71% of R & D funding comes from industry, followed by government (21%) and private foundations (4%).

Scientists, sponsors, and institutions usually have financial interests related to the outcome of research.

  • Scientists receive salary support for their work and may have intellectual property rights, such as patents, related to their research.
  • They may also own stock in companies that fund their research or have relationships, such as consulting agreements, with those companies.
Companies that sponsor research have an interest in producing research results that support the development and marketing of their products or services.

  • Institutions receive funding through contracts or grants with research sponsors and may also own stock in companies that fund research.
  • Institutions often have collaboration agreements with companies and receive gifts from companies.
  • Institutions may also own intellectual property related to research.
Although most of the debate about financial interests in research has focused on ownership of stock or intellectual property or relationships with private research sponsors, it is important to realize that salary support can also have a significant impact on scientific behavior.

Decisions concerning hiring, tenure, and promotion made by academic institutions are usually based on a scientist’s ability to publish, develop intellectual property, and obtain grants or research contracts.

Many institutions require scientists to support their salaries by obtaining contracts or grants and have come to depend on the indirect income provided by grants or contracts to cover operating expenses.

Some scientists, such as post-doctoral fellows, are supported by “soft money,” which means that their salaries are supported entirely by grants or contracts. If these contracts or grants are not renewed, these scientists may lose their jobs.

Many scientists and scholars are concerned that financial interests can threaten the scientific community’s adherence to methodological and ethical norms, such as honesty, objectivity, openness, social responsibility, and protection of research subjects.

Scientists who have financial interests related to their work may distort their research to produce desired results, fail to publish or share data or methods appropriately, or violate ethical or legal rules.

Research sponsors may manipulate study designs or data analysis and interpretation to produce outcomes that favor their interests, or suppress unfavorable data and results.

Institutions may sign contracts that allow private companies to prevent academic scientists from publishing data or results or they may accept gifts that give industry donors some control over research or the curriculum.

Institutional officials may look the other way when well-funded scientists are accused of misconduct, or they may place pressure on oversight committees to approve lucrative studies.

There are many well-known cases in which financial interests have adversely impacted scientific integrity.

  • For example, in the early 2000s, scientists funded by the pharmaceutical company Merck did not publish data showing that its drug Vioxx increased the risk of heart attacks and strokes, and several pharmaceutical companies failed to publish data showing that their anti-depressant drugs increase the risk of suicide in adolescents.
  • In the 1990s, tobacco companies conducted secret research on the addictive properties of nicotine while claiming that cigarettes are not addictive.
  • In 1995, a pharmaceutical company forced the University of California to withdraw a paper accepted by the New England Journal of Medicine showing that its thyroid medication is not superior to several generic medications .
  • In 1999, Jesse Gelsinger died from a severe immune reaction to an adenovirus vector he received in a Phase I gene therapy trial in which the investigator and the institution had significant financial interests (stock and patents) that were not properly disclosed during the consent process. Gelsinger also was not properly informed about the risks of the treatment identified by previous animal studies.
  • In 2005, University of Vermont researcher Eric Poehlman admitted to fabricating and falsifying data over a ten-year period on 15 federal grants worth $2.9 million. Poehlman, who served a year and a day in federal prison and was fined $196,000, manipulated data because he felt pressure to maintain grant funding to support himself and his research staff.
Numerous empirical studies have highlighted potential funding biases by demonstrating statistically significant associations between private sponsorship and research outcomes.

For example, a study of research on calcium channel blocking drugs found that 96% of authors who published studies reporting outcomes favorable to the use of calcium channel blockers had financial relationships with corporate sponsors.

A study of cardiovascular clinical trials found that publications that disclosed industry funding were more likely to report positive findings than those not funded by industry.

Three systematic reviews of over 40 publications examining the relationship between sources of funding and research outcomes found that studies with industry funding were more likely to report results that favored the company’s products than studies with independent sources of funding.




https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4278468/
 
fd2840ba-e4a9-4512-909c-d876b49c623f-730x487.jpg


Bill Gates, the billionaire left-wing activist wants to save humanity.

He wants to dim the sun.

That’s right, the founder of Microsoft apparently thinks that the sun is the Blue Screen of Death in the sky and is funding research at Harvard University into dimming the sun to cool the earth.

The solar geoengineering project, called Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment (SCoPEx), will be flying a test balloon above Sweden next year as part of this research.

The plan is to eventually release 2 kg of calcium carbonate dust into the atmosphere in a year or two to study how what impact it may have.

You read that correctly.

They want to put chalk dust in the atmosphere. Are you old enough to have ever cleaned blackboard erasers for your teacher? That nasty cloud of chalk dust you inhaled during that process is what they want to put into the atmosphere.

What could possibly go wrong?

Who would have thought that the answer to “man-made climate change” would be more man-made climate change?

That said, environmentalists aren’t entirely on board. “There is no merit in this test except to enable the next step. You can’t test the trigger of a bomb and say ‘This can’t possibly do any harm’,” said Nicklas Hällström, director of the Swedish green think-tank WhatNext?

Of course, Hällström’s biggest issue with this concept is that he thinks that it will create the impression that we can still use fossil fuels.

There are several problems with this whole thing.

For starters, radical environmentalists can’t seem to decide whether "man-made climate change" is causing the earth to warm or cool.

That’s why what was once referred to as “global warming” is now called by the more vague term “climate change.”

Second, even if you ascribe to the idea that climate change is man-made and not part of a natural cycle, even the most radical of predictions refer to its impact of fractions of a degree over many, many decades.

Dimming the sun would likely have a more dramatic impact on global temperatures.

It is widely believed that the reason why dinosaurs were wiped out was an asteroid impact that released particles into the atmosphere, blocking the sun and causing a dramatic drop in global temperatures.

Is this really something we want to try ourselves?

Third, how would adding particles in the air contribute to the "greenhouse effect:?

Do we really want to find out?



https://news.trust.org/item/20201218140025-po1gu

No

What’s the argument we used to hear the lemmings apply to Trump, “he’s a billionaire which proves he knows what he is doing”
 
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