Milankovitch Cycles

I spent 35 years testing naval sensor systems. Our group had an ISO 9001 certification and we used a lot of equipment that required regular calibration.

So the answer is NO ... God, you're stupid ... go fucking read ISO 9001 ... HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HA WHA HW AHHW ... you spent 35 years sweeping the floor there ...

ISO/IEC 17025 General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories

 
So the answer is NO ... God, you're stupid ... go fucking read ISO 9001 ... HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HA WHA HW AHHW ... you spent 35 years sweeping the floor there ...

ISO/IEC 17025 General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories

You're not very good at looking things up, are you.

 
So, any evidence that only politically aligned scientists are selected to review IPCC reports? Let's try this. Let's look at some of these folks and what they were doing before the IPCC and see if we can see any basis for your accusation.

Here are the editors of Working Group I, The Physical Science Basis.

Valerie Masson-Delmotte: French climate scientist and Research Director at the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission, where she works in the Climate and Environment Sciences
Panmoa Zhai: Chinese climatologist, Secretary General of the Chinese Meteorological Society, and one of six co-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change working groups.
Anna Pirani: Executive Deputy Direction of Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste, Italy
Sarah L Connors: Science Policy Fellow at the European Geoscience Union (EGU). She holds a Ph.D. in Atmospheric Chemistry.
Clotilda Pean: University of Paris - Saclay
Yang Chen: Statistics PhD from Harvard, currently employed at the University of Michigan
Leah Goldfarb: International Science Council; the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research; and the Office for Climate Education on international science policy and educational initiatives. She has a PhD in physical and atmospheric chemistry from the University of Colorado.
Melissa I Gomis: worked for an international consulting firm as an environmental scientist. She holds a PhD from Stockholm University for which she investigated the human exposure to Perfluorinated substances. In parallel, she produced a film on the impact of clouds on Arctic climate.
J.B. Robin Matthews: Postdoctoral Fellow in Physical Oceanography at Memorial University in Newfoundland, Canada, where he worked with underwater vehicles in the northwest Atlantic. He holds a PhD in Ocean and Climate science from the University of Victoria, also in Canada, for which he investigated seasonal cycling of ocean pH and historical methods of measuring sea surface temperature.
Sophie Berger: From Brussels, Belgium. Holds a PhD in Glaciology
Mengtian Huang: Mengtian received her Ph. D. in physical geography from Peking University in June 2019, with a focus on vegetation dynamics and climate change. Her research interest is the impacts of extreme events on terrestrial ecosystems and vegetation feedbacks.
Ozge Yelekci: Holds a postdoctoral position with Institut de Polytecnique de Paris in the Department of Mechanical Engineering
Rong Yu: graduated from Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology (NUIST), majoring in climate system and climate change.
Baiquan Zhou: received his Ph.D. in Meteorology from University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, with a focus on detection and attribution of changes in extreme precipitation over China from the thermodynamic and dynamic perspective.
Elisabeth Lonnoy: PhD, Univerity of Paris - Saclay
Thomas K Maycock: Science Public Information Officer, Editor & Project Coordinator, National Climate Assessment TSU North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies
Tim Waterfield: UK Centre for Ecoloy and Hydrology, Greater Nottingham, England
Katherine Leitzell: Communications Director for the NOAA California Sea Grant program, based at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. She holds a Masters degree in Neuroscience from the University of Southern California and was a AAAS Mass Media Fellow in 2007
Nada Caud: Started in 1999, as a member of the Astronomical Society of Tunisia while studying physics at the Sciences University of Tunis. After a PhD in Physics, received in 2006, Nada Caud has worked for 7 years as Outreach Officer within French Science Museums. She has been working since 2013 as Communications Project Manager at the Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l’Environnement (LSCE).
Doctors say Camels are the safest cigarettes !
 

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