Alex 'Bellend' would be more appropriate - a right hissy bitch!
All you do is shoot the messenger.
I take it from that you are a climate change denier.
Don't you think that on the off chance the scientists are right (and they usually are) that we owe it to future generations to do everything possible to reduce polluting the atmosphere cos if your wrong its curtains for them?
Another dishonest attack on people who don't dispute that climate changes, the rest of what you say is nonsense since CO2 isn't a pollutant at all and that it has very little warm forcing capability.
Look all I'm saying is we can't gamble and take the risks. Even a good gambler will hedge his bets.
So convert to a low carbon economy. Electric cars, wind farms, wave farms, Solar panels, a bit of Nuclear for now.
As better technology becomes available costs will come down, mass employment will be created.
Of course it is said that Venus was once like Earth.-
Venus is a
terrestrial planet and is sometimes called Earth's "sister planet" because of their similar size, mass, proximity to the Sun, and bulk composition. It is radically different from Earth in other respects. It has the densest
atmosphere of the four terrestrial planets, consisting of more than 96%
carbon dioxide. The
atmospheric pressure at the planet's surface is about 92 times the sea level pressure of Earth, or roughly the pressure at 900 m (3,000 ft) underwater on Earth. Venus has, by far, the hottest surface of any planet in the Solar System, with a mean temperature of 737 K (464 °C; 867 °F), even though Mercury is closer to the Sun. Venus is shrouded by an opaque layer of highly reflective clouds of
sulfuric acid, preventing its surface from being seen from space in
visible light. I
t may have had water oceans in the past,[20][21] but these would have vaporized as the temperature rose due to a runaway greenhouse effect.[22] The water has probably
photodissociated, and the free hydrogen has been
swept into interplanetary space by the
solar wind because of the lack of a
planetary magnetic field.
[23] Venus' surface is a dry desertscape interspersed with slab-like rocks and is periodically resurfaced by
volcanism.
Wikipedia.
Yea should be able to adapt to 92 times the sea level pressure of Earth and a temp of 464 C. NOT!