Chapter 1 Prologue
Chapter 2 List of Graphs
Chapter 3 Earth's Climate Timeline
Chapter 4 1. Is Humanity Losing the Global Warming Debate?
Chapter 5 2. How Did We Find the Earth's 1,500-year Climate
Cycle?
Chapter 6 3. Shattered Glass in the Greenhouse Theory
Chapter 7 4. The Baseless Fears: Sea Levels Will Surge, Bringing
Floods and Devastation
Chapter 8 5. The Treaty That Would Change Earth's Climate—Or Maybe
Not
Chapter 9 6. The Baseless Fears: A Million Wild Species Will Be
Lost Forever
Chapter 10 7. Warming and Cooling in Human History
Chapter 11 8. The Baseless Fears: Warming Brings Famine, Drought,
and Barren Soils
Chapter 12 9. The Earth Tells Its Own Story of Past Climate
Cycles
Chapter 13 10. The Baseless Fears: More Frequent and Fiercer
Storms
Chapter 14 11. How Far Can We Trust the Global Climate Models?
Chapter 15 12. The Baseless Fears: Abrupt Global Cooling
Chapter 16 13. The Sun-Climate Connection
Chapter 17 14. The Baseless Fears: Millions of Human Deaths from
Warming
Chapter 18 15. Powering the Future: Can We Depend on Renewable
Energy?
Chapter 19 16. The Ultimate Failure of the Kyoto Protocol
Chapter 20 Glossary
Chapter 21 About the Authors
S. Fred Singer was the founding dean of the School of
Environmental and Planetary Sciences at the University of Miami,
the first director of the U.S. National Weather Satellite Service,
and served five years as vice chairman of the U.S. National
Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmospheres. He is the author or
editor of more than a dozen books and monographs, including Global
Climate Change (Paragon House, 1989) and Hot Talk, Cold Science:
Global Warming's Unfinished Debate, (Independent Institute,
1997).
Dennis T. Avery has been a senior fellow of the Hudson
Institute since 1989. Prior to that, he was a senior analyst in the
U.S. Department of State (1980-88), where he won the National
Intelligence Medal of Achievement in 1983. Avery's book Saving the
Planet With Pesticides and Plastic: The Environmental Triumph of
High-Yield Farming (Hudson) was first published in 1995, with a
second edition in 2000.
Singer and Avery present in popular language supported by in-depth
scientific evidence the compelling concept that global temperatures
have been rising mostly or entirely because of a natural cycle.
Unstoppable Global Warming explains why we're warming, why it's not
very dangerous, and why we can't stop it anyway.
*Science Daily*
Fred Singer and Dennis Avery have put together an impressive
collection of 'reasons to believe that global warming may not be as
bad as some people are telling us'—in other words, that natural
variations, rather than human-emitted greenhouse gases, have tended
to control climate. Their exhaustive list of scientific references,
mostly from refereed journals, only underscores their statements.
Bravo for a job well done!
*George H. Taylor, State Climatologist, Oregon Climate Service*
This book is must reading for anyone concerned about global
warming. The authors stress that "consensus" has no place in
science, only hard-headed testing of speculation. Their testing of
the earth's erratic, moderate warming since 1850 leads them to the
planet's recently discovered—but already broadly studied—1500-year
climate cycle.
*Frederick Seitz, former President, National Academy of
Sciences*
Real science in, real science out. A masterpiece of understanding,
dispelling the computer myths of manmade global warming. Please
read this book.
*David Bellamy, Order of the British Empire, academic, author and
host of British TV documentaries*
Fred Singer and Dennis Avery highlight the many fallacies
associated with the hysterical claims of dangerous climate change
and unsubstantiated computer projections surrounding the theory of
human caused global warming. They have managed to lay out, dissect,
and expose the facts in a thoroughly readable style. Unstoppable
Global Warming is a ‘must read’ for everybody who is interested in
the real issues surrounding climate change.
*William Kininmonth, Australasian Climate Research*
Singer and Avery skillfully present their case for the existence of
a solar-induced 1,500 year cycle that generates warming and cooling
of the Earth’s temperature irrespective of the atmospheric
concentration of greenhouse gases. The authors even more skillfully
argue the implications of their findings to the ongoing heated
debate regarding the human contribution to observed and future
changes in climate.
*Robert C. Balling, Jr., Arizona State University*
A wonderful new book. . . . meticulously researched and
footnoted.
*The Washington Times*
...a thoughtful book by two respected scientists...
*Shopfloor.Org*
Unstoppable Global Warming is a valuable and sane contribution to
the public conversation about global warming. It deserves a warm
reception from readers.
*The Washington Times*
Recommended.
*Choice Reviews*
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