Buckriggler
| Favorite team: | LSU |
| Location: | |
| Biography: | |
| Interests: | |
| Occupation: | |
| Number of Posts: | 314 |
| Registered on: | 9/22/2020 |
| Online Status: | Not Online |
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re: UFC Firecracker 2026 Event..
Posted by Buckriggler on 6/6/26 at 9:28 am to Tigergreg
quote:
A fight to the death.
....or a fight to the rape
AI fun with climate change doomsday predictions
Posted by Buckriggler on 6/4/26 at 2:57 pm
Just out of curiosity I did an extended Gemini search on how many erroneous climate change predictions that have been made over the last 30-50 years Here's what came back:
If we completely remove the cap and count every single inaccurate or failed climate prediction made over the last 30 to 50 years, the number easily climbs into the tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands.
The reason this number scales indefinitely isn't because of a single massive conspiracy, but rather due to a math and media multiplier effect. When you look at how climate science is conducted and reported, "failed projections" are generated across a strict hierarchy of scale.
Here is how that uncapped numbers game breaks down:The Hierarchy of Scale:
Where the Thousands Exist1. Macro-Level "Doomsday" Milestones (~100 to 500 reports)
These are the high-profile, absolute deadlines stated by public figures, think tanks, or international politicians.What they are: Predictions that give a specific date for a global point of no return, a frozen Europe, or an ice-free pole.
The Data: Academic researchers have actually tried to catalog these. For instance, a notable dataset compiled by researchers David Rode and Paul Fischbeck at Carnegie Mellon University formally tracked 79 distinct climate-related apocalyptic predictions made by prominent figures to study how extreme forecasting behaves over time. Think tanks like the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) maintain running lists tracking roughly 50 to 100 major institutional failures.
2. Peer-Reviewed Regional & Ecological Hypotheses (~1,000 to 5,000 papers)If we expand the search to specific, localized scientific papers published in academic journals over the last three decades, the number jumps into the thousands.
What they are: A specific university study focusing on a single geographical feature or species—for example, predicting that a certain type of pine beetle will completely wipe out a specific forest by 2012, or that a localized aquifer will dry up by 2018.
Why they fail: These papers often rely on a "climate envelope" model, which assumes an ecosystem is passive. In reality, ecosystems are dynamic; animals migrate, plants adapt, and local weather patterns shift cyclically. When real-world observation overthrows the hypothesis, the paper becomes, by definition, an inaccurate scientific report.
3. Raw Computer Model "Ensemble Runs" (Tens of Thousands)This is where the numbers enter the stratosphere. Modern climate forecasting doesn't rely on one single computer simulation; it uses what are called ensembles.What they are: Scientists will run a single climate model hundreds or thousands of times, tweaking micro-variables slightly each time to see the range of possible outcomes.
Why they fail: By design, many of these individual "runs" are intentionally pushed to extreme boundaries (such as high-emissions scenarios) to test the outer limits of climate sensitivity. Historically, over 95% of the individual model trajectories used in early IPCC frameworks vastly over-predicted the actual rate of atmospheric warming during periods like the 1998–2012 "warming hiatus". If every individual incorrect model path counts as an inaccurate report, you are looking at an archive of tens of thousands of data curves that missed reality.
4. Local News & Sensationalized Media Reports (Hundreds of Thousands)If we include the media echo chamber, the number is effectively limitless.
What they are: A scientist publishes a nuanced paper saying, "There is a 10% chance that under extreme conditions, this beach could erode significantly by 2020." A local newspaper translates that into the headline: "SCIENTISTS WARN BEACH WILL BE GONE BY 2020."
The Scale: Databases like RealClimateScience or Watts Up With That have spent decades scanning and archiving digital and physical newspaper microfiches from the 1970s onward. They have cataloged thousands upon thousands of individual local news reports predicting imminent local weather disasters, structural collapses, and agricultural failures that never happened. Why an Uncapped List Keeps GrowingTo look at this through a structured lens, we can categorize how these data archives are divided by independent researchers who track climate forecasting accuracy:Archive CategoryEstimated VolumePrimary Driver of ErrorInstitutional Press ReleasesHundredsPolitical pressure to simplify complex data for public consumption.Outlier Model TrajectoriesThousandsOverestimating "climate sensitivity" (how violently the atmosphere reacts to a single unit of CO2).Localized Impact StudiesThousandsLinear thinking—assuming a short-term local trend (like a 5-year drought) is permanent.Media HeadlinesTens of ThousandsSensationalism and the removal of scientific qualifiers like "may," "potentially," or "in a worst-case scenario."
If we completely remove the cap and count every single inaccurate or failed climate prediction made over the last 30 to 50 years, the number easily climbs into the tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands.
The reason this number scales indefinitely isn't because of a single massive conspiracy, but rather due to a math and media multiplier effect. When you look at how climate science is conducted and reported, "failed projections" are generated across a strict hierarchy of scale.
Here is how that uncapped numbers game breaks down:The Hierarchy of Scale:
Where the Thousands Exist1. Macro-Level "Doomsday" Milestones (~100 to 500 reports)
These are the high-profile, absolute deadlines stated by public figures, think tanks, or international politicians.What they are: Predictions that give a specific date for a global point of no return, a frozen Europe, or an ice-free pole.
The Data: Academic researchers have actually tried to catalog these. For instance, a notable dataset compiled by researchers David Rode and Paul Fischbeck at Carnegie Mellon University formally tracked 79 distinct climate-related apocalyptic predictions made by prominent figures to study how extreme forecasting behaves over time. Think tanks like the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) maintain running lists tracking roughly 50 to 100 major institutional failures.
2. Peer-Reviewed Regional & Ecological Hypotheses (~1,000 to 5,000 papers)If we expand the search to specific, localized scientific papers published in academic journals over the last three decades, the number jumps into the thousands.
What they are: A specific university study focusing on a single geographical feature or species—for example, predicting that a certain type of pine beetle will completely wipe out a specific forest by 2012, or that a localized aquifer will dry up by 2018.
Why they fail: These papers often rely on a "climate envelope" model, which assumes an ecosystem is passive. In reality, ecosystems are dynamic; animals migrate, plants adapt, and local weather patterns shift cyclically. When real-world observation overthrows the hypothesis, the paper becomes, by definition, an inaccurate scientific report.
3. Raw Computer Model "Ensemble Runs" (Tens of Thousands)This is where the numbers enter the stratosphere. Modern climate forecasting doesn't rely on one single computer simulation; it uses what are called ensembles.What they are: Scientists will run a single climate model hundreds or thousands of times, tweaking micro-variables slightly each time to see the range of possible outcomes.
Why they fail: By design, many of these individual "runs" are intentionally pushed to extreme boundaries (such as high-emissions scenarios) to test the outer limits of climate sensitivity. Historically, over 95% of the individual model trajectories used in early IPCC frameworks vastly over-predicted the actual rate of atmospheric warming during periods like the 1998–2012 "warming hiatus". If every individual incorrect model path counts as an inaccurate report, you are looking at an archive of tens of thousands of data curves that missed reality.
4. Local News & Sensationalized Media Reports (Hundreds of Thousands)If we include the media echo chamber, the number is effectively limitless.
What they are: A scientist publishes a nuanced paper saying, "There is a 10% chance that under extreme conditions, this beach could erode significantly by 2020." A local newspaper translates that into the headline: "SCIENTISTS WARN BEACH WILL BE GONE BY 2020."
The Scale: Databases like RealClimateScience or Watts Up With That have spent decades scanning and archiving digital and physical newspaper microfiches from the 1970s onward. They have cataloged thousands upon thousands of individual local news reports predicting imminent local weather disasters, structural collapses, and agricultural failures that never happened. Why an Uncapped List Keeps GrowingTo look at this through a structured lens, we can categorize how these data archives are divided by independent researchers who track climate forecasting accuracy:Archive CategoryEstimated VolumePrimary Driver of ErrorInstitutional Press ReleasesHundredsPolitical pressure to simplify complex data for public consumption.Outlier Model TrajectoriesThousandsOverestimating "climate sensitivity" (how violently the atmosphere reacts to a single unit of CO2).Localized Impact StudiesThousandsLinear thinking—assuming a short-term local trend (like a 5-year drought) is permanent.Media HeadlinesTens of ThousandsSensationalism and the removal of scientific qualifiers like "may," "potentially," or "in a worst-case scenario."
re: New Orleans is broke - going the payday loan route
Posted by Buckriggler on 4/29/26 at 8:51 am to RobertFootball
quote:
I’ve always wanted to visit NO but all the crime stories keep me away.
My family and I just went there. Had a great time and stayed in the Quarter. Almost had to KO an angry, unwell man on the rail car in the garden district heading back to Canal, but there were police and guardsmen all through the Quarter. I also went in the Fall for an LSU game...stayed in NO and drove to and from the game without a problem.
re: After Iran, will Trump annex Cuba and Greenland?
Posted by Buckriggler on 4/17/26 at 3:59 pm to wackatimesthree
quote:
quote:
absolutely positively NO on statehood for either of them nor Alberta
This is the correct answer.
Unless y'all never want a Republican POTUS again.
Absolutely this. Why would you want to give 2 senators and reps to new states where there is no chance of them every being red?
re: RFK Jr.’s NIH approved $924,000 for experiments forcing horses to undergo miscarriages.
Posted by Buckriggler on 4/9/26 at 2:11 pm to Ailsa
I'll allow it. If they come up with something effective, they might just save the range land in the West from wild horse overpopulation as well as all of the wildlife that is affected. Starving animals vs. lab created miscarriages? I'll take the miscarriages.
re: James Carville seems fine
Posted by Buckriggler on 3/7/26 at 10:47 am to SoFlaGuy
So mad he's drooling on himself :lol:
re: Judge limits federal agents’ use of tear gas in Portland
Posted by Buckriggler on 2/4/26 at 8:36 am to Jbird
Sounds good to me. I've been hoping they'd bring back the billy club.
re: A Therapist's Warning About the Politics of Outrage
Posted by Buckriggler on 1/31/26 at 1:42 pm to hashtag
quote:
Therapists are the worst.
What did he say that you disagree with? :lol:
re: The .30-06 conspiracy theory is the theory with the most legs.
Posted by Buckriggler on 12/13/25 at 2:21 pm to Sassafrasology
Anyone who understands this caliber understands how bizarre it is that this round wouldn't pass through. Not saying it didn't happen, and I'm not saying that kid wasn't the shooter....just that it's extremely abnormal, and knowing that round....that test seems like common sense.
re: Netflix made a movie about Lakeboy7?
Posted by Buckriggler on 12/8/25 at 9:03 am to stout
A lot of white liberal women will watch out of a sense of obligation and cover the cost of production.
The coal theme has to invariably include a save the environment twist. You know the trans has a gay male boyfriend to show two guys kissing at every opportunity, and at least one negligent firearm discharge goes off to show how dangerous guns are. ICE will also raid the coal mine and arrest whole families working in the mine together with a coal covered black faced baby being pulled from it's mother's nipple and being sent back on a plane to central America in handcuffs alone.
The coal theme has to invariably include a save the environment twist. You know the trans has a gay male boyfriend to show two guys kissing at every opportunity, and at least one negligent firearm discharge goes off to show how dangerous guns are. ICE will also raid the coal mine and arrest whole families working in the mine together with a coal covered black faced baby being pulled from it's mother's nipple and being sent back on a plane to central America in handcuffs alone.
re: California to start giving phone bill discounts to illegal aliens
Posted by Buckriggler on 10/20/25 at 8:41 am to HagaDaga
quote:
And not a single Republican law group will sue them to stop/delay it.
They need to be allowed to do what they want with California so that it implodes. The rest of the country needs to see what eventually ends up happening when the unchecked left gets everything they want in a state. It's political insurance on a federal level.
re: Trump responds to ABC putting Kimmel back on the air
Posted by Buckriggler on 9/24/25 at 8:30 am to Major Dutch Schaefer
quote:
Let Jimmy Kimmel rot in his bad ratings
That's all that needs to be done
re: Did Charlie Kirk really say anything that bad or untrue?
Posted by Buckriggler on 9/15/25 at 3:04 pm to stout
quote:
Will he did have a few controversial opinions.
The comment that black women steal jobs because they can't think or something along those lines.
The comment about black airline pilots might not be qualified.
or "We made a huge mistake when we passed the Civil Rights Act in the 1960s".
I can see people considering those to be raciest like comments.
I can tell by the accuracy "or something along those lines" in your posts that you are clearly well-versed in his statements and not at all taking them out of context
One of the problems is that the msm makes it tough to find context. They selectively edit out explanations and focus on statements that are provocative. With the Civil Rights Act, I could not find the context, only the original statement of the "huge mistake" along with interpretations of him believing it became a tool for DEI and racism in a broader sense. Anyone have a link to him adding context to this statement? Obviously a guy who hosts a black leadership conference and provides scholarships to blacks to get there does not believe that blacks should not have equal rights, but I would like to see the video with the context behind his statement. I found one with a female asking him about his statement, but it was a gotcha statement on YouTube where they cut him off on a short after he affirmed what he said.
re: fricking Dave Smith from the top damn rope
Posted by Buckriggler on 9/13/25 at 9:17 am to Roaad
I had to watch that a few times :rotflmao: :rotflmao:
re: Elon Musk - The Left is the party of murder
Posted by Buckriggler on 9/10/25 at 3:13 pm to Tigergreg
quote:
He is in critical condition. It all depends on what the bullet hit. It may have missed a vital organ or his spinal cord. Just praying he pulls through. He has a beautiful family.
Based on that horrific video, I can't comprehend how he could have possibly survived that. Way too much blood lost. Would be nothing short of a miracle
re: Ole boy better hope he didn’t cross State lines
Posted by Buckriggler on 9/10/25 at 3:03 pm to Gee Grenouille
They have a firing squad in Utah. Should cycle through a couple rounds of blanks and a nut shot before the coup de grace
re: Democrats set out to study young men. Here are their findings
Posted by Buckriggler on 6/4/25 at 2:23 pm to RLDSC FAN
quote:
The focus groups found that young men feel they are in crisis: stressed, ashamed and confused over what it means to be a man in 2025
Must have paid 20 mill to run their focus group out of San Francisco
re: SCOTUS refuses to hear Challenge to Maryland ban on AR-15s
Posted by Buckriggler on 6/4/25 at 2:18 pm to Adajax
From what I gathered with what is happening, they are waiting on the numerous cases in the circuit courts to work their way through before taking it on and settling it. Even if this is true, it's not comforting to see the minority of conservative justices being the ones to push taking it on now.
re: Another Trumpian statistic? Amount of murderers illegally in this country.
Posted by Buckriggler on 3/21/25 at 2:11 pm to IvoryBillMatt
re: Heavily armed United States Marines have landed at the southern border to assist Border Pa
Posted by Buckriggler on 1/24/25 at 6:26 pm to Mid Iowa Tiger
M16 is better than the M4 for longer range shots. A bigger caliber would be better still.
re: James Woods: “State Farm WASN’T There”
Posted by Buckriggler on 1/12/25 at 1:50 pm to OU Guy
Regardless of what people think about what happened with Woods, State Farms does in fact suck really bad. Got in a wreck with my wife (no pics) on the interstate several years ago near Tyler Texas. We were hit by an uninsured motorist and our policy covered that. Our vehicle was completely destroyed and it was a miracle we weren't seriously injured. State Farm did everything they could to not pay a cent and it was only until I told them I was getting an attorney that they started to negotiate and gave us a low ball offer. They fought us tooth and nail for everything. Regardless of what people think about the Woods case, they do in fact suck really bad, and they sure as hell weren't there for us when we needed them. It has been over 20 years, and I still look forward to telling everyone I can about our horrible experience with them.
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