Obviously you can, as demonstrated by the fact that you keep making stuff up. Not having anything to back you up, and honesty not being an option for you, you resort to making up strawmen to attack.
As they won't discuss the science, this has morphed from the science to a discussion of personality disorders displayed by denier cultists.
I'm seeing a lot of histrionic personality disorder, the need to be the center of attention.
I'm seeing a lot of narcissism, based on the cultists declaring how they're far smarter than the world experts on the subject matter, and based on their inability to admit any sort of error, ever, no matter how small.
I'm seeing obvious paranoia, the claim that the world is secretly plotting against them.
There's definitely some antisocial personality disorder there, based on their inability to play nice with others.
A few of the cultists are schizotypal (just plain nuts). And a few are sociopaths, based on their pubic desire to see mass death.
Your premise and your conclusion aren't related in any way. Do you understand that? I mean, I understand that somehow, you might think what you're saying makes some kind of sense, but it doesn't.
As everyone here knows, that's your form of abject groveling surrender. Whenever you've been absolutely destroyed on a topic, you reflexively start weeping "WAAAH! TROLL!", because you think it gives you an excuse to run.It's hard to believe. He's a mirror troll:
So, I need to go carve another notch.
This is from an article at the nationalgeographic.com.
A NEW STUDY warns that Greenland’s ice is melting faster than scientists previously thought. But perhaps the biggest surprise is that most of this ice loss is from the land-fast ice sheet itself, not Greenland’s glaciers.
The new study, published January 21 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that the largest sustained ice loss from early 2003 to mid-2013 came from Greenland's southwest region, which is mostly devoid of large glaciers.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/e...ing-sea-level/
All it takes to melt Greenland’s ice sheet is a surface temperature of 1 C and sunlight. “It used to be rare to get temperatures above 0 degrees on the ice sheet, but no longer,” Bevis said. And each degree above 1 C doubles the amount of ice melt.
What happens next?
Without acting soon to dramatically reduce the burning of fossil fuels that is raising global temperatures, most or all of Greenland’s ice could melt, raising sea levels 23 feet, warns Richard Alley, a glaciologist at Penn State. This would occur on a time scale of centuries. However, there is a warming threshold that could be crossed in a few decades or less and, if exceeded long enough, the meltdown of Greenland would be irreversible, said Alley.
*I runs around in circles tearing my hair out*