To make a blanket statement about a party regarding a science based matter is impossible and shows that much of the issue appears politically driven. Republicans are allowed to have their own opinions regarding this matter. There is no party line for Republicans on this subject.
Global is an adjective and warming is a noun.
Wallace Broecker from Columbia University is said to have "coined" the term Global Warming.
Global warming
The global warming!
Yes, it prevents global warming.
Approximately 97 of climatologists believe in global warming.
Approximately 97 of climate scientists believe in global warming.
Global warming skeptics do not believe the geoscientists, engineers and meteorologists round the world. The skeptic individuals believe that nature is the primary cause of global warming and/or that future global warming will not be a very serious problem.
Approximately 97 of scientists believe in man-made global warming.
According to multiple studies, less than 3 of scientists do not believe in global warming.
Because it is GLOBAL, not local warming.
Oh yes!
There are people who don't believe global warming is happening.There are people who believe it is happening but don't believe that humans are causing it.There are people who believe all the climate scientists who believe it is happening and that we are causing it.
People believe that man is causing global warming and climate change by burning fossil fuels and cutting down the forests of the world.Other people believe that global warming is a natural event and man is not causing it.Most believe that it is partially a natural issue that man is having some unknown affect on as well. This is where most scientists fall.Other people believe that global warming is not happening at all.
Yes, there are politicians who do not believe in global warming or who question the scientific consensus on climate change. This skepticism can stem from ideological beliefs, financial interests, or a lack of understanding of the scientific evidence.
The vast majority of climate scientists, around 97, believe in global warming and agree that it is primarily caused by human activities.
Whether or not you are worried about global warming seems to depend on your political persuasion, at least in the United States. Republicans don't believe it is happening. Democrats believe it, but can't get enough support to do anything about it. Republicans, for the most part, are convinced that this is just hysteria. Poll after poll demonstrates that Republicans rank this issue far-lower than terrorism, economic decline and even entitlement reform. Republicans just don't believe that global warming is occurring. This position has hardened in recent years, as the scandals that expose apparent fraud in the scientific community by those pushing the global warming agenda pile up (Mann and the Hockey Stick graph, the East Anglia climate emails, and the recent revelations about the scientists who studied polar bear populations.) Republicans are suspicious about most environmentalist claims because, quite frequently, they think they are used to expand government power rather than to solve the problem. The fact that the major advocate for manmade warming in the United States is Al Gore also does not help. Democrats are worried, and they believe that global warming is occurring. The question is: Do they believe it enough to be willing to spend money/lose their jobs to combat it? Most place it low on the spectrum of concerns, beneath welfare and economic performance, but nowhere near as low as Republicans. They are, however, willing to wield global warming as a club to force companies to buy "green" lighting (like my local Wal-Mart) and blackmail corporations into purchasing carbon credits. In other words, America is in a stalemate. People have their attention focused on other things.