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	<title>Comments on: Skull Head Shorty</title>
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	<description>Dog Apparel of All Types</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 04 Nov 2011 12:55:30 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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		<title>By: games cards hearts</title>
		<link>http://www.savvy4.com/skull-head-shorty/comment-page-1/#comment-2867</link>
		<dc:creator>games cards hearts</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Jan 2011 14:12:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>&quot;Not to offend you, but you are simply parroting what you have heard in school and from the liberal media. There are a number of factors that cause the planet to warm up, as well as cool down. First and foremost, Earth sits in the sun all day, but doesn&#039;t follow a perfectly circular orbit around the sun, nor does it stay in the same position all the time. It&#039;s going to warm up and cool down. Second, the climate has changed radically over thousands of years. The planet has gone through ice ages, droughts, heat waves, and all manner of climates in between. One of the factors that regulates the climate is that Earth&#039;s imaginary axis wobbles, which places the northern and southern hemispheres in different exposure to the sun in a cyclical pattern that varies over hundreds, if not thousands of years. There are certainly things that man does that can cause the climate to change, such as clear-cutting forests, burning down rainforests, releasing harmful chemicals into the air, and other things, and it would be best if man learned to conserve resources and be good stewards of the planet we inhabit, but it must be clearly understood that we don&#039;t have as much control over the climate as we like to think we do. To think otherwise is very self-centered. Remember that a large portion of North America was covered with ice, and was a very different place than it is now. Where did all that ice go? It melted, because the planet warmed up. This happened long before man inhabited as much of north America as we do now, and long before we had cars, factories, and other pollution sources that contribute so-called &quot;greenhouse gases&quot; to the atmosphere. The laws of physics, which govern all kinds of activities on Earth, tell us that there is no such thing as perpetual motion or endless supplies of energy. The planet is gradually winding down. It is imperceptible to the average person, because there is such small change in one person&#039;s lifetime, but taken over thousands of years, it becomes more apparent. Imagine if mankind spent as much time and energy trying to stop wars and killings and global suffering caused by man&#039;s inhumanity toward his fellow man rather than trying in vain to save a dying planet.&quot;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Not to offend you, but you are simply parroting what you have heard in school and from the liberal media. There are a number of factors that cause the planet to warm up, as well as cool down. First and foremost, Earth sits in the sun all day, but doesn&#8217;t follow a perfectly circular orbit around the sun, nor does it stay in the same position all the time. It&#8217;s going to warm up and cool down. Second, the climate has changed radically over thousands of years. The planet has gone through ice ages, droughts, heat waves, and all manner of climates in between. One of the factors that regulates the climate is that Earth&#8217;s imaginary axis wobbles, which places the northern and southern hemispheres in different exposure to the sun in a cyclical pattern that varies over hundreds, if not thousands of years. There are certainly things that man does that can cause the climate to change, such as clear-cutting forests, burning down rainforests, releasing harmful chemicals into the air, and other things, and it would be best if man learned to conserve resources and be good stewards of the planet we inhabit, but it must be clearly understood that we don&#8217;t have as much control over the climate as we like to think we do. To think otherwise is very self-centered. Remember that a large portion of North America was covered with ice, and was a very different place than it is now. Where did all that ice go? It melted, because the planet warmed up. This happened long before man inhabited as much of north America as we do now, and long before we had cars, factories, and other pollution sources that contribute so-called &quot;greenhouse gases&quot; to the atmosphere. The laws of physics, which govern all kinds of activities on Earth, tell us that there is no such thing as perpetual motion or endless supplies of energy. The planet is gradually winding down. It is imperceptible to the average person, because there is such small change in one person&#8217;s lifetime, but taken over thousands of years, it becomes more apparent. Imagine if mankind spent as much time and energy trying to stop wars and killings and global suffering caused by man&#8217;s inhumanity toward his fellow man rather than trying in vain to save a dying planet.&#8221;</p>
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