The claim that human emissions have caused huge changes in the climate are used to instill fear. [emphasis, links added]
Without human emissions, the climate will still change, but as we believe, calmer, gradually.
But anyone who studies climate history knows that climate change often happens suddenly, usually only a few decades.
An example is the Sahara Desert, not always the desert.
Scientists reported in a 2013 paper that the landscape of trees and grasslands ranged from about 10,000 years ago to 5,000 years ago.
“Then, climate change, North Africa began to dry up.”
The study, published in Science, says it all took only a few hundred years.
According to the author “Our analysis shows that the termination of the Horn of Africa in the Horn of Africa took place within centuries, highlighting the nonlinearity of the hydrogenated climate in the region.”
It is believed that as the Earth's cyclical positioning changes to the Sun, the Sahara's transformation was initially caused by more sunlight falling on the Earth's northern hemisphere.
It has nothing to do with carbon dioxide emissions and human activities. This is all natural.
People have influence, but the real change is still natural and still very familiar today.
A ritual that performs weather changes will not tame Mother Nature.
Read more in the Skillless Area