GW is not even a hypothesis and you know it.
Like I said before, there aren't many scientists who deny global warming. Even skeptics admit that global warming is happening. The debate is about what causes it.
I can't help but notice you chopped off the first part of my statement. Let me repeat it for you: "But you and your ilk are willing to give up liberty and treasure even though you really have no freaking idea. "
GW is perhaps an observed phenomenon. The observation period is so small that it has no statistical nor scientific significance (except for fund raising purposes). And, of course, we are on a global cooling trend for the last 5 years. This is why the guesses of scientists on the cause (which is what makes a scientific theory) cannot and do not pass scientific muster. A 2% fluctuation in a 20 year period on an object that occupies 1,083,206,246,123,080,894,852 cubic meters, and is 4.5 billion years old? That is why they won't posit theories.
An analysis of the records of all of the Sun's activities over the past few decades - such as sunspot cycles and magnetic fields - shows that since 1985 solar activity has decreased significantly, while global warming has continued to increase.
Mike Lockwood, of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Chilton, Oxfordshire, said: "In 1985, the Sun did a U-turn in every respect. It no longer went in the right direction to contribute to global warming. We think it's almost completely conclusive proof that the Sun does not account for the recent increases in global warming."
The study, published today in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A, shows there is no doubt that solar activity over the past 20 years has run in the opposite direction to global warming, and therefore cannot explain rises in average global temperatures.
But they can't explain GW, nor can they provide a scientific theory for same. Climatology is an infant "science." It can't provide useful theories (evolution can by the way), it can only provide guesses. As long as scientists get paid for those guesses, it will continue to thrive.
That would be OK, if it weren't for the trillions of dollars and impossible to quantify loss in human liberty it produces.
AGW is a political position, not a scientific one.