...? I literally don't know what you're talking about.
We have so much food in America our corrupt government intentionally inflates the prices in the interest of bigger corporate farm profits. We pay farmers not to grow food. We pay farmers to grow crops to make ethanol--a fuel which requires more energy to create than it produces when burned. (The practice is completely pointless and creates MORE net emissions of CO2) We have TONS of extra food and food production capacity. Any nation with free markets does; food becomes cheap. People start doing other work and society advances to a higher standard of living for all.
Real science would get a lot of people on-board with whatever ideas might combat man-caused climate change. All of this political posturing just harms real scientific efforts going forward because we're inundated with so much garbage research.
I don't brush off the idea of man-caused climate change. If it's happening, that's important. But I'm not interested in giving politicians a lot more power (to produce 0 change anyway--Every proposal I've ever seen just moves production of CO2 offshore) in the interests of something which has never been shown scientifically to be happening. (The man caused part. Slow climate changes are always present.) The science matters.
Insofar as most people crusading on the issue are championing socialist/communist causes against industrialization, for redistribution, that does not interest me. That's not science. That has nothing to do with climate change beyond using the idea of it as an excuse for policies which have nothing to do with it. UN conferences on "climate change" are filled with third world dictators demanding redistribution from freer, developed nations. It's a god damned circus.
The problem is, there's barely any real science (which doesn't show anything remotely conclusive, let alone significant) on the matter. And every person claiming there's conclusive science on the matter just harms the cause of investigating the possibility of man-caused climate change.
Then there's the fact that other activities of man (omg cow farts we're doomed!) produce gasses with far more "greenhouse" effect. Yet there's virtually no attention given to them, because CO2 is mass produced and easy to rant about without any facts. The real focus is control and corporate-government desire for it, not the environment.
I'm not brushing off concerns, but I'm realistic about them. Yes, CO2 has "greenhouse" properties. But they're relatively weak compared to many other gasses. And there are a multitude of systems which often counterbalance changes in CO2 effecting temperature. We don't understand half of them, let alone well enough to model them and make half-accurate simulations.
That's not to say it's not possible, and scientifically showing it would certainly require a lot of work and data. But it's scientists doing honest work which could progress that matter, not the corrupt politicians doing it today, who embrace it as an excuse for more power. Their motivations have nothing to do with science or the environment, and this is plainly obvious in their proposals which would do nothing to curb global CO2 emissions anyway.
[I wish I could obey forum rules]