Oh, and you could, of course, say you did indeed say "perhaps", hinting that you meant "probably". In which case you'd do well to clarify. You could say that yes, the evidence does indeed suggest we've done this, we are to blame. It's all it takes. I'll leave you be.
Of course, that will make this callout look stupid, and rightly so. But then, I did not force you to start it.
But here is where you have the wrong end of it and I knew you would. What specific aspect of climate change am I talking about? Better still, what can be said to be caused by climate change?
Now at this point, you may wish to reflect that many, many things get accused of being caused by Climate change and NOT all by Scientists. The fact that we know there is a thing called climate change allows people to call any bothersome change in climate, Climate change. Some MAY be right some MAY NOT be right.
So what is the mindset one should have when very ANY specific claim of climate change is made? "Therefore is climate changing a result of man being on Earth? Some. Maybe. To some extent. Perhaps."
Yes, scientific enquiry actually demands that at EACH instance of proclaimed climate change it is ACTUALLY Man made climate change or if it is not. IF it is then to what extent is this caused by man and if so how much is solely by him and how much by any other mitigating factor, and how much can the specific factors of man by corrected?
Why? Because it is not enough to say "Well X has change from what I remember, or from what it used to be, therefore this change in climate is climate change (Man made climate change)". Was THIS specific change, man-made climate change? It CANNOT be a default because " Is the climate "changing"? YES! Will it continue to change? Yes. Are some of these changes not beneficial for us? Yes. Has the Earth always been changing? Yes. Was it changing before we were around? Yes. Will it continue to change long after we stop existing on this planet? Yes. Are some of these changes bad for humans? Yes."
So If we know ANY change may not be man-made climate change. The more likely it is to be man-made climate change depends on how much research has been done into it and how much data has borne out solid results. Some of the claims have no such research, data and nor has the Scientific community much to say on a specific claim.
So, therefore we can say that whilst climate change undoubtably exists it DOES NOT make every claim and every instance of proclaimed claim "climate change" equally as valid or credible, and you can throw study after study at me and it does not make this claim any less true. It is the equivalent of me making a proclamation that Blondes are Ditzy and then to back this up, referring you to ditzy blonde after ditzy blonde (Blondes are not necessarily ditzy - this is simply illustrative - and I feel sillier having to point this out).
Furthermore, it is naive to think that we have all the answers, we do not. Even with what we actually know, it is work in progress. "It would be beyond stupid to think that nothing man does have any effect on anything or that there are not measurable changes in the climate or whatever. But it would be equally as stupid to blame this all on man. Somewhere on a VERY long spectrum lays the truth and everyone is entitled to an opinion and NO ONE has the ultimate truth on this.
Anyone who pretends to is made more foolish by the pronouncement."
So if someone comes to me and says that the drought in Australia is man-made, I would say "That is an interesting thought. How do you figure?" I would listen them out. They may be right or wrong, naturally, but I would be interested in hearing the evidence they have to support it. As impressive as this may be, I would want to know how they could exclude the very real chance that it is simply the Earth being itself. Furthermore again, I would be more impressed if they came up with solutions to reversing this trend or a minimisation strategy.
The default position is not to say that they are a kook, nor is it to say what they are telling me is truth or that it is completely wrong. That goes for scientists as well. They are not completely infallible.
What I have no time for is someone who may say" Yeah, the drought is bad. Climate change. Man did this", with a knowing and solemn nod of the head, but when pressed about it being an interesting theory to expand on, them saying "Of course it is climate change by man. Don't you know what climate change is? What shape is the Earth? Do you even Gravity?"
No, you will need more than that and you MAY be right. Perhaps? Does this climate change caused by man exist? Maybe. To some extent, perhaps (Man has been in Australia for 50 000 years and has been industrialised for a good couple of hundred years. It is not outside of the realms of possibility that ANY such claim may have at least some truth to it).
But of course this was not THE specific example and there is claim after claim not specific to Australia and the drought but many, many such claims. Are they automatically to be believed when man-made climate change is the go to default? No, you will need more than that and you MAY be right. Perhaps? Does THAT climate change caused by man exist? Maybe. To some extent, perhaps
One thing I have learned is that people like to think that they are smarter than what they are. When they do not know something, they tend to reinforce and general on what little they do know to feel smarter and more superior or intellectual.
Rather than point this out with climate change again, I will give an example of this that most of us know well.
"My child has Autism"
"Righhhtt...Autism. Umm...that is pretty tough. ...Still, they do have pretty unique talents like Maths and photographic memories. They can recall pretty cool stuff"
"Oh, you have seen Rainman too?"
Compare with:
"Uhhhh, it's been a nasty long winter"
"Climate change, huh? Damn, you humans and your driving cars"
"Right, should have known this Winter's length was caused by Climate Change"
So as stated, every instance of "Climate change" does need to stand up to some scrutiny and accepting it exists is NOT saying that every claim is equally as valid or equally as credible.
Therefore is climate changing a result of man being on Earth? Some. Maybe. To some extent. Perhaps.
Until we know the specific claim in question we do not have the extent of the change or whether it is included in the "some" climate change that is man-made climate change. It's stupid to pretend otherwise. I meant exactly what I meant and do not need you reinterpreting to suit your narrative. Nor does your assassion metaphor bear the slightest resemblence to what I said or inmplied and it would be beyond moronic to think so.