When you do, encouraging surprises appear, as in findings from Yale's Six Americas survey of
public views about global warming (read «Energy Agreement Hidden by Climate Disputes»).
Not exact matches
«Should the
public come to believe the scientific issues are settled, their
views about global warming will change accordingly.
Should the
public come to believe that the scientific issues are settled, their
views about global warming will change accordingly.
should the
public come to believe that the scientific issues are settled, their
views about global warming will change accordingly.
And the new Yale / George Mason poll, which is the first I have seen to prove the
views of Tea Partiers, shows that Tea Party members (12 % of the
public) feel they are very well informed
about climate science and more than half think
global warming will never hurt anyone.
«Should the
public come to believe that the scientific issues are settled, their
views about global warming will change accordingly,» it says.
There is a lack of
public awareness
about the level of scientific agreement underpinning the
view on anthropogenic
global warming.
Republicans should «continue to make the lack of scientific certainty a primary issue in the debate» because otherwise, he warned, «[s] hould the
public come to believe that the scientific issues are settled, their
views about global warming will change accordingly.»
Maibach, who is now working on a further project to measure the effects the
views of weathercasters have on their audience, added: «Most members of the
public consider television weather reporters to be a trusted source of information
about global warming - only scientists are
viewed as more trustworthy.»