Climate change is just that, climate change.
I think it's pretty arrogant for humans to think that they can stop the natural warming/cooling cycles of the planet that have been going on for billions of years.
But in this instance, most of the change is not natural. It is the consequence of human activity---especially the rate of change. Natural cycles do not account for what we are seeing.
While that article was written in 2000, it still illustrates that cyclical changes are completely natural, and take place without greenhouse gases and the activities of mankind even being a factor. That's not to say there can't be terrible results.
Yes they do, but the natural changes have already been accounted for. They are not sufficient to account for the rapidity or intensity of the climate change that is occurring today.
I also think that more attention needs to be paid to solar activity, as mentioned in this article:
http://www.livescience.com/environme...un_effect.html
I think the first paragraph says it all.
Increased output from the Sun might be to blame for 10 to 30 percent of global warming that has been measured in the past 20 years, according to a new report.
Increased emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases still play a role, the scientists say.
So what is responsible for the other 70-90% of global warming?
The article also indicates that this factor is already known and being incorporated into the lastest models, yet the Fourth Assessment Report still concludes that most of the global warming we are seeing today is generated by human activity.
what I think is even more fascinating is the Little Ice Age, which spanned from approximately 1600 to the 19th Century.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_ice_age
A good article, which shows, among other things, that solar activity as a contributor to climate change, is being studied.
The Little Ice Age was indeed a subject of scientific controversy in the field for some time, and has been intensively studied for that reason. But the conclusion is still that the current global warming is mostly human generated. We are not dealing with a solely natural cycle today.
Obviously you have read a fair bit of popular literature on this topic. But have you read the Assessment Reports of the IPCC? (They are created for politicians, so they are not difficult.) Have you looked at the data on which they are based? What makes you think you have sufficient scientific data, and understanding of it, to second-guess the conclusions of the world's best climatologists?