Thursday, December 10, 2015

Why do we breathe in oxygen and breath out carbon dioxide?

When oxygen is breathed in it goes to the alveoli ans in to the bloodstream where it is picked up by a protein molecule called himoglobin one molecule of himoglobin can transport
 4 oxygen molecules to anywhere in the body the himoglobin transports the oxygen to another protein
 called Cytochrome C oxidase wich makes two molecules of water for every molecule oxygen (water needs two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen) when a water molecule is made it releases energy the Cytochrome C oxidase harvests the energy then uses it for every day functions
Carbon Dioxide is released because it is in most everything we eat and is toxic to humans so we breathe it out. 
You breath oxygen in order for you to live. 
You give off carbon dioxide in order for plants to live. 
Plants and animals are in a give and take process it's also know as "mutualism". 
Plants take in carbon dioxide in order for it to give off oxygen which can be very beneficial to us. 
While in humans and animals, it's in a complete opposite where in we take in oxygen and give off carbon dioxide.

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

The Truth about CO2


Global Warming activists will tell you that CO2 is bad and dangerous. The EPA has even classified it as a pollutant. But is it? Patrick Moore provides some surprising facts about the benefits of CO2 that you won't hear in the current debate.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

BOOM: Liberal Lies on Climate Change Fully Exposed


Author Zac Unger was originally drawn to the arctic circle to write a “mournful elegy” about how global warming was decimating the polar bear populations. He was surprised to find that the polar bears were not in such dire straits after all.

“There are about 25,000 polar bears alive today worldwide. In 1973, there was a global hunting ban. So once hunting was dramatically reduced, the population exploded.”
“This is not to say that global warming is not real or is not a problem for the polar bears,” Unger added. “But polar bear populations are large, and the truth is that we can’t look at it as a monolithic population that is all going one way or another.”