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SuperFreakonomics: What global warming?
Released this week, new title, "SuperFreakonomics: Global Cooling, Patriotic Prostitutes, and Why Suicide Bombers Should Buy Life Insurance," was four years in the making and is set to fuel Yuletide conversations the world over. Raising unusual debate such as, "What's more dangerous, driving drunk or walking drunk? Why is chemotherapy prescribed so often if it's so ineffective? Can a sex change boost your salary?" - the book is a beacon of alternative light in a media saturated with by a prescribed agenda.
Exploring the hidden side of everything, the authors invite answers for questions such as why doctors so bad at washing their hands, what's the best way to catch a terrorist and can eating kangaroo save the planet?
Controversy has already begun over the book’s chapter entitled ‘Global Cooling’ in which the authors discuss how even the most sophisticated climate models are limited in their ability to predict the future, and underline the large measure of uncertainty in this realm.

Turning the Armageddon debate on it’s head, the authors put forward alternative views for global warming including the idea that cows -- as well as sheep and other cud-chewing animals called ruminants are wicked polluters.
“Their exhalation and flatulence and belching and manure emit methane, which by one common measure is about twenty- five times more potent as a green house gas than the carbon dioxide released by cars (and, by the way, humans). The world's ruminants are responsible for about 50 percent more greenhouse gases than the entire transportation sector.” (Freakonomics excerpt Harper Collins)
For more from the SuperFreakonomic's authors see their blog at freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com.
SuperFreakonomics is printed by Harper Collins and is also available to buy now at Amazon.com.
Kerry Olsen
Source: freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com.
Photo Credit: WWF
TAGS: superfreakonomics steven levitt stephen dubner freakonomics global warming new york times blog online magazine fashion magazine
