If you look at the first graph I found, it included the 80s, which were at least roughly equivalent to the 90s, but only if you include 80-82. Adding more similar data would assuredly flatten that trend as the effect of outliers is diminished. I don't think it's coincidental that the first alternate graph presented started in 1983, that agency was started in 1982, likely in response to two consecutive years of giant wildfires.From the data provided previously in the thread. I already made a post showing the averages trending to increasing over time, and an alternate model to smooth out the giant spikes from extreme years.
But you know what? I'll humor you. Your latest model (now that you don't want to use the first one you used) uses data from the Canadian government, fair enough, a reasonable source. It claims to source it's data from https://www.ciffc.ca/publications/canada-reports , but what's odd is that it doesn't include 2022 or 2023 despite those reports being available. So I went and plugged those numbers into the graph.
I think it helps. It doesn't include the 80's, which by every account I can find were milder than the 90's and onward (almost like things are getting worse over time), but I think it still makes the point.
Unless the argument is that climate change kicked in and started the fire problem in 2023, it's just not a good argument. Though I appreciate the effort in the data analysis.
I'm saying that others here may genuinely believe what they are saying based on their own knowledge and faculties of reason. With you however, it does not matter what you know, or think you know, or pretend to treat logically, as your only motivation is the overthrow of the geopolitical order. If you can rationalize climate change flipping the system over, you will not only argue it is real and the effects are dire, you will actually desire for that to be the case. You want crisis and catastrophe. You want apocalyptic climate disasters for exactly the same reasons you want Israel eliminated and Ukraine conquered by Russia: you see these all as pathways to the end of current hegemony.I don't know if this is a grammatical mistake or what, but you cannot possibly mean that. But even were that-- or what you actually mean-- the case, the potential for plants to become more dry and flammable is pretty well understood and documented. As is, at least in general terms, the evil of the United States-- because that's the real topic of discussion, apparently.
Everything will be fine. That's hardly a hypothesis, that's human existence. Whatever circumstances we are presented with become the current fine. Even if fires expand enormously, everything will be fine. To disregard this and catastrophize leads one to fear not only things as they are but things as they never will be. We live in a world with earthquakes and tornados and floods. You can't say that things are the best you could possibly imagine, nature kills lots of people. And yet, you could call it all fine, because it is what you know, and if everything stayed as it currently is, you would call that fine. You are terrified of change, because it's not what you know, and you've talked yourself into thinking of only the ways your currently accepted "fine" might get worse. But the future will be fine, even if it is different, even if nature kills lots of people, it will still be fine. Historically, things tend to get better for people, and when they do, that will still only be fine.It's not just a bunch of hypotheticals on equal footing with the 'everything will be fine' hypothesis.