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CarbonQ

Let’s be clear on terminology first. Global Warming keeps earth habitable.

Too little and we get covered in ice. Stop it altogether as you suggest - earth would become a big ball of ice. Uninhabitable.
Stopping it is however impossible, short of getting rid of the atmosphere.

Too much and it gets hot. Full on, it would mean surface temps of several hundred degrees C. Uninhabitable again.
This is achievable if we work too hard …

So the question is not should we stop it, rather should we work to keep global warming at the levels that keep earth as habitable as possible for our chosen species (see below)
So my answer here is Yes. Let’s keep our planet habitable.

A great guide to this comes in the form of carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere - a cause and driver of global warming.

The ideal range of co2 levels is somewhere between 250 and 350 ppm, at least for humans. Of course other species thrive at other levels. Millions of years ago, arid conditions with different vegetation suited dinosaurs. CO2 up above 1000ppm - not pleasant for humans, we evolved at around 250 and our civilisations got going as we got up to 300ppm

So specifically, we should work to keep co2 levels around 300ppm if we want earth to remain good for humans.

Footnote, levels were falling as part of the million year long series of cycles. We saw the beginnings of ice spreading. We then worked super hard to raise them and have overdone it. We just hit 420ppm and it is still rising.

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