Humans not able to recording the temperature millions doesn't mean the change was not there. Those are published paper, the estimation at least have credibility.
I am in agreement with you that the climate is changing now, but from where to where? There was not ice in the poles before, would we reach that point? Need more data. That's a long term monitoring, as shown in the graph. I believe we need to make effort I have said in previous post.
Most homes not needing AC in Seattle not because complex regulation or cost, simply it won't be used as much. In my post I showed the next 15 days in seattle is around 80 F high. It's normal for Puget Sound. It's just the weather, we just had major storms last two winters which was rare too, do I need to claim they were due to climate declining?
As aforementioned, I do believe climate change does naturally occur and with the estimations and data provided by various scientists, we know that the planet wouldn't have developed as it did without the optimal atmospheric conditions. The data we do have access to currently can at least allow us to draw appropriate inferences relative to the highly probable correlation between increased human activities and accelerated climate change using the patterns of association that can be observed.
The increase in global atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations and other greenhouse gases will lead to a further increase in climate change or global warming, which will have a multitude of consequences on our environment and also our health. Smog will appear more often throughout densely populated areas or regions of the world and the pollutants of the smog will be trapped under sinking hot air (Especially in places like LA due to the cooler surface-level air, so the pollutants will not disperse into the higher levels of the atmosphere. Think of it as a sort of temperature inversion caused by an anticyclone. A case like this did appear in London in 1952). Due to the decrease in air quality, pulmonary-related diseases or disorders will become more common, headaches and migraines will become more frequent, and we will probably see a large increase in cases of conditions similar to cerebrovascular ischemia. Air pollution may also lead to the increase in cases of systemic inflammation, neuroinflammation, and oxidative stress. Another important consequence to consider is agricultural detriments. Increased greenhouse gas emissions will lead to more frequent acidic rain resulting from increased levels of sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxide.
Edit:
It should be obvious that climate change and its catalysts will have a cascading effect on other environmental and health factors, but another issue I think is quite important and definitely worth contemplating (Especially after having worked alongside The Water Project, which is a non-profit organization that helps provide access to clean water across various sub-Saharan communities in Africa) is water scarcity. Most of the water in the world (97%) is salt water and can only be consumed if desalinated, except current methods of desalination are not cost-effective considering how the process of desalination requires diesel and diesel requires water to manufacture. Two percent of the water on Earth is trapped in ice and therefore humans rely on 1% of the world's fresh water supply, although most of that limited water supply is used by agriculture and industry. With a hotter climate, the world will continue to suffer long droughts and water scarcity will become an even bigger problem in the years to come (Look at the shrinkage of the water supplies in the Hoover Dam and Colorado River).
Why dismiss scientifically backed evidence/research?
Ah yes, that's right. Dismiss all the evidence that doesn't support your bias in favour of the evidence that does.
I wasn't dismissing the data provided by the user I quoted, I was simply stating that the recorded climate shifts are estimations and because humans didn't exist millions of years ago, we didn't have the capacity to record climate trends over the specific periods of time when humans were nonexistent. We can record climate trends now and have been observing them.