Cleveland Mark Blakemore said:
Maunder's minimum in 2012, will stay that cold for at least 200 years afterward
Um, trust me when I say I know a little more about this than you, and frankly, that's complete bollocks. With some of the press releases coming out, I can understand how you'd conclude that, but it's simply not the case. Yes, this solar cycle is weaker than it was expected to be, but it's really no different to the 1960s. It's not a big change in the Sun's behaviour like the Maunder min was.
Cleveland Mark Blakemore said:
You keep sneering as if it's all the fault of evil capitalism, but it's all the fault of evil solar cycles. No political system is going to ever be able to achieve the fertility of the world as it was at the end of the last decade.
If the sun decides to chill for a couple of centuries (people like me say millennia) and it already has, then this party is permanently over.
Actually, the coincidence of the Maunder minimum and freezing of the Thames aside, there's little-to-no evidence for solar activity (with is all the Maunder min is - there's no change in the Sun's temperature or heat output, another big misconception) affecting climate. Any "solar forcing" is hundreds of times weaker than a what small change in the C02 concentration in our atmosphere would produce.
Case in point: the extra solar heat received by Venus (because of its proximity to the Sun) should mean its temperature is maybe 20 degrees hotter than Earth. In actual fact, it's 500 degrees hotter, because it has so much more C02 in its atmosphere.
You seem to have picked up on a few controversial science topics (and it's always good to listen to the scientists, don't get me wrong) but come to the wrong conclusions. Easy to do without really reading up on the subject, which no-one outside the field really has time to do. The danger is that scientists sometimes feel the need to hype their findings to get the public interested, but it can lead to a whole heap of misunderstanding.