I wonder more often than not how super smart people that can develop theories about how man's rather insignificant contribution to the planet's ecosystem is killing it can't seem to draw the lines between the dots. There's oil il in Canada and Alaska and Russia and Greenland, etc. Oil came from animal life the perished during the ice age. I might be wrong, but I have to believe that if water level issues weren't a problem before that, they're not likely to be a lot worse this time. Most of the critters that croaked and turned into oil lived on dry land, but could not survive harsh cold temperatures because they were all poikilothermic, assuming science is right about Dino being Fred's pet lizard. This would suggest that most everything between between the Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn would have largely been desert, and uninhabitable, however, Texas has oil too, so perhaps there was something a lot different going on. Alabama has TONS of coal (5 seams I know of personally). That came from giant tree ferns and other vegetation that got covered with a lot of very heavy mud that turned into rock and compressed the vegetation. So, obviously, water levels were higher at some point in time, and for slate to form, that water can't be moving very fast. Slate is silt, silt doesn't settle in fast moving water.
SO, who's to say that the earth's rotation hasn't slowed? We all know what happens when you spin a bowl of water. Centrifugal force is a very basic component of rotational physics. What if the day is 3 seconds longer now than it was when the polar ice caps were formed by nuclear winter caused by an asteroid strike? What if the day was only 23 hours long at one point? Where would the water go? Obviously, toward the equator, where the centrifugal forces were much higher. So, are the oceans rising, or is the planet just slowing down a bit? Longer days would certainly increase temperatures and melt more ice. So, then, what happens as the oceans migrate back toward the poles? The effective diameter of the planet (including it's water mass) would become smaller, and like an ice skater, it would accelerate. But, like anything else in physics, it will eventually slow down and stop spinning. There's no such thing as perpetual motion. Rotational acceleration will shorten the days, cool the poles, reform the ice, and shoot down a lot of theories about carbon dioxide killing the planet.
I've always wondered that if you completely eliminate CO2, what are photosynthetic plants going to live on? Where is our much needed O2 going to come from?Will we evolve and become nitrogen breathers before radiation finally kills us? That video went very straight in that direction, but failed to call out the global warming theorists.