On another board, "An Ancient" tried to argue against that. What are responses to this?
My point still stands, his calcs, which I saw (they aren't actually his, but Mike Wong's, anyways), when he brought them to this board, are based on pure energy in -> energy out calculations, which is fine in the lab, the point being, as I just pointed out, simple raw energy in -> energy out calcs give 1kt of energy per square mile in a heavy downpour, since kt level davastation does not ensue, it is evident that the simple raw energy in is not in fact distributed in the manner a face value of 1KT of energt would suggest, hence, the raw energy output of assumed rainfall (agian, working theoretically) would not in fact cause super-heating of the earth.
On a similar note, the big tsunami was in the order of 1 GT IIRC, yet it patently did not have the heating effects of a 1 GT nuclear blast.