I wouldn't normally reply to such a load of rubbish but since you are continuously loading the fora with it then I'll waste a little of my valuable time. You seem particularly obsessed that the concept of enhanced atmospheric warming is a scam invented by industrialists to make money. Any study of the history of this issue would show that capitalists have resisted the idea for decades since they mostly make a profit from exploiting natural resources and don't have any real concern for the long-term future. Sure, recently some have caught on that there is a profit to be made from non-carbon energy sources but that's the nature of capitalism ...
Your quotations are things which one would dump in the category of "bad science" and we've been through this sort of thing before (over and over). One of your quotes is: "... One factor the forecasters always seem to forget is that the rate of any chemical reaction increases with concentration of the reactants. Therefore, the more CO2 we add to he atmopshere, the faster plants consume CO2 in photosynthesis reactions ..." which is completely untrue. Photosynthesis, like other biochemical reactions, occurs within a particular temperature
range - within that range there is increased reactivity with heat (not necessarily linear) but below and
above that range reactions such as photosynthesis stop.
Not that the sheer wrongness of such comments has a lot of relevance to the argument (one of the quotes you made was from someone who didn't believe that the Earth was millions of years old ...

).
There is masses of literature on this, should you care to read it. Facts: the greenhouse effect exists; increased release of greenhouse gases will cause warming of the atmosphere; greenhouse gas release has increased massively over the last two hundred years; atmospheric temperatures are rising irrespective of natural oscillations.
What the effects of this will be are speculative to an extent but the warnings are based on
informed opinion. So I would hope that people take heed and reduce greenhouse emissions.