Anti science sentiment exists everywhere in the world, sadly. People think of the US as the only place where anti-science idiots exist, but the fact is, anti science sentiments exist everywhere almost as bad or worse than the US.
I'd argue that science behind global warning is still unclear after reading a good number of papers on the subject
I don't argue it's not getting warmer, I believe humans plays a (possibly big) part on this (not sure on exact %), but the whole models behind climate are far from clear-cut. You can twitch the parameters and get vastly different results, and scientists themselves say they don't understand everything.
So yes, it's unclear. And while a minority, there's still several people that have different results and NOT unrespectable.
And I don't think it's that good a thing to tell people that science is a sure thing.
As someone who studies atmospheric science and climate, I'm not sure what you mean. Climate change
is happening and human released emissions
are responsible. In science, nothing can be factually true with 100% certainty, but climate change is one of the most studied and well known phenomena of this day.
Scientists who study climate are as
certain of anthropogenic climate change as immunologists are about the effectiveness of vaccines, or that virologists are that HIV causes AIDS, or cosmologists are that the big bang occurred, or geologists are about tectonic activity being responsible for earthquakes and the changing geology of Earth.
There are a wide multitude of lines of evidence for climate change, from models as you mentioned, to measurements (of land and ocean and atmospheric temperatures, ice melting, sea levels rising) happening all over the world right now, to vast amounts of paleoclimatic records dating back hundreds of millions of years showing CO2 being
the main driver of climate. While a few people may disagree, as with any scientific theory, the vast majority of the consensus (and science is determined by consensus) agrees that the earth is warming, with a temperature averaged around 2.5-3 K for a doubling of atmospheric CO2.
People like to quote Richard Lindzen or Patrick Michaels, or a few others who think global warming isn't going to be as intense as most other scientist predict, but to focus on them over the statistical average of what all climate scientists from a wide variety of fields predict is just as disingenuous as to quote the scientists who think an atmospheric doubling of CO2 will lead to an 6-8 K CO2 rise. Yet you see plenty of the first and not so much of the second.
Do uncertainties exist? Certainly, as with literally every scientific topic, including those that people take as a fact. But uncertainties existing does not preclude something from being a good idea in science, and the idea that human released CO2 is the current driver of climate is one of the most well studied and agreed upon ideas in science that there is.
Pretty vague question imo. That climate change question can be interpeted in alot of ways.
ie. If tommorows weather forecast is wrong, the science is unclear..
No it can't.
Weather != climate. Meteorology is a notoriously unpredictable field due to it's chaotic nature. Climate is not unpredictable. It follows very well known trends of forcing due to solar activity, planetary structure, chemical composition of our atmosphere, and orbital motion. We can predict the effect that different parameters will have on climate and look back in the paleoclimatic record to confirm our predictions.