Yes, the fact of the matter is, in the realm of climate change, there are two groups: the first is the totality of relevant scientists, whom agree that it exists and is caused by humans.
The "totality" of relevant scientists being correct by virtue of being unanimous is an appeal to popularity, while believing they are correct by virtue of being scientists is an appeal to authority. However, you are correct none the less. Climate change exists and is caused by humans. However it begs the question; how is it changing? And how much is anthropogenic and how much is purely natural? There, scientists heatedly disagree.
On the other side, a group of industrialists and demagogues, and a few "scientists" of irrelevant studies (i.e., economics and psychology, a few theologists, and other liberal arts studies that traditionally don't focus heavily on things relevant to the biology, chemistry, physics, climatology, geology, or history of climate change), whom state without evidence that it does not exist, that the climate has always been like this, and the north pole is supposed to be an ocean, and that God will come down from heaven and magically transmute the ocean to be less acidic.
Your strawman is poisoning the well with his ad hominem appeal to ridicule. Also please don't bring religion into this. It has absolutely no bearing to anything I have said, at all, ever.
And if you're going to argue that the entire educated world is in on some kind of vast moneymaking conspiracy, you're going to have to explain how working for Greenpeace is going to earn them more money than working for, for instance, the Saudis.
Well I'm not arguing that at all, and a millionaire saying the sky is blue while a homeless man says it is red doesn't prove it is red, but as the Climategate emails indicate Shell wanted to get in on the action if the results were steered towards carbon trading schemes or the UN mandating pollution control technologies which they could profit from, you'd be surprised how "green" the so-called "industrialists and demogogues" really are.
All in all I am disappointed by the decline in quality of this discussion, and urge everyone to avoid inflammatory rhetoric.
Leafsnail; 1000 e-mails, 2000 documents 15 years. But the whole point is I won't take the IPCC, or anyone else for that matter, at their word. The information I am finding, which I am discussing here, indicates there is no need to shut down the coal industry out of fears of a global catastrophe.