// If everyone followed the 'consensus', we'd believe the Sun went around a flat Earth. //
It's worth noting that the whole "flat Earth" theory is essentially a modern invention, and apart from a few fringe types it was never the consensus that the Earth was flat. That the Earth went around the Sun, yes -- but even then, the alternative hypothesis was around for a while before that. And the reason that for a while the geocentric model of the Solar System was more popular wasn't actually dogma, but evidence. Ptolemy did a great deal of work to show how to fit the data to that theory, and was largely successful, albeit with the need to introduce epicycles and ...
But anyway. That's not really the point you were trying to make. I recognise the risks inherent in being dogmatic, but in practice the scientific consensus is the scientific consensus for a very good evidence-based reason. Anthropogenic Climate Change models fit the data far better than you are giving it credit for, and have survived the scrutiny of far more rigorous challenges than anything this thread has been capable of offering. As long as that's the case, I will defend it -- with a certain amount of healthy scepticism as appropriate -- from the challenges of pseudoscientific non-experts who only give the appearance of knowing what they are talking about.
One experiment can prove me wrong. But only if that experiment is robust enough to survive the attack. No such experiment, and no other plausible theory, exists to explain the present observations.