The only groups that you can argue definitely support your claim are those who stated 'less then zero' and 'no warming', all others say are saying there is anthropogenic climate change.
My claim?
I have been quite clear that the Earth's temperature has increased since 1850. However, I have said there is no evidence that man-made emissions are responsible for that warming.
My "claim" is that we don't know enough about the climate to know what effect, if any, man-made emissions are having on the climate. Furthermore, I have said there is no evidence to support the hypothesis of man-made global warming -- the hypothesis that says that man-made emissions have been the primary driver of warming since 1950.
At no point have I said that we can conclude that emissions have absolutely no impact on the climate.
However, I am fascinated by your assertion that anyone who thinks humans affect the climate, even if they believe the effect is miniscule, are part of the "consensus" on "anthropogenic climate change."
Let's consider Prof. Judith Curry, a professor and former chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology. In 2013, Prof. Curry wrote an article for the National Post that had the headline, "Kill the IPCC":
http://business.financialpost.com/fp-comment/ipcc-climate-global-warming
Prof. Curry is regularly criticized by Michael Mann and other "Nobel laureates" for being a "denier." Indeed, in the National Post article, she says the IPCC's predictions have been completely wrong and that the IPCC is driven by an activist agenda rather than a scientific one. As you can see from the headline, she says the IPCC should be scrapped.
She is hardly a supporter of the IPCC or its spectacularly wrong predictions.
And yet, Prof. Curry is one of those people commonly known as a "lukewarmer." She certainly believes human emissions have some impact on the Earth's temperature, although she isn't necessarily convinced there is evidence that it is significant enough to justify government action.
According to you, she is part of the "consensus" on man-made global warming.
According to you, Richard Lindzen, Anthony Watts, Christopher Monckton, and countless others that are regularly branded as "deniers" are also part of the "consensus."
Indeed, if I were a climate researcher, you would be including me as part of the "consensus." You are already counting many scientists who hold the same views as me as being part of the "consensus."
In fact, according to you, someone who believes that natural causes are responsible for 99% of the warming would still qualify as being part of the "consensus" on "anthropogenic climate change."
That's absurd. The "consensus" is a fairy tale for a whole variety of reasons, including the fact that the definition of what is being agreed to is vague to the point of meaninglessness.
http://business.financialpost.com/f...sts-support-climate-alarm-cannot-be-supported
http://business.financialpost.com/f...ensus-among-the-misinformed-is-not-worth-much
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/07/11/the-climate-consensus-is-not-97-its-100/
One fact is absolutely clear. It is a blatant falsehood to claim that there is a "97% consensus" on the IPCC's position that human emissions have been the dominant cause of warming since 1950. Even you have conceded that claims of a "97% consensus" on this point are false.