What?
This is where everything you say falls apart. Temperature drives climate. It has for the entire history of the world. Until recently… i suspect you know this but are yammering on anyway.
Since the beginning of naturally recorded history, temperature rose, then co2 rose.
The forcing function (the sun) that drives temperature, has a number of cycles where the input heat goes up and down.
However, the CO2 lags temperature because the processes that result in CO2 emissions are slower (more greenery, then more greenery rotting, co2 solubility dropping in oceans, etc)
By the time the heat input starts to drop, CO2 has increased. And what do we see each and every time the heat input drops? Temperature drops far slower than on its rise. Its co2 capturing the heat.
Now, for the first time in the history of the planet, CO2 rises faster than at any time in the past, and not shockingly, temperatures _follows_because physics hasnt changed, ever. Its a forcing function, only this time, because it has never lead the natural rise in heat input before. Because it behaves exactly like it always has, temperature must rise for the same heat input because the insulation is better. (Think of how you can heat your home with a bigger furnace, or by a smaller one with better insulation)
The forcing function this time and for the first time in the history of the planet is not the sun, but the process that move carbon out from its sequestration.