Kliphnote: Sorry for the, so few, post. But I'm on holiday for a week.
Spending my "Capitalist Pig" money.
Global Warm-Mongers Again Ignore Contrary Evidence
Posted 06:38 PM ET
Climate: A professor
has told the Associated Press the heat and storms that have slammed the
country are "what global warming looks like." He won't say it's global
warming. But he keeps the fear campaign rolling.
Blistering heat, deadly storms and virulent wildfires have dominated
recent news cycles. It's been hot in the heartland, stormy on the East
Coast and smoky out west. Jonathan Overpeck, a University of Arizona
professor of geosciences and atmospheric sciences, says the severe
weather "is what global warming looks like at the regional or personal
level.
"The extra heat increases the odds of worse heat waves, droughts,
storms and wildfire," he said. "This is certainly what I and many other
climate scientists have been warning about."
He's right. That's exactly what some have been saying. But that
doesn't mean that they are right when they say that increased carbon
dioxide emissions from man will cause the planet to overheat.
If what we've seen in parts of the U.S. recently is what global
warming looks like, we have to wonder what the low temperatures in other
regions indicate. During just one day in the last week of June, 46
cities across the country set or tied record lows, says Mark Johnson of
newsnet5.com in Cleveland.
While we might expect Gulkana, Alaska, to register a low of 29
degrees, five degrees colder than its previous record low, who would
have thought that on the same day, the Daytona Beach, Fla.,
International Airport would see its record low for June 28 fall to 63
degrees from 67? Or that the record in Smithville, Tenn., fell from 50
degrees to 43, again on June 28.
Are all these falling records, we wonder, what global cooling looks like?
Maybe global cooling looks like what happened in Germany last month,
when that country had its coldest start to June in two decades. Or in
Stockholm, Sweden, where 43 degrees on June 2 was the lowest high
temperature in that city for all of June since 1928.
Even
the winter in some places is more brutal than usual this year.
Christchurch, New Zealand, had its coldest day on June 6 since records
have been kept. The day's high barely crept above the freezing mark.
What does all this mean? Not much. No more and no less than the heat
and storms that have hit the U.S. Yet the alarmists use the extreme
weather to keep scaring the public. But then that's all they have left.
They're like attorneys resigned to arguing the law when the facts aren't
on their side.
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