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Something to consider for global warming proponents
#1
Quote:
Must-see video with Tony Heller (aka Steven Goddard) of realclimatescience.com
“Most people believe that hot weather is becoming more common and more intense in the United States,” says Heller. “Is this true?”
“This belief is utter nonsense,” says Heller.

Here are highlights from just the first  10 minutes of the video:
“Eighty years ago this week, the US was experiencing the worst heat wave in the history of the United States, says Heller. All of the Midwest, all of the east coast except up into northern New England, was over 100 degrees.
July 9, 1936, was one of the hottest days in US history.
In New York City, the temperature soared to 106 degrees, the hottest day ever in the Big Apple.
Same in Long Branch, New Jersey, where temperatures have dropped off rather sharply since the 1990s.
Same in South Dakota, where temperatures reached an almost unbelievable 120 degrees.
Remember that hullabaloo a few weeks back about how hot it was going to climb in Phoenix? That South Dakota temperature from 1936 was even hotter.
Or look at Omaha. Omaha used to have 110-degree days, Heller points out.
No more. There have been no 110-degree days in Omaha since 1954.
_____________________________________
Watch the above video for many more startling revelations.
Published on Jul 13, 2016
Tony Heller of http://realclimatescience.com/ presents at the 34th Annual Meeting of Doctors for Disaster Preparedness, on July 9, 2016 in Omaha, Nebraska. Find Tony on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SteveSGoddard


#2
We work along the Gulf Coast and this year is not nearly as hot as it has been say 5 or 6 years ago.

I keep records of each day we work...the temp, hot, sunny, rain, cloudy etc etc
That way the next year if we are up or down, I can look back and say, "Oh, we got rained out that day"
Or "damn the heat index was 110, and the people did not come out as usual. "

So I keep up with the weather.

And this year, it is not as humid for one thing and in the evenings, it is actually cooling off.
Where as in the past, you would still be sweating like a fool at 9 pm, wiping your face off with a towel.


One year will be a rainy year.
One will be a dry year where the crops burn up (been awhile since we've seen that).
One year will be so damn hot and humid you feel like you are about to suffocate.
Then back to being a mild year.
(same with the winter time, it varies)

Point being, it fluctuates and with us working outdoors, we are very in-tune to any changes that occur.
And this year, it is cooling off very nicely in the evenings, which is welcomed down here.

a.k.a. 'snarky412'
 
        

#3
Aah, the Guardian must be pro-global warming.

The other article I posted was from the Guardian, and they put down the guys that said volcanoes put out more CO2 than man.

And now, looking up Wiki for information on DDP and it actually has in there that the Guardian calls it a "fringe political group" due to them being skeptical of man-made GW.



Quote:Doctors for Disaster Preparedness (DDP) is a 501©(3) non-profit organization located in Tucson, Arizona.[1] Its Facebook page states that the group "promotes homeland defense and prudent preparedness for disasters of all kinds".[citation needed] The group is closely affiliated with the American Association of Physicians and Surgeons, a politically conservative nonprofit association, with which it shares an address and administrative staff.[2] It is run by Arizona physician Jane Orient.[3]

According to Bloomberg News, the group was "founded to promote civil defense during the Cold War", and has been "transformed over the years into a forum" on "fringe-science topics" such as global warming denial.[3]

DDP was described by The Guardian as a "fringe political group" and as a "truly bizarre lobby group".[citation needed] It promotes the "skeptical" view that man-made global warming is not real or not an important concern.[2] The group awards the Petr Beckmann Award, named in honor of Petr Beckmann, a libertarian electrical engineer who challenged Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. [4]



Linky



See, you get called loonie names for questioning GW, when in science as a whole, that is what one would normally do.
Question, study, analyze...question and research some more.

But not with man-made GW, one is not supposed to that.

a.k.a. 'snarky412'
 
        



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