The Goracle speaks about global warming to our leaders
This story by Dana Milbank of the Washington Post will be the turning point on the greatest hoax of the last 100 years.Wind farm developer drops oil-spill appeal - The Whig Standard - Ontario, CA
The company building the wind plant on Wolfe Island has withdrawn an appeal it had launched to avoid being held responsible for a diesel spill that occurred last fall.The Case Against Global Governance : WesternFront America
I rather like being an American. I can’t stomach the idea of being forced to give that up to satisfy some centralized one-world government which couldn’t find it’s rear-end with both hands and a hound dog!BBC NEWS | Will US follow Maryland's green lead?
...
(What do you think the “Global Warming/Climate Change” movement is all about? It has always been, and remains, all about Global Governance!)
When Court Stevenson looks out on the Chesapeake Bay, he sees far more water and far less land than he used to.Fact Sheet 1998 - The Chesapeake Bay: Geologic Product of Rising Sea Level
"We've lost 30,000 acres right here," says Mr Stevenson, an environmental scientist who has been studying the bay since the early 1970s.
The impact of global warming is hard to ignore - rising sea levels are contributing to massive erosion, threatening Maryland's 3,000 miles of coastline.
...
"Americans have to change their energy consumption habits," he concludes.
...
Part of the reason for these dramatic scenes on the bay lies two hours north, where smokestacks spewing toxic emissions dot the coastline around Baltimore, Maryland, the state's industrial capital.
Between 6,000 and 7,000 years ago, the rate of submergence began to slow, and the Chesapeake Bay took on its characteristic "drowned river valley" shoreline pattern. Sea level at that time stood approximately 9 meters lower than the present level. Since then, the rate of sea-level rise over much of the last 6,000 years has been an almost-imperceptible 1.4 millimeters per year (about 6 inches per century). The present general shoreline configuration was attained by the time the first European and colonial maps were prepared (fig. 5), but as tide gauges and the continued inundation of low-lying areas indicate, relative sea level in the bay is still rising.
No comments:
Post a Comment