Tuesday, October 20, 2009

World Climate Report » Baffling Island
Somehow, that temperatures there were several degrees higher than present for a good third of the past 10,000 years and that there has been virtually no temperature trend in the area during past 50 years—the time usually associated with the greatest amount of human-caused “global warming”—was conveniently downplayed or ignored.
Open Letter to President Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives by Nils-Axel Morner, Leader of the Maldives Sea Level Project | Climate Realists
In 2001, when our research group found overwhelming evidence that sea level was by no means in a rising mode in the Maldives, but had remained quite stable for the last 30 years, I thought it would not be respectful to the fine people of the Maldives if I were to return home and present our results in international fora. Therefore, I announced this happy news during an interview for your local TV station. However, your predecessor as president censored and stopped the broadcast.
Power Shift: Largest Canadian youth summit on climate change | Students on Ice Blog
Ottawa (October 14, 2009) — Over 1,000 young people from every Canadian province and territory will gather in Ottawa between October 23-26 for the largest ever youth event on climate change in Canada’s history. Power Shift Canada, a project of the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition, will span four days of action, lobbying, workshops, keynote speakers, and concerts.
Forecast for Ottawa, October 23
[Max Temperature 44 °F, Record 64 °F (1998)]
Does NY Times' Andrew Revkin see climate change conspiracy at the Wall Street Journal?
In his original query, Revkin actually baited Murray and then posted the reply, minus the bait. I'd be a little prickly, too. Revkin did the same type of editing he disproved of in the video. And I only learned of the back story by inadvertently glancing at the first comment
CNN Poll: Half the country disagrees with Obama on issues « - Blogs from CNN.com
According to the poll, which was released Tuesday, 48 percent of people questioned say that they agree with Obama on the issues that matter most to them, with 51 percent saying no. That's a switch from April, when 57 percent said they agreed with the president on important issues, with 41 percent disagreeing.

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