Tuesday, February 16, 2010

The Greenroom » Forum Archive » Climate Alarmists Fail to Use Google, Study Shows
A new study to be released this week from the Peu Research Center suggests that people who are alarmed about the direction the earth’s climate is going are either unable to use the Google search engine to acquire a broad base of information about the subject, or are uninterested in doing so.
Cold slap in face for warming believers | Editorial - The Orange County Register
The steady drip, drip, drip of facts has eroded the foundation of global warming extremism for years, but it has accelerated recently to the point even the mainstream media has taken notice. Well, at least the foreign mainstream media.

On another day we may look at why the European and Asian media are more willing to reveal flaws in global warming's alleged "settled science" than are U.S. media. For now, suffice it to say Britain and India's news reports are in the forefront of reporting revelations that undermine the idea manmade greenhouse gases create global catastrophe.
Cincinnati region digs out from under record snowfall
There's never been this much snow by this time in February. So far this month, we’ve seen 23.1 inches of snow, according to the National Weather Service. The previous record was 21.4 inches in 1914.
EU Referendum: Golden-Gate-gate?
Nevertheless, the original PNAS paper is not yet published, so Alleyne has got his copy from the advance release, and one can assume from that that Dr Johnstone, who recently received his PhD from UC Berkeley's Department of Geography, is not averse to attracting a little personal publicity from a quick scare story.

From elsewhere though, we learn that Dr Johnstone's work is in part supported by the Save the Redwoods League, a multi-million dollar advocacy organisation which last year paid Ruskin K. Hartley, its executive director, a cool $182,154. There's money in them thar Redwoods.

Futhermore, there's money in climate change and redwoods. Last year, the League – which has awarded 54 grants totalling $771,000 since 1997, had been offering grants to examine the impact of global climate change on redwood forests.

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