Monday, April 05, 2010

Solar company Schüco pays golfer Geoff Ogilvy to promote the greatest scientific fraud in history
Geoff Ogilvy has won seven tournaments on the US PGA Tour, as well as the 2008 Australian PGA Championship. With one win already in 2010, Geoff currently holds the 13th spot on the Official World Golf Ranking. “Schüco stands for clean energy, and I am proud to officially represent this philosophy. Golf is a great way for Schüco to elevate their communication for climate sustainability. As a golfer and especially as a father, climate protection is a very personal matter and I am convinced that no one represents this issue with more credibility than Schüco.”
The Rachel Maddow Show - Let them eat fake
Thank god we have Fox. I don’t mean to rain on all their excitement here, but it turns out that climategate is total bullpucky as well.

A little noticed news this week that the British House of Commons has officially investigated the controversy and found that no one misrepresented any data. Nobody lied.

Nothing about the supposed bombshell climate-gate scandal at all challenges that scientific consensus that global warming is happening, that it is induced by human activity.
Tim Ball: Atmospheric Aerosols: Another Major IPCC Omission
Wind is another forgotten variable in the entire field of climatology. Besides variation in the amount of material picked up into the atmosphere, consider how rates of evaporation vary, but that is yet another major flaw in the CRU/IPCC climate science.

The political whitewash will continue because too many careers and too much money is involved. At some point the science will become a factor as people begin to understand how much is wrong. Continuing colder weather will underscore the problem as all the factors the CRU/IPCC people ignore take over. Hopefully, the economy is not destroyed using CO2 and global warming or climate change as the excuse.
California's climate bill debate | Public Radio International
Opposition of California's major climate law grows as the state struggles with high unemployment and an ailing economy.

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