Thursday, August 11, 2011

July Average Wind Speed In Austin Was 5 MPH | Real Science
The highest gust was only 19 MPH. A completely useless month for generating electricity – at a time when they needed it the most.
NCAR Can Distinguish Man-Made Melt From Natural Melt | Real Science
they attribute approximately half the observed decline to human emissions of greenhouse gases, and the other half to climate variability.
We’re all glad to help, aren’t we? | Herald Sun Andrew Bolt Blog
OK. Let’s sum up what we now know.

Our question - and perhaps the other sceptical ones we’ve helped to lift into the top four - now looks like being asked in some very awkward places where debate on global warming has never been allowed. They include the Melbourne Writers Festival.

But it seems clear that Simons and Alcorn are hoping like hell that GetUp or some other Leftist outfit will come to the rescue with a mass voter turnout to stop our question from being asked.
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”Your agenda on climate change could become our agenda,’’ says the Sunday Age.
NOAA Adjusts Time To Match The Agenda | Real Science
A few months ago they claimed that they didn’t know how many people died in tornadoes prior to 1950. This memory loss conveniently avoided the period when the vast majority of tornado deaths occurred, and allowed them to claim that 2011 was the worst year on record. Of course this was a complete lie, as NOAA knows how many people died in tornadoes going back to at least 1875
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Now they claim that they don’t know drought conditions prior to 12 years ago. In business, this is known as fraud.
Tornadoes Becoming A Smaller Death Risk Since 1925 | Real Science
Your chances of being killed by a car are several orders of magnitude higher.

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