Sunday, October 30, 2011

It's cyclical: If you don't like warmist meteorologist Bill Jacquemin's current opinion on the global warming hoax, wait 10 minutes and ask him again

Malloy declares emergency; more than 822,268 without power - Westport News
Connecticut is picking up the pieces this morning after a freak winter storm tore through the state Saturday with stunning ferocity, leaving more than 822,000 without power and prompting Gov. Dannel P. Malloy to declare a state of emergency for the second time in just over two months.
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"This is just crazy," said Bill Jacquemin, chief meteorologist with the Connecticut Weather Center in Danbury, noting that the storm had grown so powerful in was creating its own cold air system.
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Although the National Weather Service has posted a "winter storm warning," the official start of winter is still 55 days away, on Dec. 22.

"This is very, very unusual," said John LaCorte, a National Weather Service meteorologist in State College, Pa. "It has all the look and feel of a classic mid-winter nor'easter. It's going to be very dangerous."

Jacquemin said this storm was simply the latest in a line of powerful storms that have hammered the state this year. As climate change adds more moisture to the atmosphere, he said, we're seeing an unprecedented series of powerful weather events.

"The old normal doesn't apply anymore," he said.
March 2010: Wacky weather patterns may be here to stay :: Coventry Today
Unseasonably warm days after record rainfall may seem like a wacky weather pattern, but extremes like this may become the norm.

“We really won’t be seeing typical weather, anymore,” Bill Jacquemin, meteorologist for the Connecticut Weather Center, said Wednesday.
August 2009: Global Warming Is Exaggerated
Increased CO2 is actually a good thing, as plants need CO2 to live, taking in CO2 and giving off oxygen, which we need to live. The more CO2 they absorb, the more abundant and resilient the plants are against dry weather - and the more oxygen for us.

The climate is changing, but what is it caused by? No one knows, but we do know that it is a cycle that has gone on for centuries. Humans would love to blame themselves so they will feel in control to make a change, but the reality is that we are not causing global warming and so we will not be able to stop the trend.

We need to stop spending money on researching why it is happening and passing legislation to control CO2 emissions. Instead, we need be spending money on how to survive the climate changes.

Meteorologist Bill Jacquemin is president of the Connecticut Weather Center Inc. in Danbury.
July 2007: US: The good old summertime? Ah, yes, I remember it well... -- Earth Changes -- Sott.net
You could ask Al Gore, but meteorologist Jacquemin believes our current weather cycle is caused by an absence of solar activity that affects our weather-carrying jet stream. The notion that our weather cools down when sun spots disappear and warms up when they reappear over an 11-year cycle is gaining credence with many scientists, and is complicating the whole controversy over global warming.

"We're at the bottom of that cycle now," Jacquemin said. But we're getting off easy: During an extended period of no sunspot activity in the late 17th century, Europe got hit by what is now known as "The Little Ice Age," when crops failed to grow and thousands starved to death.

By the way, the Danbury-based weatherman says there's no such thing as a reliable "extended outlook." Weather patterns elude long-term predictions, from week to week, region to region, he said.

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