July 13, 1936 : Hottest Day In Michigan’s History | Real Science
On July 13, 1936 – Mio, Michigan hit 112F, the hottest temperature ever recorded in Michigan. One person was dying nearly every minute from the heat.Ski resorts around the U.S. tap renewable energy sources to combat climate change - ESPN
Leading experts tell us that this could not have happened with CO2 below 350 ppm. CO2 was 310 ppm at the time, proving once again that many climate experts are incompetent buffoons.
Hancock believes that "all ski areas have a strong self preservation interest in promoting projects that support colder, snowier winters."WEINSTEIN: Temperatures up, lights out across America - Washington Times
Although wind, solar and biofuels have received about $50 billion in direct federal subsidies in the past 3 1/2 years, today they account for less than 4 percent of America’s installed power generating capacity. Texas’ experience last summer may be instructive. The state has almost 10,000 megawatts of installed wind capacity, triple that of California. But mid-afternoon on Aug. 3, the hottest day of last summer’s heat wave, wind’s contribution to the power grid was close to zero. Renewables like wind and solar are intermittent and don’t obviate the need for base load power.“Climate Science” in Shambles: Real Scientists Battle UN Agenda
It is the best of times, it is the worst of times — for science. Over the past several years, the world has been spectator to an alarming meltdown as one serious scandal after another has publicly exposed many of the world’s most prestigious scientific organizations, institutions, and publications as being captives of rigid ideologues who employ rigged computer models, fraudulent “evidence,” censorship, and intimidation to advance a radical “green” political agenda and to squelch genuine scientific inquiry and debate.
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