Tuesday, July 31, 2012

McKibben Believes That CO2 Turned Him Into A Newt | Real Science
Oklahoma July maximum temperatures have dropped by two degrees since the 1930s, according to the recorded daily maximum temperatures from USHCN
Articles: The Climategate and Jerry Sandusky Scandals: A Common Thread
Spanier's "investigation" of Jerry Sandusky was so thoroughly inept that it got him fired. When it was completed, Spanier stated that he had "complete confidence in how they have handled the allegations against Sandusky," and he was fired very shortly thereafter. The recent Freeh report indicates that the investigation was conducted for the purpose of finding nothing. In other words, it was a cover-up.

It wasn't the only time Spanier rigged an inept investigation for the purpose of finding nothing. In 2010, his investigators found that Penn State climatologist Michael Mann had done nothing wrong when he invented his "hockey stick trick," to "hide the decline" and lend false credibility to climate change theory. The difference between the Mann investigation and the Sandusky investigation is that one covered up a sex offender and the other covered up a fraud.
Carbon levy makes fridge repairs cost more, says Sophie Mirabella | JunkScience.com
A LEADING insurer has warned that the carbon tax will produce significant price increases in the repair costs of gas in commercial cold storage and airconditioning units and urged its agents to review clients’ coverage.
Carbon tax pinches small hospitals | JunkScience.com
PRIVATE and community not-for-profit hospitals across the country are reeling under the financial pressure of the carbon tax after receiving no federal or state government support.
The New Nostradamus of the North: Gallup poll: Global warming lowest ranking issue in the US
In spite of all recent heat wave hype in the media, climate change and global warming are not among the major concerns for Americans:
Listening for the hissing in wheat carbon trial | JunkScience.com
Preliminary findings have shown the extent to which elevated carbon dioxide levels have a ”fertilisation” effect on crops. For example, the wheat being studied has grown bulkier and taller.

Project leader Glenn Fitzgerald from the department said the wheat had grown 10 to 15 per cent taller. ”If you walk out there mid-season you can tell the difference between the ones that have CO2 and the ones that don’t,” he said.

Grain yields from the Horsham sites have increased by 10 to 40 per cent, while field pea yields have risen 15 to 50 per cent, depending on the variety.
Energy Week Ahead: Forecast Calls For Hot Climate-Change Debate | JunkScience.com
Oklahoma Senator James Inhofe will get a chance to cross-examine perpetrators of what he dubbed “The Greatest Hoax” this week, as a Senate panel takes on the science of climate change.

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