Monday, October 15, 2012

Global Warming Ended in 1996
Human-caused global warming is dead as a doornail. China’s industrialization since 1996 alone disproves the connection between production and rising temperatures.

But the good news is that we can start fondly looking back on Global Warming as one of those wacky 80s and 90s trends that just didn’t carry over to this century. Global Warming has become the relic of a quaint time of big hair and big dreams when children that picking up litter off the beach would save the planet from some unspecified evil and that the ozone layer was about to break open like some giant space-zit and cover the earth in radioactive mutants.

We know better now. It’s time for all the people making millions and billions from a dated 90s scam to come clean and cut out this nonsense.

Doesn’t Al Gore have enough money already?
Just in time for the election | Climate Nonconformist
Last week, Fox News screened a special about President Obama’s environmental and energy policies.  [40-minute video:  Behind Obama's Green Agenda]
More Say There Is Solid Evidence of Global Warming | Pew Research Center for the People and the Press
42% say the warming is mostly caused by human activity
American Geophysical Union/Climate Science Legal Defense Fund Legal Education Webinar Series « Global Warming: Man or Myth?
22 October at 12:00h EST
An Inside Look at the Michael Mann Case

This webinar will provide an overview of the ongoing Freedom of Information Act litigation American Tradition Institute v. University of Virginia, Prince William County. It will be hosted by Peter Fontaine, counsel to Dr. Michael Mann. The free-ranging discussion will include issues related to Dr. Mann’s personal intervention in the case, application of state public records acts to researcher electronic correspondence, the interplay between the Federal FOIA and state laws, practical issues related to document review, potential exemptions to protect correspondence from disclosure, and other legal theories for the protection of correspondence, such as the First Amendment and Academic Freedom, and emerging trends in this dynamic intersection between science and the law.

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