Sunday, May 26, 2013

Links

Whiteface Mountain NY - 34 inches of snow
On Memorial Day weekend! – Helps expose the global warming con job.
Of Old Folks Stories and Cycles | Musings from the Chiefio
FWIW, we are now in the start of a “cold cycle”. The poles are cooling (that’s where the net heat leaves) and that cools the “cold pole” of the heat engine. The oceans hold a lot of heat, so for the next decade or so it will be leaving. That will involve a lot of water evaporation from the oceans (falling as rain and snow as in the UK and Australia recently) as the oceans cool. In about 20 years the oceans will have cooled and overall things will be colder and snowy. Then the tendency to storms will fade and the “Loopy Jet Stream” will once again flatten. Then we will take another 1/2 cycle of the next 30 years after that as things “warm” again. It’s 30 years of cooling, then 30 years of warming, then 30 years of cooling again… Folks over 60 have seen it (though some didn’t pay attention) and the “Climate Scientists” are trying to exploit it for gain and influence (or are dupes).
Harsh, winter-like conditions in New Hampshire and Maine
HARSH WINTER-LIKE CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST ALONG THE PEAKS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE AND WESTERN MAINE INTO MONDAY.
WaPo: Five Myths About Tornados | JunkScience.com
5. Climate change is producing tornadoes of increasing frequency and intensity.
Chris de Freitas: Science proves alarmist global warming claims nothing but hot air - Opinion - NZ Herald News
Whatever the cause of the current warm phase, its occurrence is not unprecedented. Global warming happened from 1850 to 1940, then cooling to 1979. During the Medieval Warm Period from 900 to 1200AD, the Vikings sailed in arctic waters that are now covered with sea ice, and farmed Greenland soil that is now too cold for agriculture.

From the results of research to date, it appears the influence of increasing carbon dioxide on global warming is almost indiscernible. Future warming could occur, but there is no evidence to suggest it will amount to much.

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