Monday, November 29, 2010

Cancun climate change talks: 'last chance’ in the snakepit - Telegraph
[Copenhagen] was a traumatic experience – so much so that dealing with global warming has slumped sharply and alarmingly down the international agenda.

Public support – long arrogantly taken for granted by environmental activists – has also eroded on both sides of the Atlantic.
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But, while breakthough is highly unlikely, a breakdown remains very much on the cards. Some old hands here – such as Yvo de Boer, the UN’s chief negotiator at Copenhagen – can glimpse similar tell-tale clouds gathering over the sea. If they are right and the storm breaks, this may well turn out to be the last set of serious UN climate negotiations for many years.
NC Media Watch: Just a couple of Sunday afternoon climate change questions
1) With the release of 250,000 State Department Cables (e-mail) how many of them discuss the huge global warming crisis? What was revealed? Anything, after all this is a world wide crisis!
One Of The (Many) Big Lies Of The Week | Real Science
The oceans of the world have risen nearly seven inches since 1870, and over the last decade the pace of rise has doubled over earlier years.
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I see this repeated over and over again. But there is no basis for it. Even the improperly calibrated satellite altimetry data shows sea level rise slowing down over the last five years.

So why doesn’t the climate science community rush to correct the misinformation? It is almost as if they have a stake in climate alarmism.
The concert no warmist would applaud | Herald Sun Andrew Bolt Blog
Bono in Melbourne in 2010:

U2’S 360 Degrees tour, the most expensive rock spectacle ever, is here. The tour, with a daily running cost of $850,000, arrived on six 747 jets

“You compare a tour by the number of trucks they use,” production manager Jake Berry said. “The Rolling Stones ran 46 trucks. We are running 55. This is the biggest.”

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