Well, that's a lie to you too, we say atlantic Shamelessly serve stale leftovers for Christmas and in the form of “winter cooked”. It's bad enough having turkey again. [emphasis, links added]
Do we have to reheat the tripe? What happens next, the end of the Arctic ice? (Alas, yes, from european news green network: “The Arctic could be ice-free by the summer of 2027: What it means for weather, shipping and polar bears.” and from scientific communism: “The Arctic may become functionally ice-free in just a few years.”
Ten years to save the planet? With all due respect, we don’t mean well; We'd rather have last year's fruitcake than this cake with nothing heated.
The article begins with a lovely, evocative bit of ignorance:
“In recent years, Bing Crosby's performance of 'White Christmas' has sounded like a dirge to me. Some people may still have a white Christmas, but in New York City where I live , 2002 was the last time snowflakes fell on Christmas Day, which wasn’t really a climatologically significant statistic. It was more of an omen.
Well, look, ma'am, You're in the middle of North America's largest urban heat island, so don't expect last year's snowfall. The reason Bing dreamed of a white Christmas in 1942 [because] He didn't.
Possibly because he moved to California and didn't realize that climate change would make it uninhabitable by 2024, even though the 39 million people living there by then somehow didn't notice.
Also, if you want to get out of winter, or out of the economy to save it, or both, You may want to get statistics of “climate significance” rather than anecdotes or paranormal hints. However, when she looked up from the Ouija board, she saw only ectoplasm anyway.
For example, we should believe:
“The most intense warming is also happening in some of America's classic winter wonderlands: Albany, New York, has average winter temperatures that are 6.8 degrees (Fahrenheit) warmer than about 50 years ago, according to analysis by the nonprofit Research Group Climate Centers. New Hampshire Winter temperatures in Concord, Wisconsin, and Green Bay, Wisconsin each increased by 7 degrees, and in Burlington, Vermont, winter temperatures increased by more than 8 degrees.
We know, we know, everywhere is warming faster than average. Also as original and appealing as the mince pies.
Yes, telegraph complained in October that “European ski resorts 'could be wiped out within decades'/As temperatures warm, ski resorts below 1,500 m will lose their snow cover by 2060.”
But what if, as The Atlantic author insists, the planet as a whole has warmed by 2.45°F (1.36°C) since “the late 19th century (1850-1900) pre-industrial average,” as NASA shamelessly claims that, and If you believe they knew the temperature in 1877 to two decimal places, you might also believe that 1900 was “pre-industrial”Although the United States was producing 10 million tons of steel per year at the time and U.S. Steel became the world's first billion-dollar company in 1901, So why has Albany been nearly three times warmer in less than a quarter of the time, while Burlington has been more than three times warmer?
We wouldn't put a thermometer in the center of an urban heat island, would we? Or in the oven next to the turkey?
Things get worse. The author is the chief chef of their alarmist dishes, and he starts serving these numbers without even cooking.
“It will still snow for many years to come, sometimes in heavy amounts,” she said, so Obvious predictions without snow cannot be tested, and in normal science, as in life, the proof of the pudding is in the eating.
Here we have serious doubts about the amount of flour because she continues:
“But both the extent of snow cover and the length of the season that supports snow cover are gradually shrinking in North America.”
Yes, that's her hyperlink, and she must have assumed no one would click on it, because this is the chart it points to (the EPA itself uses data from Rutgers University's Global Snow Laboratory):
Yes, that’s right, their star climate writer looked at the chart and saw a downward trend. No editor had any other ideas…if they still had editors.
Even NASA said when it picked 1972 to start this trend:
“Snow cover decreases mainly occur in spring and summer, while Winter snowpack remained fairly stable during the study period, with fall snowpack increasing (See Figure 2).
So in fall and winter, Christmas is right in the middle, North American snowpack unchanged or slightly increasing Even if you choose a biased starting point, based on the graphs she points to as evidence of decline. Awkward.
But since we must panic, they squeeze in:
“Snowpack in the spring and summer can have a particularly significant impact on water supplies.”
Is there snow in summer? In Albany? We think not.
strangeness, Daily heat map An email was sent to us at the end of November, usually without a link, that read:
“With a cold front sweeping across the United States this weekend, it’s a good time to read a good book, like Auden Schindler’s Awful Beauty, out this week, which urges readers to become more engaged citizens .I found this to be an especially important read given the new context of US climate policy.
Well, she would, wouldn't she? But what about the cold front (just the weather, mind you, not the climate) and reading comfortably? Is it the same as the one we had before? Say that's not the case
As for atlantic Writers who create this mess, don't let them near your kitchen. If they can't read the chart, they probably can't read the recipe, and If this was their breaking news idea, they'd probably proudly push out an empty plate and call it dinner.
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