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25 Responses

  1. Thanks for letting me know how the terms “global warming” and “climate change” have been mixed up and misinterpreted in the news! A friend of mine had noticed how common media used to refer consequently to “global warming” but after some point in time referring to the same subject just swapping words and calling it “climate change”. He thought it was a conspiracy, and at the time I – though resilient to his idea – couldn’t back up my arguments.

  2. Here’s an area where scientists and theists can agree..

    if it’s raining hard over the ocean and you want more information,

    call NOAA! I mean Noah No – a never mind

  3. @1971ojoalparche1971 “is there a newspaper one can access readily online that can be mostly trusted ”

    try nationalenquirer com

  4. Have you ever considered making a blog/personal site? I would check it daily. You’re genius, man.

  5. Crappy sensationalist press. All do yourselves a favour and cancel your ‘rag’ subscription. Boycott the bastards.

  6. Watch footage from the Naked Lady Gaga shoot and check out the topless shoot -Naked Lady Gaga. C000M –

  7. The idea of checking sources will forever be attached to you in my mind. I tell people all the time I never saw the point of reference checking till I heard of you. Keep up the good work, I know it takes time to sort through all those websites and articles to find out that information.

  8. @1971ojoalparche1971 =is there a newspaper one can access readily online that can be mostly trusted when it comes to science reporting?= I would recommend a science magazine like Scientific American, Wired, New Scientist or even Nature (which does sci-tech reporting as well as publishing papers.) I have worked for a number of different publications, and science magazines are by far the most stringent.

  9. Hi Potholer. In your opinion, is there a newspaper one can access readily online that can be mostly trusted when it comes to science reporting? From what I have seen with my limited scientific experience, some papers are good sources of information, but many of them do piss poor jobs when it comes to science.

    I know reading real science journals is the best way to go about this, but I ask out of curiosity mostly. Thanks!

  10. I nearly threw up my vocal chords laughing at the last sentance of this video. Absolutely priceless.

  11. Yeah, I should have took Earl of Sterling advice by just looking out the windows instead of getting a university degree where the first two years doing subject such as advance calculus and differential equations!

    But isn’t that the similar maths shown at the end of the video?

  12. @zebb1111

    lol, claim after claim, but no sources. Why don’t you cite your sources.

  13. what a shill.
    you were wrong about the gulf steam, your wrong about many things.
    do you even know what is melting the polar ice?
    it aint sunshine
    get your face out of the global warming articles and do some real research.
    radioactive isotopes and heavy metals are melting the polar ice.
    its still -70- degrees on average at ther poles. last time i checked, the melting point of ice is still 100 degrees celsius.
    I dont believe that its melting from a 1 degree rise in temperature since 1900.

  14. David Parker, at the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research in Berkshire, says ultimately, British children could have only virtual experience of snow. Via the internet, they might wonder at polar scenes – or eventually “feel” virtual cold.

  15. @HerecomestheGrump There’s an entire segment on this quote. It starts at 5:24

    Did you watch the video?

  16. Here is a famous quote from 2000

    According to Dr David Viner, a senior research scientist at the climatic research unit (CRU) of the University of East Anglia in 2000,within a few years winter snowfall will become “a very rare and exciting event”.

    “Children just aren’t going to know what snow is,” he said.

  17. “Temperate(Climate Region), Deserts (Ecology)”
    p.s. the AGT is still 15c like it has been for the last 10,000.
    the so called 1.2-7 degree rise in some places vs equal drops in other places is in heat the exchange variability cycles of earth that effects weather and temperature pattern variability (“Climate Variability”) but has nothing to do with AGT (still 15c) Climate (which is Geographic) or Ecology(which changes over thousands o years short of natural/imposed disaster causing adrupt change

  18. “AGT has jackshit to to with CLimate Regions , which is Geographical, or Ecology which is sum of long term weather, life,flora and fauna in an area”
    And it is also a misdemeanor to call swings in weather patterns “climate Variability” as it takes thousands and thousands or an abrupt natural or imposed disaster of years to effect Ecology…often confused as “”local Climate”
    As cold as it is getting in placed like Las Vegas and Texas they are still Temperate(Climate Region), Deserts (Ecology)

BP oil spills and an end to snow

SOURCES: “BP Oil Spill Stalls Gulf Loop Current” yowusa.com GULF STREAM SHUTTING DOWN BECAUSE OF OIL SPILL!!! AND IT’S HAPPENING FAST!! www.colinandrews.net Eworldwire cites Dr. Gianluigi Zangari www.eworldwire.com Zangari paper: www.associazionegeofisica.it “If you want confirmation, look outside the window.” www.youtube.com “Snow now a thing of the past” in the Independent: www.independent.co.uk Publication list of papers by David Viner www.cru.uea.ac.uk “A link between reduced Barents-Kara sea ice and cold winter extremes over northern continents” Petoukhov, V., and VA Semenov, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, Nov 2010 VOL. 115, D21111, 11 PP., 2010 doi:10.1029/2009JD013568 Blog comment 1 www.boards.ie Mail comment www.dailymail.co.uk “Charles Onians migrated to journalism from the world of human rights NGOs some time ago.” blogs.afp.com “Summer snow extent heralding of the winter North Atlantic Oscillation” Mark A. Saunders, Budong Qian, and Benjamin Lloyd-Hughes GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 30, NO. 7, 1378, doi:10.1029/2002GL016832, 2003 NASA map data.giss.nasa.gov “Decadal trends in the North Atlantic Oscillation: regional temperatures and precipitation” JW Hurrell – Science 1993