posted April 28, 2008 11:14 AM
Records in global warming have been set all over North America, South America, Europe and Asia in the last 12 months or so. Record and near record snow falls and/or record and near record cold temperatures.If we continue to set these kinds of global warming records we'll soon find we're in the next ice age.
The man made global warming hoaxers don't want to talk about global warming any more. Now, they want to talk about "climate change" as though the climate on earth hasn't been in flux for as long as there has been a climate on earth.
Talk about global warming only makes them look terminally stupid..which they are but but the term "climate change" can mean whatever they want it to mean.
It's too hot...it's climate change.
It's too cold..it's climate change
It's just right..it's climate change
The truth is global temperatures warmed just .7 degree, 7 tenths of 1 degree, over the last century. All that heat gain was given back last year.
Could I see a show of hands of those who are able to detect, on even a day to day basis, a temperature change of 7 tenths of 1 degree...let alone over a century of time?
Listen, even your digital thermometer won't show you a .7, 7 tenths of a degree change.
If it's 75 degrees, then it displays 75 degrees. If it's 75.7 degrees, it still displays 75 degrees.
Anchorage digs out after record snowfall
The Associated Press
Published: April 26th, 2008 12:37 PM
Anchorage continues to dig out from a snowfall that set a record for the day and the month.The National Weather Service says 17.2 inches fell at its office just south of Anchorage's international airport and 22 inches fell in northeast Anchorage on Friday and Saturday.
The heaviest snow fell between 3 and 6 p.m. Friday at a rate of almost two inches per hour.
The monthly total at the weather service office is now 29.7 inches, breaking a record from 1963 when 27.6 inches fell during April.
The 15.5 inches that fell Friday is the third-most for any one day in Anchorage. The record is the 25.7 inches that fell six years ago on March 17, 2002.
http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/story/387743.html