Tag Archives: Global Cooling

The feds: behind the curve as usual

Seventeen “years with no global warming and recent very cold winters is a troubling trend, which if it continues will result in serious problems for humanity. This will be especially true if the current obsession with global warming continues, leaving the public unprepared for cold weather events.

“Of particular concern are the warnings from solar scientists that over the next three decades, we are headed toward significant global cooling as the sun weakens into a grand minimum.”

So, instead of relying on our hapless bureaucrats and corrupt political leadership—who want to close coal-fired power plants to stop the global warming that’s already stopped on its own—it’s time for “the public” to get its own act together: plan on colder winters and adjust accordingly.

Via PJMedia.

Global warming takes a break

GlobalCoolingVery considerate of it, don’t you think? Funny how it can do that, eh?

Another scorcher

KVUE meteorologists are predicting another unseasonably hot day, with a high of 97 degrees and a low in the 70s overnight, and similar temps through what has usually been a cool and wet Memorial Day weekend. That should bring smiles to the Global Warming apocolyptees, though these warm and cool periods came and went long before anyone heard of the Gorebot and his minions. And with cooling oceans, a decline in the average worldwide land temperature and the U.S. average temeprature, a thickening of the pack ice in the Arctic and more hints of global cooling, GW is looking more like a fraud every day.

Carrington Super Flare

It’s quiet on the sun these days. Too quiet. No sun spots of note. Some scientists regard that as possibly the cause of much of the late snow this spring and say it could be forecasting colder days ahead. But, theoretically, that won’t stop another brief super flare from our nearest star like the one that disrupted telegraph communications, caused auroras as far south as Cuba and surprised English solar astronomer Richard Carrington, in September, 1859. Imagine what another one would do to our electronic-dependent world. It could become known as the Day Silicon Died.