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July 4th was the hottest day ever

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by rivergator, Jul 5, 2023.

  1. rivergator

    rivergator Too Hot Mod Moderator VIP Member

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    I can't speak to the 'ever' claim or what it was like around the world. I can, however, personally confirm that it was really hot here in Jacksonville.

    The planet saw its hottest day ever this week. The record will be broken again and again | CNN
     
  2. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    It's happening a lot sooner than forecast. It really feels like true catastrophe, whatever form it takes through so many extreme weather events and heat domes, is upon us. Wife and I talk about all the time
     
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  3. gatorchamps960608

    gatorchamps960608 GC Hall of Fame

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    Poppycock. Next you're going to tell me that Covid vaccines worked. Sheesh.
     
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  4. rivergator

    rivergator Too Hot Mod Moderator VIP Member

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    Temperatures aren't real, prove me wrong?

    Thermometers are tools of the liberal media?
     
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  5. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    Let me tell you about a friend of a friend...
     
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  6. gatordavisl

    gatordavisl VIP Member

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    Well, I guess maybe moving to northern Minnesota wasn't such a bad thing after all. o_O
     
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  7. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    If they won't publicly debate you, it's because they know they're wrong
     
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  8. sierragator

    sierragator GC Hall of Fame

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    yeah, but it snowed somewhere on the planet! ;)
     
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  9. GatorNorth

    GatorNorth Premium Member Premium Member

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    Been on the Panhandle the past 7-8 days. Been brutal with very few clouds and even less rain. Not even the afternoon pop-up shower. Kinda weird.
     
  10. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    Sen. James Inhofe, from Wiki

    In 2012, Inhofe's The Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future was published by WorldNetDaily Books, presenting his global warming conspiracy theory.[148] He has said that, because "God's still up there", the "arrogance of people to think that we, human beings, would be able to change what He is doing in the climate is to me outrageous",[149][150][151] but also that he appreciates that this argument is unpersuasive, and that he has "never pointed to Scriptures in a debate, because I know this would discredit me."

    As Environment and Public Works chairman, Inhofe gave a two-hour Senate floor speech on July 28, 2003, in the context of discussions on the McCain-Lieberman Bill.[152] He said he was "going to expose the most powerful, most highly financed lobby in Washington, the far left environmental extremists", and laid out in detail his opposition to attribution of recent climate change to humans, using the word "hoax" four times, including the statement that he had "offered compelling evidence that catastrophic global warming is a hoax" and his conclusion that "manmade global warming is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people".[153][154] He supported what he called "sound science", citing contrarian scientists such as Patrick Michaels, Fred Singer, Richard Lindzen and Sallie Baliunas as well as some mainstream scientists. Two of these, Tom Wigley and Stephen Schneider, later issued statements that Inhofe had misrepresented their work.[154][155]

    On July 29, the day after his Senate speech, Inhofe chaired an Environment and Public Works hearing with contrarian views represented by Baliunas and David Legates, and praised their "1,000-year climate study", then involved in the Soon and Baliunas controversy, as "a powerful new work of science". Against them, Michael E. Mann defended mainstream science and specifically his work on reconstructions (the hockey stick graph) that they and the Bush administration disputed.[152][156] During the hearing Senator Jim Jeffords read out an email from Hans von Storch saying he had resigned as editor-in-chief of the journal that published the Soon and Baliunas paper, as the peer review had "failed to detect significant methodological flaws in the paper" and the critique by Mann and colleagues was valid.[156][157]

    In a continuation of these themes, Inhofe had a 20-page brochure published under the Seal of the United States Senate reiterating his "hoax" statement and comparing the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to a "Soviet style trial". In a section headed "The IPCC Plays Hockey" he attacked what he called "Mann's flawed, limited research."[158][159] The brochure restated themes from Inhofe's Senate speech, and in December 2003 he distributed copies of it in Milan at a meeting about the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, where he met "green activists" with posters quoting him as saying that global warming "is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people". He signed a poster for them,[144] and thanked them for quoting him correctly. In an October 2004 Senate speech he said, "Global warming is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people. It was true when I said it before, and it remains true today. Perhaps what has made this hoax so effective is that we hear over and over that the science is settled and there is a consensus that, unless we fundamentally change our way of life by limiting greenhouse gas emissions, we will cause catastrophic global warming. This is simply a false statement."[158][160] In January 2005 Inhofe told Bloomberg News that global warming was "the second-largest hoax ever played on the American people, after the separation of church and state", and that carbon dioxide would not be restricted by the Clear Skies Act of 2003.[161][162][163] In a Senate Floor "update", he extended his argument against Mann's work by extensively citing Michael Crichton's fictional thriller State of Fear, mistakenly describing Crichton as a "scientist".[164][165] On August 28, 2005, at Inhofe's invitation, Crichton appeared as an expert witness at a hearing on climate change, disputing Mann's work.[158]


    Jim Inhofe - Wikipedia
     
  11. GatorNorth

    GatorNorth Premium Member Premium Member

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    Don't suppose Inhofe thinks we could pollute rivers and lakes after God created them either, huh? We can certainly disagree on many of the cause/effect aspects of this but it takes a special kind of WTF? to think climate is immune to impact because "God's still up there"
     
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  12. slocala

    slocala VIP Member

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    The good thing is we know how to warm it up during the next ice age.
     
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  13. 92gator

    92gator GC Hall of Fame

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    Guess we can count on some severe volcanic activity in the coming years...you know...when the earth's AC kicks in?

    (....hmmmm....can't wait to hear how the neo-progs spin that, as an excuse to expand government and encroach on our freedoms...oh joy!).
     
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  14. channingcrowderhungry

    channingcrowderhungry Premium Member

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    Bottom of a pint glass
    What about my freedom to not boil alive when working outside everyday now? Or are companies turning profits a more important freedom?
     
  15. obgator

    obgator GC Hall of Fame

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    Must be fake news because I found an ice cube in my freezer
     
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  16. duggers_dad

    duggers_dad GC Hall of Fame

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    It was an unusually June in Charlotte. We had highs in the sixties some days. Yes, the heat is finally here.
     
  17. WarDamnGator

    WarDamnGator GC Hall of Fame

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    Don't look up.
     
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  18. snatchmagnet

    snatchmagnet Bring On The Bacon Premium Member

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    Parts Unknown
    Yikes. How’s that feel in February?
     
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  19. Sohogator

    Sohogator GC Hall of Fame

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    Coming soon to a grocery store near you.

    'A Wake Up Call': The World Needs to Prepare for Massive Crop Failure

    The researchers analyzed climate models and observational data from 1960 and 2014 and then looked at future projections between 2045 and 2099. By analyzing the data, they found that a changing jet stream has contributed to crop failure in the past. Jet streams are air currents that change weather patterns around the world. But many scientists have observed that climate change is changing how jet streams move, which could challenge crop-growingregions around the world. Climate models are equipped to show those changes in the atmosphere, but these models cannot always show how it affects conditions on the ground.

    The study explains that under a high emissions scenario, a “strongly meandering jet stream” or a wavy jet stream could actually trigger some of these lower crop yield events worldwide. Data showed the researchers that years with “more than one wave event” often lead regional crop yields to drop up to 7%. They also found that agricultural regions in Eastern Europe, East Asia, and North America were likely to be impacted by these events. The study referenced a heat wave that significantly hurt agriculture in Russia back in 2010. The high temperatures that year were connected to a shift in the jet stream, according to the researchers.
     
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  20. gatordavisl

    gatordavisl VIP Member

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    Brutal, but it's blissful during summer. Windows are all open at the moment. 80 yesterday and 71 today. The big lake acts like a giant air conditioner, so it might be 90 in Minneapolis and 70 here. Winters, though, are cold, wet, and long. 130" of snow this year . . . a record. o_O
     
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