Global warming?

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
we are having a a hard time breaking the 80's in SD...usually 90-100's....and the wife almost has to put the furnace on at night...in the high 40's....warming?
 

LDB

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Yeah, 72 in Bristol VA/TN. That's why it's now global climate change instead of global warming. The fools like Gore had the rug pulled out from under them and had to scramble in their power/money grubbing to not be shown as the total fools and frauds they are.
 

aristotle

Veteran Expediter
Yeah, 72 in Bristol VA/TN. That's why it's now global climate change instead of global warming. The fools like Gore had the rug pulled out from under them and had to scramble in their power/money grubbing to not be shown as the total fools and frauds they are.

But climate change is constant. These libs are such alarmists. They should focus on the heat emanating in and around Washington,DC. The amiable dunce in the White House probably doesn't even sense the backlash coming his way soon.
 

Dreammaker

Seasoned Expediter
I delivered in northern Wisconsin this afternoon. People were wearing heavy sweatshirts and light jackets or pullovers.
 
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chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
I am in Kannapolis NC.. (maybe i'll run into dale jr) it was 80 here and next to nothing as far as humidity,,it is now 62..should be great sleeping tonight.....but we have to pass "cap and tax' NOW, it is a global emergency and we will face dire straits if we don't pass it NOW, this term, before Aug!!!!

I think ill idle the van all night, just to increase my carbon footprint!!!:rolleyes:
 

Dreammaker

Seasoned Expediter
From Powerline:

1816 was the "year without a summer." There were several causes of the abnormally cold weather that year, as this source recounts:

The year 1816 is still known to scientists and historians as "eighteen hundred and froze to death" or the "year without a summer." It was the locus of a period of natural ecological destruction not soon to be forgotten. During that year, the Northern Hemisphere was slammed with the effects of at least two abnormal but natural phenomena. These events were mysterious at the time, and even today they are not well understood.

First, 1816 marked the midpoint of one of the Sun's extended periods of low magnetic activity, called the Dalton Minimum. This particular minimum lasted from about 1795 to the 1820s. It resembled the earlier Maunder Minimum (about 1645-1715) that was responsible for at least 70 years of abnormally cold weather in the Northern Hemisphere. The Maunder Minimum interval is sandwiched within an even better known cool period known as the Little Ice Age, which lasted from about the 14th through 19th centuries.

But the event that most severely shaped 1816's cold phenomena was the cata-strophic eruption the previous year of Tambora on the island of Sumbawa, in modern-day Indonesia. The ash clouds and sulfur aerosols spewed by this volcano were widespread, chilling the climate of the Northern Hemisphere by blocking sunlight with gases and particles.

If this account is correct, the "year without a summer" played a role in the development of the American Midwest:

In 1816, it snowed in June in the United States and Europe. Crops failed, there was starvation, people lost their farms, and it touched off the wave of emigration that led to the settlement of what is now the American Midwest. In the meantime, hundreds of thousands more starved around the world.

New England and Europe were hit exceptionally hard. Snowfalls and frost occurred in June, July and August and all but the hardiest grains were destroyed. Destruction of the corn crop forced farmers to slaughter their animals. Soup kitchens were opened to feed the hungry. Sea ice migrated across Atlantic shipping lanes, and alpine glaciers advanced down mountain slopes to exceptionally low elevations.


I don't think things are quite so bad this year, but if something doesn't change pretty soon 2009 may go down in history, in some parts of the U.S. at least, as another year with barely any summer. Here in Minnesota and across the Midwest, temperatures are abnormally cold. I don't know whether the phenomenon is world-wide--data that will answer this question have probably not been assembled, and may not be honestly reported--but the current low level of solar activity suggests that the cooling trend could indeed be universal.

Here in Minneapolis, the temperature never reached 70 degrees today--rather astonishing for the middle of July, our hottest month. Most days recently, it hasn't been comfortable to be outdoors in the evening without a fire and a sweatshirt. It feels more like October than July. Thankfully, and unlike 1816, it hasn't snowed; the worst consequence we fear is not getting any ripe tomatoes.

Today, walking down the street in downtown Minneapolis at 5:30, en route from my office to my parking ramp, I saw something I've never seen before: a man wearing a winter coat in July. Well, maybe not quite a winter coat, but definitely a fall/winter semi-parka with an unzipped, faux-fur lined hood. He was carrying a briefcase and looked like a businessman who was tired of being cold every time he went outdoors. In the summer.

I personally don't think that we (all of humankind, let alone we Americans) can control the weather, but for those who do think we possess that Godlike power, here's a request: can we turn the thermostat up a little?
 

LDB

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I don't know whether the phenomenon is world-wide--data that will answer this question have probably not been assembled, and may not be honestly reported--

Hah! Obama/Reid/Pelosi/Gore honest about "climate change" or anything else? You can bet it won't be honestly reported if any of those dung piles has anything to do with it.
 
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