thør
Karhu-er
- Joined
- May 29, 2002
- Posts
- 92,354
Yes, I had heard that during the time the midwest was in a deepfreeze.
It rained at Nuiqsut in mid-winter. It never rains in Nuiqsut in mid-winter.
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Yes, I had heard that during the time the midwest was in a deepfreeze.
After last winters nation wide record cold, fears of global warming won't get Obama many votes.
After last winters nation wide record cold, fears of global warming won't get Obama many votes.
It rained at Nuiqsut in mid-winter. It never rains in Nuiqsut in mid-winter.
After last winters nation wide record cold, fears of global warming won't get Obama many votes.
Well, jeninflorida has voted for Obama to fuck garbage can.What votes does Obama need?
The global warming advocates must be pleased with that.........![]()
Well, jeninflorida has voted for Obama to fuck garbage can.
http://forum.literotica.com/showpost.php?p=56621694&postcount=28
It's changed the design standards.
Wingnut nation has routinely offered winter as "proof" that there's no such thing as global warming.
....and they wonder why we laugh at them.
What design standards?
Yeah, we were laughing at Al Gore 5 years ago when he was predicting daisies in Greenland about now.
Summers are cool too.
Did Al Gore actually predict that, can you link to it? Cus it seems that whenever someone says that the predictions were proven false it turns out they can't read.
Design standards for arctic construction on permafrost.
So the short answer is no. Gore said something like "Greenland will be green by 2525" and haters translated that to "It'll be an agricultural powerhouse by 2015"
Did they loosen them or toughen them?
How do the Alaskans feel about drilling for oil up there?
Humans gone by 2040.
26 years.
Make 'em count.
U.S. military and intelligence agencies are increasingly monitoring and preparing for how, when and where the consequences of a warmer planet will collide with national security, requiring the eventual need to deploy American troops to weather-torn lands.
As climate-change arguments continue at home — including pundits who assert the scientific consensus on the issue is overblown or concocted — current and former Department of Defense officials are mapping future strategies to protect U.S. interests in the aftermath of massive floods, water shortages and famines that are expected to hit and decimate unstable nations.
“For DoD, this is a mission reality, not a political debate,” said Mark Wright, a Pentagon spokesman. “The scientific forecast is for more Arctic ice melt, more sea-level rise, more intense storms, more flooding from storm surge, and more drought.
“Those changes shape the future operating environment, help us predict missions we'll have to undertake, and create challenges and constraints on how we operate on our bases,” Wright said. “We're taking sensible measured steps to mitigate the mission risk posed by climate change.”
Who has a heat wave in the middle of spring? Southern California, setting the trend yet again.
http://a.scpr.org/i/7097293e9185937e27e4ae56162c0b58/84529-eight.jpg