http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/5441237 ... -cold-snap
kenneal wrote:And But repeat after me, "There is no such thing as global warming. There is no su........"
Moderator: Peak Moderation
kenneal wrote:And But repeat after me, "There is no such thing as global warming. There is no su........"
I quite agreeeatyourveg wrote:That's weather. Global warming is a bit different .
I quite agreefeatherstick wrote:Gosh. Snow in winter.
Strawman, anybody?An Inspector Calls wrote:Global warming hits New Zealand!
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/5441237 ... -cold-snap
kenneal wrote:And But repeat after me, "There is no such thing as global warming. There is no su........"
Exactly. And if we look at weather in the southern hemisphere right now, we will doubtless discover that somewhere that is usually very cold right now is unseasonally warm. But the denialists don't bother thinking about it that hard, or doing any relevant research, because they've already made their minds up that climate change is not real.kenneal wrote:We had a cold snap last winter while the Arctic was extremely warm, 26C above average in places, for the time of year. On average the climate was warmer.
I quite agreeUndercoverElephant wrote:Strawman, anybody?An Inspector Calls wrote:Global warming hits New Zealand!
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/5441237 ... -cold-snap
kenneal wrote:And But repeat after me, "There is no such thing as global warming. There is no su........"
Absolutely typical climate-change-denialist nonsense. You see it is unusually cold somewhere, and start spewing about climate change not being real (no actual facts/arguments mind you, just spewing ridicule). All you are doing is proving to the world that you don't understand the topic.
Ah, so when there's a heatwave all over the northern hemisphere and it is globally the warmest year on record that's not evidence that climate change is happening, but when there's one cold snap in one place in the southern hemisphere, that is evidence that climate change isn't happening, right?An Inspector Calls wrote:I quite agreeUndercoverElephant wrote:Strawman, anybody?An Inspector Calls wrote:Global warming hits New Zealand!
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/5441237 ... -cold-snap
Absolutely typical climate-change-denialist nonsense. You see it is unusually cold somewhere, and start spewing about climate change not being real (no actual facts/arguments mind you, just spewing ridicule). All you are doing is proving to the world that you don't understand the topic.
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/forum/vie ... hp?t=19056
No, I think my point is very clear - perhaps not to you - neither short-term warming events nor cold events signify anything (or very, very little) in terms of climate. But the reaction to my post of a cold event here is striking - compare that to the cosy reactions to warming events:UndercoverElephant wrote:Ah, so when there's a heatwave all over the northern hemisphere and it is globally the warmest year on record that's not evidence that climate change is happening, but when there's one cold snap in one place in the southern hemisphere, that is evidence that climate change isn't happening, right?An Inspector Calls wrote:I quite agreeUndercoverElephant wrote: Strawman, anybody?
Absolutely typical climate-change-denialist nonsense. You see it is unusually cold somewhere, and start spewing about climate change not being real (no actual facts/arguments mind you, just spewing ridicule). All you are doing is proving to the world that you don't understand the topic.
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/forum/vie ... hp?t=19056
Your double standards are stinking the board out. You don't know what you are talking about.
Shall we try the MacG "climate change bullshitter test"?
Do you believe greenhouse warming occurs on Venus?
You've got it precisely backwards. The denialists like to point to outliers - localised weather events which buck the trend. They do exactly what you do have done in this thread - one cold snap in one place and you start crowing about how climate change is nonsense. They also like to accuse the people who believe climate change is real of doing exactly what they do, even though those believers are not doing anything of the sort. The FACTS are that average global temperatures are rising, year on year, to levels higher than any in recorded history.An Inspector Calls wrote:No, I think my point is very clear - perhaps not to you - neither short-term warming events nor cold events signify anything (or very, very little) in terms of climate. But the reaction to my post of a cold event here is striking - compare that to the cosy reactions to warming events:UndercoverElephant wrote:Ah, so when there's a heatwave all over the northern hemisphere and it is globally the warmest year on record that's not evidence that climate change is happening, but when there's one cold snap in one place in the southern hemisphere, that is evidence that climate change isn't happening, right?An Inspector Calls wrote: I quite agree
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/forum/vie ... hp?t=19056
Your double standards are stinking the board out. You don't know what you are talking about.
Shall we try the MacG "climate change bullshitter test"?
Do you believe greenhouse warming occurs on Venus?
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/forum/vie ... hp?t=19056
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/forum/vie ... hp?t=18782
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/forum/vie ... hp?t=17229
It's a classic confirmation of the denialist taunt: If it's cold, it's weather, if it's hot, it's climate.
Not on the evidence of the number of threads here pointing towards short-term warming events and construing global warming.UndercoverElephant wrote:You've got it precisely backwards. The denialists like to point to outliers - localised weather events which buck the trend.
Global average temperatures are rising year-on-year. Everything else is noise, and deliberate attempts to muddy the water.An Inspector Calls wrote:Not on the evidence of the number of threads here pointing towards short-term warming events and construing global warming.UndercoverElephant wrote:You've got it precisely backwards. The denialists like to point to outliers - localised weather events which buck the trend.