The Fiction Of Climate Science
https://www.forbes.com/2009/12/03/c...telligent-technology-sutton.html#2453adb5260f
Many of you are too young to remember, but in 1975 our government pushed "the coming ice age."
Random House dutifully printed "THE WEATHER CONSPIRACY
coming of the New Ice Age." This may be the only book ever written by 18 authors. All 18 lived just a short sled ride from Washington, D.C.
Newsweek fell in line and did a cover issue warning us of global cooling on April 28, 1975. And
The New York Times, Aug. 14, 1976, reported "many signs that Earth may be headed for another ice age."
OK, you say, that's media. But what did our rational scientists say?
In 1974, the National Science Board announced: "During the last 20 to 30 years, world temperature has fallen, irregularly at first but more sharply over the last decade. Judging from the record of the past interglacial ages, the present time of high temperatures should be drawing to an end
leading into the next ice age."
You'll find a lot of science "blogs" explaining how the were wrong then; but now you should believe them.
1975 dead by ice age. 2005 dead by global warming. They stopped calling it global warming b/c it stopped warming. Now it "climate change". We know the climate changes.
So Johnny, find an independent source that explains why predictions of doom, the east coast, Florida underwater, polar ice caps melted, etc.. didn't happen.
So to be clear, you just lied again. Ice Age isn't mentioned. You know what else isn't on the page? Florida. Why do you lie your ass off all the time?
You posted some bs:
"Me: List one climate model / prediction that has been right."
I gave you a whole page.
Then you lied about what was said on the page. You're a liar who likes to get his climate info off sites like Patriot Post or random wordpress .com sites.
Not to rub it in..
"A full-blown, 10,000 year ice age," came from its March 1, 1975 issue.
The Christian Science Monitor observed that armadillos were retreating south from Nebraska to escape the "global cooling" in its Aug. 27, 1974 issue.
But I'm seeing a pattern.