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By Kyle Prast
Monday, Nov 17 2008, 11:03 AM
Do you ever get the feeling that those who believe in Global Warming don't want to be confused by the facts? I fully support a person's right to believe what they please. That doesn't mean their beliefs are correct, but they do have the right to believe what they want. We call that free will. But when their beliefs start infringing on my rights, limit my choices, raise food and energy prices, and cripple our economy, then I draw the line. Yet that is exactly what is happening in our government and President Elect Obama is marching lock step to the global warming drummer. If you were paying attention, October was a chilly month around the world. Yet the Global Warming devotees stated otherwise. The UK Telegraph gave a startling explanation in The world has never seen such freezing heat: (My emphasis)
A
surreal scientific blunder last week raised a huge question mark about
the temperature records that underpin the worldwide alarm over global
warming. On Monday, Nasa's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS),
which is run by Al Gore's chief scientific ally, Dr James Hansen, and
is one of four bodies responsible for monitoring global temperatures,
announced that last month was the hottest October on record.This was startling. Across the world there were reports of unseasonal snow and
plummeting temperatures last month, from the American Great Plains to
China, and from the Alps to New Zealand. China's official news agency
reported that Tibet had suffered its "worst snowstorm ever". In the US,
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration registered 63 local
snowfall records and 115 lowest-ever temperatures for the month, and
ranked it as only the 70th-warmest October in 114 years. How do you explain that discrepancy? GISS says last October was "the hottest October on record", yet NOAA reported 63 record snowfalls and 115 lowest temps, and we observe much the same. Plus, aren't scientists supposed to observe and question? If the data says one thing, but world wide weather reports of early snows show something else, wouldn't that make you look closer at the data? Thankfully, some did.
... when expert readers of the two leading
warming-skeptic blogs, Watts Up With That and Climate Audit,
began detailed analysis of the GISS data they made an astonishing
discovery. The reason for the freak figures was that scores of
temperature records from Russia and elsewhere were not based on October
readings at all. Figures from the previous month had simply been
carried over and repeated two months running.
The
error was so glaring that when it was reported on the two blogs - run
by the US meteorologist Anthony Watts and Steve McIntyre, the Canadian
computer analyst who won fame for his expert debunking of the notorious
"hockey stick" graph - GISS began hastily revising its figures. This
only made the confusion worse because, to compensate for the lowered
temperatures in Russia, GISS claimed to have discovered a new "hotspot"
in the Arctic - in a month when satellite images were showing Arctic
sea-ice recovering so fast from its summer melt that three weeks ago it
was 30 per cent more extensive than at the same time last year.
The
GISS admitted that some data was "obtained from another body" and they didn't "have resources to exercise proper quality control" over that data! Amazing. The GISS figures are used by the UN "to promote its case for global warming." They use GISS because "they consistently show higher
temperatures than the others."
Yet last week's latest
episode is far from the first time Dr Hansen's methodology has been
called in question. In 2007 he was forced by Mr Watts and Mr McIntyre
to revise his published figures for US surface temperatures, to show
that the hottest decade of the 20th century was not the 1990s, as he
had claimed, but the 1930s.
More and more data shows that brief period of warming in the 1990s has ended, yet Al Gore, the media, and some in government stubbornly hold to their religion of Global Warming.
[Is it] wise for the world's governments to
embark on some of the most costly economic measures ever proposed, to
remedy a problem which may actually not exist, is a question which
should give us all pause for thought. Candidate Obama said he would look at off shore drilling and clean coal. President Elect Obama retreats to his earlier positions of bankrupting our coal fired power plants through Cap and Trade and reinstating the moratorium on offshore oil drilling. These two measures will further cripple an ailing US economy. And why? Because of a stubborn belief in the bad science of Global Warming. What would Cap and Trade mean to us? America's Climate Security act "Catastrophic for Wisconsin" and Cap-and-Trade? Maybe it should be called Cap-and-Raid!
Across the pond, they have the same problem, Climate Change Bill makes chilling reading:
Declining global temperatures continue to make a
mockery of those computer model projections on which the whole global
warming scare is based.
As I have asked before, has there ever in history been such a collective flight from reality?
Film-makers taking on our 'global warming hysteria': A new Irish film claims that climate change guru Al Gore is an
alarmist and that those who think they are saving the planet are only
hurting the poor. IF THE ADVANCE publicity is anything to go by,
Not Evil Just Wrong will do for Al Gore what Michael Moore's Fahrenheit
9/11 did for George W Bush.
Please, comment content should relate to the subject of the post. Although I try to respond to many, do not interpret my lack of a response as agreement.
Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Vicki Mckenna, Jay Weber, The Right View Wisconsin, Mark Levin, CNS News
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By Kyle Prast
Wednesday, Sep 3 2008, 12:43 PM
Have you noticed that this summer was cooler than usual? That fact, coupled with our recent cold and snowy winter, takes the subject of Global Warming off the front burner.
The last time the temperature didn't hit 90 degrees in Milwaukee
during a summer* was in 2000, the weather service said. Before that, it
was 1915.
But without even knowing what the daily highs were, could you tell our days and nights were cooler when compared to other summers? I could. Thanks to lower evening temperatures, we were able to avoid turning on our electricity guzzling air conditioner this summer.
As a gardener, I know this summer has been cooler. Tomatoes, which require warm evening temperatures, are ripening slowly. This spring my peach trees let me know we had a colder than usual winter by producing only 2 blossoms. Essentially all of the flowering buds were frozen out. I haven't had a bumper crop in years. We may have had a stretch of warmer than usual temperatures in recent years. These fueled the Global Warming argument. Who could forget the summer of 1995? (We were remodeling. The whole east side of our house was open to the elements and mosquitoes. Couldn't run the air.) Remember that summer? We had a number of 100+ days! It was awful.
But the warming trend seems to have turned around, and I think it is taking the wind out of the Global Warming alarmists' sails. Did you notice how the Global Warming/Climate Change issue was no longer in the limelight at the Democrat convention? There was lots of talk about energy independence and getting off of foreign oil from the Democrats, but not much on reducing carbon footprints, or Global Warming specifically, that I heard. Barack Obama did not mention Global Warming or even Climate Change in his speech. The closest Obama came
to it was, (my emphasis)
And for the sake of our economy, our security, and the future of our
planet, I will set a clear goal as President: in ten years, we will
finally end our dependence on oil from the Middle East...
...As
President, I will tap our natural gas reserves, invest in clean coal
technology, and find ways to safely harness nuclear power**... ...And I'll invest 150 billion
dollars over the next decade in affordable, renewable sources of energy
- wind power and solar power and the next generation of biofuels; an
investment that will lead to new industries and five million new jobs
that pay well and can't ever be outsourced. Al Gore referred to it as climate crisis in his convention speech. But
Gore was not on the prime time coverage I viewed. He is still gung-ho on reducing dependence on big oil and coal, but even Gore did not refer to the term Global Warming--except in reference to McCain backing away from "mandatory caps on global warming pollution" legislation. The Republicans are off to a slow start with their convention due to hurricane Gustav. Last night Joe Lieberman did mention global warming briefly: If John McCain was just another go-along partisan politician, he never
would have led the fight to fix our broken immigration system or to do
something about global warming. I will be listening tonight and tomorrow to the speeches--especially for specific mention or even a hint of Global Warming or Climate Change. I think the whole issue has cooled off in light of the large temperature drop this year and the majority of Americans wanting us to drill domestically. McCain's choosing Sarah Palin from an oil producing state leads me to believe we won't be hearing much about it. *The article stated that for record keeping purposes, they count summer as being June, July, and August instead of the June 22 - Sept. 22 definition of summer. **Pretty ironic. The Democrats have been blocking these energy sources in Congress, but now that the American public is demanding domestic drilling, natural gas, clean coal, and nuclear is OK?
Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin, Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Tuesday, Jun 10 2008, 12:02 PM
Just in case you missed this from the weekend news, the Sunday Journal reported in its Congress Following the Vote column, GLOBAL WARMING FILIBUSTER Voting 48-36, the Senate on Friday failed to reach 60 votes needed to end a Republican filibuster against an updated version of global warming bill. Democratic leaders then pulled the bill from the floor, perhaps for the remainder of the year. A yes vote was to advance the bill. McCain and Obama did not vote.
No surprise here, Feingold and Kohl voted YES to advance the bill. (So much for their sentiment that they will keep my thoughts in mind as the global warming debate moves forward.) We are off the hook for right now. I would bet Senate offices were bombarded with negative calls and emails on cap-and-trade. I would also bet that this bill will return either in its entirety or in bits and pieces like the amnesty bills have returned. They are hoping for a time when we aren't paying attention! Past Post: Cap-and-Trade? Maybe it should be called Cap-and-RAID!
More reading: George Will's Cap-And-Trade: A Devious Tax Plan Good chart of key players and terms explained at end: Senate taking up key climate-change bill The Heritage Foundation's Morning Bell: Carbon Capping in Bizarro World Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin , Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Tuesday, Jun 3 2008, 01:04 PM
Last night I heard Senator Inhofe (R-Oklahoma) on the Mark Levin Show. They were discussing S. 2191, the Senate "Lieberman/Warner Global Warming Bill and the disastrous effect this would have not on just the country as a whole, but the individual." (My emphasis throughout post.) Wall Street Journal referred to Cap-and-Trade as Cap and Spend
As the Senate opens debate on its mammoth carbon regulation program
this week, the phrase of the hour is "cap and trade." This sounds
innocuous enough. But anyone who looks at the legislative details will
quickly see that a better description is cap and spend. This is easily
the largest income redistribution scheme since the income tax.
The Washington Post said, Just Call It "Cap-and-Tax" "...One of the bad ways [to control greenhouse gas] is cap-and-trade. Unfortunately, it's the darling of environmental groups and their political allies. The
chief political virtue of cap-and-trade -- a complex scheme to reduce
greenhouse gases -- is its complexity. This allows its environmental
supporters to shape public perceptions in essentially deceptive ways.
Cap-and-trade would act as a tax, but it's not described as a tax. It
would regulate economic activity, but it's promoted as a "free market"
mechanism. Finally, it would trigger a tidal wave of
influence-peddling, as lobbyists scrambled to exploit the system for
different industries and localities. This would undermine whatever
abstract advantages the system has. ...Call this "environmental pork," and it would just be a start. The
program's potential to confer subsidies and preferential treatment
would stimulate a lobbying frenzy. Think of today's farm programs --
and multiply by 10.
After listening to Senator Inhofe, I think we could also refer to it as Cap-and-Raid! If it passes, it will raid every worker in America's wallet! Senator Inhofe said, Senator Barbara Boxer insists this is not a tax bill. But if you have looked into the bill itself and at the linked articles, it is difficult to understand how this could not be considered a tax bill. Inhofe then quickly listed some points to ponder. He mentioned the Wall Street Journal referring to it as the most extensive reorganization since the 1930s. He called it worse than the Kyoto Treaty for the economy. Cap-and-Trade will need 45 more Big Government Bureaucracies to enforce the standards. Using Boxer's figures, Inhofe pointed out that Cap-and-Trade would collect $6.7 Trillion dollars from industry (those costs will be passed onto us!). The maximum rebate to customers is $2.5 Trillion dollars. Do the math: That means $4.2 Trillion goes where? That sounds like a tax to me! He went on to remind us that the Democrats have killed every domestic drilling bill. The US relies on coal for 53% of all of its electricity production. Cap-and-Trade will tax coal fired electricity production. Consider that China "cranks out a new coal electric plant" every 3 days (?). (I think he said 3 days, which fits with this - certainly between India and China it would be true.) Manufacturing jobs will go where there is (cheap) energy/power, Inhofe said. This is also what Congressman Sensenbrenner talked about at his Town Hall Meeting when he called Cap-and-Trade "Catastrophic for Wisconsin". I would add that manufacturing jobs will also go where environmental regulations are more lax. Senator Inhofe suggested people take a look at Liberman-Warner Opposition Resource Center; Impacts of Costly Climate Bill Exposed It is chock full of quotes, links and articles.
The Senate is debating this bill this week. While some say the bill will not pass, as you know, once the foot is in the door, the issue will not go away. Considering all 3 Presidential candidates support the concept of Global Warming, I would just say, the bill probably won't pass...yet. Our Senators' response to my emails: Not much hope of a NO vote here--unless they feel the heat from constituents. This is important! Please contact them both: Senator Kohl (Phone: (414) 297-4451, (202) 224-5653) and Senator Feingold (Office
of Senator Russ Feingold | 202/224-5323) and let them know what you think about this bill.
More reading: George Will's Cap-And-Trade: A Devious Tax Plan Good chart of key players and terms explained at end: Senate taking up key climate-change bill The Heritage Foundation's Morning Bell: Carbon Capping in Bizarro World Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin , Vicki Mckenna
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