What Stands Out the Most About Last Weeks Tornado Disaster

Some just deny the climatological consensus that virtually all nations accept (instead aligning themselves with Iran, Libya, Yemen and Eritrea), lie back and allow themselves to be ravaged by increasing extreme weather events, whilst thinking of England or who knows what.
Ask Galileo about consensus.
 
Galileo was a scientist who contradicted fanatical dogmatists with empirical data - as scientists invariably do.

Ask any aberrant crackpot about consensus.
Galileo was a scientist who contradicted fanatical dogmatists with empirical data - as scientists invariably do.
Like everyone who says people can’t control the weather are today.
 
Like everyone who says people can’t control the weather are today.
The science deniers are upset by empirical data in general - anthropogenic climate change, certified election results, etc.

They are emotionally-driven, not amenable to even the most overwhelming corroborative data dispassionately compiled by the most highly qualified.
 
Pathetic. You Leftards make a natural disaster a political issue and you bitch that you’re called out on it.
72piTIQ.jpg
 
The science deniers are upset by empirical data in general - anthropogenic climate change, certified election results, etc.

They are emotionally-driven, not amenable to even the most overwhelming corroborative data dispassionately compiled by the most highly qualified.
You keep on thinking your outlawing of gas lawn mowers is saving the world, Mr ‘Science’.
 

Climate change affects global temperature and precipitation patterns. These effects, in turn, influence the intensity and, in some cases, the frequency of extreme environmental events, such as forest fires, hurricanes, heat waves, floods, droughts, and storms...
We have already experienced the effects of climate change through severe weather events, including forest fires, hurricanes, droughts, heat waves, floods, and storms. Computer modeling of real data has shown that the frequency and intensity of these events are influenced by climate change.
There is a distinction that needs to be made when it comes to the relationship between climate change and extreme environmental events: Climate change has not been proven to directly cause individual extreme environmental events, but it has been shown to make these events more destructive, and likely happen more frequently, than they normally would be.

Opposing the scientific consensus recognized by every nation on earth (except Iran, Libya, Yemen and Eritrea that have not yet ratified the Paris Climate Accord), and fueled by the petroleum conglomerates:
:

It is easy to see that this is a scam. Near everything is now environmental on commercials and propaganda. Suckers gotta be what suckers gotta be. Look how fast we have declined just with the threat of Biden being installed to being installed as potentate.
 
Prematurely attributing short-lived weather events to anthropogenic climate change is a temptation, of course, but they are not as reliable as droughts, floods, hurricanes and other corroborative data unless taken in the aggregate.

Climatiologist are very cautious in making such attributions.

Scientists say the short-lived scale of tornadoes, coupled with an extremely inconsistent and unreliable historical record, makes connecting outbreaks to long-term, human-caused climate change extremely challenging.
Victor Gensini, a professor at Northern Illinois University and one of the top tornado experts, said last night's outbreak is one of the most remarkable tornado events in US history -- and while climate change may have played a part in its violent behavior, it's not yet clear what that role was.
"When you start putting a lot of these events together, and you start looking at them in the aggregate sense, the statistics are pretty clear that not only has there sort of been a change -- a shift, if you will -- of where the greatest tornado frequency is happening... But these events are becoming perhaps stronger, more frequent and also more variable."
 
Prematurely attributing short-lived weather events to anthropogenic climate change is a temptation, of course, but they are not as reliable as droughts, floods, hurricanes and other corroborative data unless taken in the aggregate.

Climatiologist are very cautious in making such attributions.

Scientists say the short-lived scale of tornadoes, coupled with an extremely inconsistent and unreliable historical record, makes connecting outbreaks to long-term, human-caused climate change extremely challenging.
Victor Gensini, a professor at Northern Illinois University and one of the top tornado experts, said last night's outbreak is one of the most remarkable tornado events in US history -- and while climate change may have played a part in its violent behavior, it's not yet clear what that role was.
"When you start putting a lot of these events together, and you start looking at them in the aggregate sense, the statistics are pretty clear that not only has there sort of been a change -- a shift, if you will -- of where the greatest tornado frequency is happening... But these events are becoming perhaps stronger, more frequent and also more variable."
They lied to us from the beginning many decades ago. Then they changed the rules and the names while fudging the science and showing us videos of the carnage.
 
Prematurely attributing short-lived weather events to anthropogenic climate change is a temptation, of course, but they are not as reliable as droughts, floods, hurricanes and other corroborative data unless taken in the aggregate.

Climatiologist are very cautious in making such attributions.

Scientists say the short-lived scale of tornadoes, coupled with an extremely inconsistent and unreliable historical record, makes connecting outbreaks to long-term, human-caused climate change extremely challenging.
Victor Gensini, a professor at Northern Illinois University and one of the top tornado experts, said last night's outbreak is one of the most remarkable tornado events in US history -- and while climate change may have played a part in its violent behavior, it's not yet clear what that role was.
"When you start putting a lot of these events together, and you start looking at them in the aggregate sense, the statistics are pretty clear that not only has there sort of been a change -- a shift, if you will -- of where the greatest tornado frequency is happening... But these events are becoming perhaps stronger, more frequent and also more variable."
1639419124691.png

 
What stands out to me is senator Paul wanting help...the same guy who fought against $ for the incredible heroic first responders in NYC. Irony and hypocrisy.
 

Maybe read the articles you link

For example, the article, written in May 2020 states "The impact on 2020 annual emissions depends on the duration of the confinement, with a low estimate of –4% (–2 to –7%) if prepandemic conditions return by mid-June, and a high estimate of –7% (–3 to –13%) if some restrictions remain worldwide until the end of 2020."

Safe to say given the lockdowns, we would expect to be on the high end of the CO2 reduction for 2020. However, we did not observe ANY REDUCTION in C02. In fact it increased as usual.

5xp6to.jpg
 
Of course, there is looting occurring. Just another lying thread from the USMB king of lying threads.
 
Prematurely attributing short-lived weather events to anthropogenic climate change is a temptation, of course, but they are not as reliable as droughts, floods, hurricanes and other corroborative data unless taken in the aggregate.

Climatiologist are very cautious in making such attributions.

Scientists say the short-lived scale of tornadoes, coupled with an extremely inconsistent and unreliable historical record, makes connecting outbreaks to long-term, human-caused climate change extremely challenging.
Victor Gensini, a professor at Northern Illinois University and one of the top tornado experts, said last night's outbreak is one of the most remarkable tornado events in US history -- and while climate change may have played a part in its violent behavior, it's not yet clear what that role was.
"When you start putting a lot of these events together, and you start looking at them in the aggregate sense, the statistics are pretty clear that not only has there sort of been a change -- a shift, if you will -- of where the greatest tornado frequency is happening... But these events are becoming perhaps stronger, more frequent and also more variable."
BTW - Obama is laughing at you from his beachfront mansion.
 
Claiming global CO2 went down immediately last year and spiked immediately up despite half the world still shut down is the kind of science denial I expect from you Leftards.

I claimed nothing but once again, you know that.
 

Forum List

Back
Top