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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alighieri who wrote (577992)7/26/2010 8:53:19 AM
From: Taro2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574848
 
When will folks like you get it through their thick skulls that short term trends and regional climate issues are not reliable indicators of long term global climate trends?

Thanks for the nice words, Ali.

Of course you know much better, right?

How about - just for a starter - explaining how the CO2 causes global warming, when it is a firm and vastly documented fact, that all previous global warming periods so far have preceded the increase of CO2 (by aro 800 years) and not the other way around like your Guru Numero Uno Al Gore described it to the Nobel Price dummies in Oslo?
Thick Skull self :)

/Taro



To: Alighieri who wrote (577992)7/26/2010 9:53:49 AM
From: i-node  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574848
 
>> When will folks like you get it through their thick skulls that short term trends and regional climate issues are not reliable indicators of long term global climate trends?

Ha. What a laugh. WTF do you think the junk science of "climate change" is based on?



To: Alighieri who wrote (577992)7/29/2010 3:31:30 PM
From: Taro  Respond to of 1574848
 
"Värmerekord i österled
Helsingfors. Temperaturen steg till 37,2 grader vid Joensuu flygplats i Libelits på torsdagen, uppger Meteorologiska institutet i Finland. Det är den högsta temperaturen som uppmätts i landet.

Även i Ryssland har värmeböljan lett till rekordnivåer. Moskva noterade på torsdagen sin varmaste dag hittills: 38,2 grader uppgav vädertjänsten för AFP. På Domodedovo-flygplatsen utanför Moskva var det hela 38,7 grader.

Mätningarna i den ryska huvudstaden började för 150 år sedan.

I Moskva sätter man nu sitt hopp till svalare väder under fredagen, då temperaturen väntas gå ned till omkring 30 grader.

Moskvaborna plågas för övrigt också av tät smog, som orsakas av att torvmossar utanför staden står i brand.

Det tidigare värmerekordet i Finland på 35,9 grader sattes i Åbo 1914. Årets tidigare rekord mättes i Lahtis, där det var 35,0 grader varmt i onsdags."

Do your own translation (from Swedish).

Clue: Hottest ever in Finland and Moscow.

/Taro