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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96398)12/6/2010 3:40:14 PM
From: longnshort2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224755
 
DEM SENATOR: ‘TIME TO TAKE UP PITCHFORKS’ IF TAX RATES REMAIN

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo) speaking on behalf of the "New Tone" the Democrats are trying to strike with Republicans. We wonder if Rachel Maddow will do a special segment about the "dangerous rhetoric" from the left.

youtube.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96398)12/6/2010 10:59:19 PM
From: Ann Corrigan3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224755
 
Final nail in coffin:
politico.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96398)12/7/2010 8:15:41 AM
From: lorne2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224755
 
ken...forget your speedo and get yourself a good parka and mukluks.

What happened to the 'warmest year on record': The truth is global warming has halted
By David Rose
5th December 2010
dailymail.co.uk

Last week, halfway through yet another giant, 15,000delegate UN climate jamboree, being held this time in the tropical splendour of Cancun in Mexico, the Met Office was at it again.

Never mind that Britain, just as it was last winter and the winter before, was deep in the grip of a cold snap, which has seen some temperatures plummet to minus 20C, and that here 2010 has been the coolest year since 1996.

Globally, it insisted, 2010 was still on course to be the warmest or second warmest year since current records began.

But buried amid the details of those two Met Office statements 12 months apart lies a remarkable climbdown that has huge implications - not just for the Met Office, but for debate over climate change as a whole.

Read carefully with other official data, they conceal a truth that for some, to paraphrase former US VicePresident Al Gore, is really inconvenient: for the past 15 years, global warming has stopped.

This isn't meant to be happening. Climate science orthodoxy, as promulgated by bodies such as the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the University of East Anglia Climatic Research Unit (CRU), says that temperatures have risen and will continue to rise in step with increasing CO2 in the atmosphere, and make no mistake, with the rapid industrialisation of China and India, CO2 levels have kept on going up.

According to the IPCC and its computer models, without enormous emission cuts the world is set to get between two and six degrees warmer during the 21st Century, with catastrophic consequences.

Last week at Cancun, in an attempt to influence richer countries to agree to give £20billion immediately to poorer ones to offset the results of warming, the US-based International Food Policy Research Institute warned that global temperatures would be 6.5 degrees higher by 2100, leading to rocketing food prices and a decline in production.

The maths isn't complicated. If the planet were going to be six degrees hotter by the century's end, it should be getting warmer by 0.6 degrees each decade; if two degrees, then by 0.2 degrees every ten years. Fortunately, it isn't.

Actually, with the exception of 1998 - a 'blip' year when temperatures spiked because of a strong 'El Nino' effect (the cyclical warming of the southern Pacific that affects weather around the world) - the data on the Met Office's and CRU's own websites show that global temperatures have been flat, not for ten, but for the past 15 years.

They go up a bit, then down a bit, but those small rises and falls amount to less than their measuring system's acknowledged margin of error. They have no statistical significance and reveal no evidence of any trend at all.
When the Met Office issued its December 2009 preThere-diction, it was clearly expecting an even bigger El Nino spike than happened in 1998 - one so big that it would have dragged up the decade's average.

But though it was still successfully trying to influence media headlines during Cancun last week by saying that 2010 might yet end up as the warmest year, the small print reveals the Met Office climbdown. Last year it predicted that the 2010 average would be 14.58C. Last week, this had been reduced to 14.52C.

That may not sound like much. But when one considers that by the Met Office's own account, the total rise in world temperatures since the 1850s has been less than 0.8 degrees, it is quite a big deal. Above all, it means the trend stays flat.

Meanwhile, according to an analysis yesterday by David Whitehouse of the Global Warming Policy Foundation, 2010 had only two unusually warm months, March and April, when El Nino was at its peak.

The data from October to the end of the year suggests that when the final figure is computed, 2010 will not be the warmest year at all, but at most the third warmest, behind both 1998 and 2005.

There is no dispute that the world got a little warmer over some of the 20th Century. (Between 1940 and the early Seventies, temperatures actually fell.)

But little by little, the supposedly settled scientific ' consensus' that the temperature rise is unprecedented, that it is set to continue to disastrous levels, and that it is all the fault of human beings, is starting to fray.

Earlier this year, a paper by Michael Mann - for years a leading light in the IPCC, and the author of the infamous 'hockey stick graph' showing flat temperatures for 2,000 years until the recent dizzying increase - made an extraordinary admission: that, as his critics had always claimed, there had indeed been a ' medieval warm period' around 1000 AD, when the world may well have been hotter than it is now.

Other research is beginning to show that cyclical changes in water vapour - a much more powerful greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide - may account for much of the 20th Century warming.

Even Phil Jones, the CRU director at the centre of last year's 'Climategate' leaked email scandal, was forced to admit in a littlenoticed BBC online interview that there has been 'no statistically significant warming' since 1995.

One of those leaked emails, dated October 2009, was from Kevin Trenberth, head of climate analysis at the US government's National Centre for Atmospheric Research and the IPCC's lead author on climate change science in its monumental 2002 and 2007 reports.

He wrote: 'The fact is that we can't account for the lack of warming at the moment, and it is a travesty that we can't.'

After the leak, Trenberth claimed he still believed the world was warming because of CO2, and that the 'travesty' was not the 'pause' but science's failure to explain it.

The question now emerging for climate scientists and policymakers alike is very simple. Just how long does a pause have to be before the thesis that the world is getting hotter because of human activity starts to collapse?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96398)12/7/2010 8:17:28 AM
From: lorne2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224755
 
Someone who agrees with you.

Maher Calls Obama a "Wussy"
December 05, 2010
nation.foxnews.com

Twitter During his appearance on CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS today, Bill Maher said that he felt President Obama was acting ‘wimpy' and ‘wussy' lately. "I'm just so disappointed that he seems to be another in a long line of Democrats that come across as wimpy, and wussy, and whatever word you want to ascribe to it, and not standing up for what they believe in enough," Maher said.

He also joked that "He looks beaten down....I thought when we elected him, as a comedian, two years in I'd be making jokes about what a gangster he was."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96398)12/7/2010 9:46:37 AM
From: TideGlider1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224755
 
Freezing Florida temps are bring OJ to a new high.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96398)12/7/2010 10:04:28 AM
From: lorne2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224755
 
ken..some great pictures her of England freezing..to many to post here. Maybe al gore could go over there and convince them that the cold is all just their imagination?

Christmas threatened as big freeze death toll rises

The big freeze death toll rises, leaves drivers trapped and threatens Christmas as plunging temperatures and snow could cause three weeks of delivery chaos
By Lewis Bazley
7th December 2010
dailymail.co.uk

Hundreds of drivers trapped between Edinburgh and Glasgow
Pensioner's body found in snow in north-east Lincolnshire
Two cyclists killed on same road where two teenage girls died last week
Death toll of winter weather up after man dies clearing snow

Warnings of icy roads and freezing fog across UK
Flight cancellations at Liverpool's John Lennon Airport

Hundreds of drivers were left stranded on the main route between Glasgow and Edinburgh last night as the snowy weather continued to bring disruption to Scotland's roads.
Multiple breakdowns and traffic incidents brought 'major congestion' to the route, and motorists were advised to avoid the route until further notice.
Lothian and Borders police said there were 'numerous' problems caused by the weather that brought traffic to a standstill.

Full article and photos >>>>
dailymail.co.uk