Saturday, November 22, 2008

Gore effect hits whole planet

By Donald Sensing

Wesley Pruden:

Turn up the heat, somebody. The globe is freezing. Even Al Gore is looking for an extra blanket. Winter has barely come to the northern latitudes and already we've got bigger goosebumps than usual. So far the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reports 63 record snowfalls in the United States, 115 lowest-ever temperatures for the month. Only 44 Octobers over the past 114 years have been cooler than this last one.

The polar ice is accumulating faster than usual, and some of the experts now concede that the globe hasn't warmed since 1995. You may have noticed, in fact, that Al and his pals, having given up on the sun, no longer even warn of global warming. Now it's "climate change." ... On average, "climate change" covers every possibility. ...

It's clear now that the earth has been cooling for the past decade, to the sorrow of the special pleaders and despite everything Al can do about it. The solar cycle peaked, the sun is quieter, the sunspots have faded and everybody but Al is cooling off.

Even the United Nations says so. The director of the U.N.'s panel on climate change concedes that nature has overwhelmed everything man can do and it might even be another decade before man can rally and the warming resumes. Until then, like it or not, nature rules the cosmos.
Here is the definition of the Gore Effect.

3 comments:

Toward the Right said...

I thought you might be interested in looking up the Maunder Minimum. If you Google it, or whatever search engine you use, several options are available for more information.

In a nutshell, it links solar activity (specifically lack of sun-spots) to climate change. In the past year or so the sun has had few to no sun spots.

Just thought you might be interested.

Great blog, by the way.

KD5NRH said...

Aha! Proof that global warming has even affected the sun...or something.

Toward the Right said...

KD5NRH,

Nah, more like solar activity effects our climate. The absence of sun spots seems to be correlated with a cooling climate.