Using the finest statistical techniques of Cuckoo, Nuttercelli, et al, I have proven that there were no scientists in the 1970s who didn’t believe the earth would be destroyed by global cooling.
I have looked through every 1970s Internet blog post made on the subject of global cooling, and did not find a single skeptical blog. Not one. This proves beyond a shadowy doubt that there were no global cooling skeptics during the 1970s.
If you check the twitter feeds from the 1970s you can get even more data to support your conclusion!
That sure beats a measly 97%…
100% of current global warming models do not work.
Was it the same back in the 70’s ?
I remember seeing Leonard Nimoy (Spock) in 1977 on the show “In Search Of” as he recounted all the evidence for the coming ice age. I remember kind of being entertained, but really not believing it. Apparently a bunch of the scientists believed it, though, and they usually said that it was man made. The solution to the cooling: curtail industrial civilization. Now, with global warming, the solution: curtail industrial civilization. And before there was either a cooling or warming scare, the environmentalists and leftists had a deep abiding desire to: curtail industrial civilization.
Nimoy says at the start of the “In Search Of” video below, as the eerie music plays: “[last year’s horribly] brutal Buffalo winter may become common all over the United States. Climate experts believe another ice age is on the way. According to recent evidence, it could come sooner than anyone had expected. At weather stations in the far north, temperatures have been dropping. Sea coasts long free of summer ice are now blocked .. year round.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L_861us8D9M
Eric—-GREAT clip!!! Where or how did you get it?
Winters 1977, 1978 & 1999 were brutal over the eastern two thirds of the US.
1979 not 1999.
“…every 70’s blog post…”
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Good one.
In the 70’s the computer I was working on filled half the bay of a converted barracks, had total ram of 456kD (a digit is half a bite) and used 9 track reel to reel for main storage although we did have what Burroughs called HPT or Head Per Track disk. The OS was MCP and Cobol was the most commonly used language on it. Oh, and we used a teletype machine for the console. No com though although we did have twisted pair terminal support over the phone system on base!! Transmissions between bases was by punching a deck of Hollerith cards and sending them over to the base Autodyn center which was networked card reader/punch combos!! It was a Burroughs Medium System B3500. Blog posts?? Internet, gee, I can’t remember that far back!!