Another look at the incredibly poor ethics of the people behind climate alarmism.
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- Mainstream Media Analysis Of DOGE
- Angry And Protesting
- Bad Weather Caused By Racism
- “what the science shows”
- Causes Of Earthquakes
- Precision Taxation
- On the Cover Of The Rolling Stone
- Demise Of The Great Barrier Reef
- Net Zero In China
- Make America Healthy Again
- Nobel Prophecy Update
- Grok Defending Climategate
- It Is Big Oil’s Fault
- Creative Marketing
- No Emergency Or Injunction
- The Perfect Car
- “usually the case”
- Same Old Democrats
- Record Arctic Ice Growth
- Climate Change, Income Inequality And Racism
- The New Kind Of Green
- The Origins Of Modern Climate Science
- If An Academic Said It, It Must Be True
- Record Snow Cover
Recent Comments
- gordon vigurs on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- spren on Mainstream Media Analysis Of DOGE
- spren on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- conrad ziefle on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- conrad ziefle on Mainstream Media Analysis Of DOGE
- Bob G on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- Ivan G Wainwright on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- Robertvd on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- Independent on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- Bob G on Global Warming Emergency In The UK
Well – criticising Trump is the only way Scumala can form a coherent sentence.
Best wishes to TOTO
Tony I checked the NASA’s sea temperature graphic for 1899 when Australia’s most destructive cyclone, Mahina, hit the Northern Queensland mainland. According to Wikipedia: “Cyclone Mahina was notable for producing the highest recorded storm surge of any tropical cyclone in history.”
Not, surprisingly, NASA’s sea temperatures were very cool around the area and the Coral Sea from whence it began its track.
Also, you might check the devastating Bhola Cyclone, which hit East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) in 1970. Estimates of death and missing vary greatly but could be over a million souls. I was there a few years later (working for UNOCAL) and the devastation was still noticeable from the storm surge. Similarly to my observation of Mahina, the NASA sea temperatures in the Bay of Bengal were coolish for the Bhola cyclone.
Cheers,
JB