Whatever Hansen predicts, betting on the opposite is almost always a sure thing. Like his 2006 Super El Nino which was going to burn up the planet,
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:2005/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:2005/trend
Whatever Hansen predicts, betting on the opposite is almost always a sure thing. Like his 2006 Super El Nino which was going to burn up the planet,
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:2005/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:2005/trend
I remember the fall of 2005 as being especially hot in central Texas, with 100-deg temps extending into November. 2006 or any year since doesn’t stand out to me.
For me in North Carolina it was the summer of 2004. We kept getting weather of 100 °F or more with a high relative humidity. (I got sick from the heat three times) but the records of that hot summer have all been revised downwards with six days running of 98 °F in July.
2005 was even hotter with temps to 103°F in July and a mean of 90 °F. Last July had a max of 92 °F and a mean of 78 °F. Global Warming??? Couldn’t prove it here.
Perhaps this is an excellent “teachable moment”, eh?
Here you have one of the “premier climate scientists” of the realm concluding in the “peer-reviewed literature” [cue sounds of Bach fugues] that such-and-such will certainly happen – – –
and Mom Nature gives Jimbo a climatological-proctological exam that shows he “don’t know Dick”
Just one of thousand of examples of crap in the peer-lit trash can.
Too bad. Warming would have been nice. You won’t like cooling.