Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- Making Themselves Irrelevant
- Michael Mann Predicts The Demise Of X
- COP29 Preview
- UK Labour To Save The Planet
- A Giant Eyesore
- CO2 To Destroy The World In Ten Years
- Rats Jumping Off The Climate Ship
- UK Labour To Save The Planet
- “False Claims” And Outright Lies”
- Michael Mann Cancelled By CNN
- Spoiled Children
- Great Lakes Storm Of November 11, 1835
- Harris To Win Iowa
- Angry Democrats
- November 9, 1913 Storm
- Science Magazine Explains Trump Supporters
- Obliterating Bill Gates
- Scientific American Editor In Chief Speaks Out
- The End Of Everything
- Harris To Win In A Blowout
- Election Results
- “Glaciers, Icebergs Melt As World Gets Warmer”
- “falsely labeling”
- Vote For Change By Electing The Incumbent
- Protesting Too Much Snow
Recent Comments
- conrad ziefle on Michael Mann Predicts The Demise Of X
- Greg in NZ on Making Themselves Irrelevant
- arn on Michael Mann Predicts The Demise Of X
- Trevor on Michael Mann Predicts The Demise Of X
- czechlist on Michael Mann Predicts The Demise Of X
- arn on COP29 Preview
- arn on COP29 Preview
- conrad ziefle on COP29 Preview
- conrad ziefle on Making Themselves Irrelevant
- stewartpid on COP29 Preview
I Can Conceive Of It
This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.
This only shows how STUPID and DULL WITTED McKitten is. He probably can`t conceive of two plus two equaling four, either.
Yeah.
And We can’t conceive how people keep falling for Bill McFibben’s excessive cherry picking.
Some of his Chicken Little Alarmism idiot supporters called him a ‘Climate Hero.’ while he was talking BS in NZ.
Deleted your tweet, of course. Lack of protein has addled his mind, anyway.
sadly, the brain runs on glucose, not protein. Protein is converted to glucose during gluconeogenesis.
RE: Raindog – “sadly, the brain runs on glucose, not protein.”
Mike never claimed the brain runs on protein. The claim that the mind/brain is addled by lack of protein is accurate.
http://news.ncsu.edu/releases/ghashghaeisp2/
http://www.lfpress.com/2013/03/26/lack-of-protein-linked-to-downs-syndrome
I do agree though that he made an extremely stupid comment. It’s known to approach 100deg there in march. When I was there in April/May it was already over 100, like it is every year.
Doesn’t he live in Maine?
I would be happy to take Bill to do some honest labor that I did involving the insulation of steam pipes in temperatures that were 150 degreesF. I remember walking out of the plant into 90 degree temperatures and shivering with goose bumps.
I spent two summers working at the Palo Verde Nuclear Plant in the early 80’s. It was usually already above 100 degrees F every morning at 5 AM when we left for work and generally warmed up an additional 10 degrees.
How anybody can give credence to McKibben is what I have a hard time conceiving.
Humans occupy places on the globe with temperatures that commonly range from below -50F to above 120F, a very wide range indeed. And they seem to have adapted quite well.
This sounds like a personal problem to me. Perhaps a failure of imagination, Mr. McKibben? Not that those temps require THAT much imagination…
I am in the “east mountain” area of the Sandias/Albuquerque and it is about 66 tonight. It clouded over and the afternoon was pretty comfortable. Temps in Albuquerque through July 4th are slated to be below average (by large margins on some days) but I doubt McKibben will acknowledge that.
A good heatwave to say the least, but by no means unprecedented.
Come to Florida Bill. With the Florida humidity you’ll have a good idea how hot summer can be.
While you’re here spend lots of money so residents can continue to enjoy not having a state tax.
Thanks!
“Enjoy Florida humidity” Oh that is good! I still have not found a good way to enjoy Florida humidity myself and this is now my second summer.
I see people going on about this current record heat where the heat indexes might be 3 degrees warmer or about the same as here in Florida NORMALLY and thinking, “what little children”. Problem is that normally California has such a nice climate that these people are truly pampered. I didn’t see Florida a couple weeks making national news when we had a “severe heat advisory” ourselves with heat indexes way into the 120’s. (98,99F with 55-60% RH if memory serves). I just see news like this and think “what crybabies” myself. In any event we have gotten rain just about daily because of this pattern that set up over the US. Our temperatures are way below average for the next few days…and its nice. 86F? Unbelievable! Just to make fun of the big child Bill above: “I can not believe its so cold here in Florida.”
This part of the year is always miserable in Florida normally and I think this is the last year that I don’t at least spend a week out of the state in July. Would be nice to be up in Alaska somewhere where I might actually have a chance at getting cold.
Nice and sunny and in the mid 70’s today here in the upper Copper River Basin, come on up:)
Conceive of this…
“EXTREMES OF HEAT AND COLD. A RECORD OF 133 IN THE SHADE IN SAN FRANCISCO
On June 17, 1859, the temperature at San Francisco registered 133deg., rising suddenly from 77deg.; a burning north-west desert wind prevailed for several hours, and at 7 p.m. of the same date the temperature had again fallen to 77deg. At Santa Barbara, on the same afternoon, a strong burning desert wind blew for a few hours, destroying all fruit and animal life exposed to the hot wind died from the effect. The temperature at Santa Barbara is also said to have registered 133deg. On the same day the temperature was 102deg. at San Diego, and 117 deg. at Fort Yuma, Cal.”
http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/105727368
~3 Dec 1889
Don’t forget to point out how hypocritical he is if you are going to bother trying to annoy those crazy greens. Perhaps a couple articles about the record cold we had this Spring with some sarcastic remark like: “I can’t believe how cold it was in Minnesota in May”. That would stick in his caw wouldn’t it?
We’ve seen 70 degree temperature swings within an hour (-40 F to +30 F) during southerly Chinook systems moving in with never a complaint:)