Al Gore refuses to debate his position with climate realist scholars and scientists. |
Many record colds are beating 100 to 200 year old cold records. This is in contrast to warm records defeating decades old records. Winter behavior in both hemispheres indicate an earlier start, colder run, more aggressive play, and a later end.
Although evidence is increasing towards global cooling, people continue to express global warming myths. They attack those, who disagree with the man-made global warming theory, as being in denial.
Reality? The so-called "climate deniers" are actually "climate realists."
Myth: Those who disagree with man-made global warming are climate deniers.
Those who disagree with global warming are not "climate deniers," they are "climate realists." They study actual observations as well as actual data. They study these as they occur all over the world.
They base their conclusions on data gathered over a period of time.
Climate realists are noticing that summers are shorter and less hot than they used to be. They're noticing that winters are colder and are longer than they used to be. They're noting that the Antarctic ice sheet has been setting records recently.
These observations make it hard to accept the man-made global warming theory.
Myth: Those who disagree with man-made global warming disagree with science.
Climate realists' disagreement with man-made global warming is based on science. Raw thermometer and satellite surface temperature measurements indicate a cooling trend.
The physics involved with interacting air masses, where the polar air masses are progressively colder, explains current weather phenomena. This includes violent weather activity and weather extremes.
A look at history, as well as "forensic" examination of ice core samples, underwater sediments, tree ring data, etc., argue in favor of climate change being a natural process. Not a man-made one.
Myth: Overall average temperatures of the world is increasing.
The raw thermometer data over the past 80 years show an overall declining trend.
Actual weather measurements, both ground and satellite, indicated a peak in natural global warming in the mid-to-late '90s. They show that average global temperatures stabilized in the first part of the first decade of the 21st century.
Since the middle of that decade, there has been an overall declining trend in temperatures.
Certain groups have tried to average up the recent temperature measurements. They also attempted to average down the older temperature measurements. This provides a misleading graph showing an "increase" in temperatures into the present.
Actual raw data contradicts that conclusion.
Even many global warming scientists admit that there's a recent pause in a rise in temperatures... meaning, average global temperatures haven't risen in the past few years.
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