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Troll Disposal Service[_2_] Troll Disposal Service[_2_] is offline
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Default Seriously too hot for cooking!

On 7/25/2015 1:48 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Saturday, July 25, 2015 at 3:31:48 PM UTC-4, Troll Disposal Service wrote:
>> On 7/25/2015 7:54 AM, gtr wrote:
>>> On 2015-07-20 01:36:38 +0000, Julie Bove said:
>>>
>>>> We hit 100 here today. We never see that number this early on. Once
>>>> in a blue moon it might get close to that in Aug. but never now. My
>>>> mom said she heard someone saying that we are going to wind up with
>>>> weather like San Diego. If that is true, something has to change.
>>>
>>> I heard on the radio that here in SoCal we usually have 4 or 5 days a
>>> year over 100 degrees. But in the past few years it's been over 15 days
>>> of it. And of course it's not the over-100 days but the high 90's days
>>> that surround them.
>>>
>>> In any case we had central heating and air installed last summer in
>>> preparation for the prediction provided on the radio blabber; that in
>>> 5-7 years there will be 40+ days a year over 100.
>>>
>>> Imagine how much worse it would be if global warming wasn't just a
>>> liberal hoax.
>>>

>>
>>
>> Caliphonya is NOT the "globe", now is it, dumbass?
>>
>> Quit bitching and enjoy your forthcoming el Nino winter.

>
> I believe you missed the sarcasm in gtr's post.
>
> Cindy Hamilton
>


Are you sure?

Gobal "warming" is a natural phenomenon, we're only just a couple of
thousand years overdue.


http://www.sott.net/article/203434-C...-in-five-years

A leading scientist has revealed that Europe could be just five years
away from the start of a new Ice Age.

While climate change campaigners say global warming is the planet's
biggest danger, renowned physicist Vladimir Paar says most of central
Europe will soon be covered in ice.

The freeze will be so complete that people will be able to walk from
England to Ireland or across the North Sea from Scotland to northern
Europe.

Professor Paar, from Croatia's Zagreb University, has spent decades
analysing previous ice ages in Europe and what caused them.

"Most of Europe will be under ice, including Germany, Poland, France,
Austria, Slovakia and a part of Slovenia," said the professor in an
interview with the Index.hr.

"Previous ice ages lasted about 70,000 years. That's a fact and the new
ice age can't be avoided.

"The big question is what will happen to the people of the Central
European countries which will be under ice?

"They might migrate to the south, or might stay, but with a huge
increase in energy use," he warned.

"This could happen in five, 10, 50 or 100 years, or even later. We can't
predict it precisely, but it will come," he added.

And the professor said that scientists think global warming is simply a
natural part of the planet.

"What I mean is that global warming is natural. Some 130,000 years ago
the earth's temperature was the same as now, the level of CO2 was almost
the same and the level of the sea was four metres higher.

http://anthro.palomar.edu/homo/homo_3.htm

The evolutionary surge that led to Homo habilis began during the
transition between the Pliocene and Pleistocene Epochs around 2.5
million years ago when climates were becoming cooler and drier. All
later species of Homo evolved during the Pleistocene (2,600,000-11,700
years ago). This was generally a time of more extreme world cooling and
recurrent glaciations (ice ages). During the coldest periods, global
temperatures dropped by about 9º F. (5º C.) and long-lasting ice sheets
spread out from the poles and high mountains. Between the four or more
major glaciations of the Pleistocene, there were interglacial warming
periods with temperatures similar to now. Both the glacials and the
interglacials lasted tens of thousands of years. Very likely, we are
now in an interglacial that began 10,000-12,000 years ago.