Monday, March 31, 2008

Anecdotal Evidence

Notice how it's a one-way street? An ice chip falls off of Antarctica and we are all going to melt because of global warming. Polar bears will drown. The winter of 2007-08 is one for the record books, erased 100 years of warming in one season, we are all going to freeze. I know the friends I have in the north all think that :0)

While icebergs are breaking apart , polar bears drowning and killing seals, winter in America (and most of the rest of the flat earth world according to Al Gore), threatens to continue into April. It hysterical, hysterically funny that so many ignorant people lack the basic skills in math, science and chemistry to cal BS to the lies. If you consider empirical evidence like minuscule amounts of crumbling ice in the Antarctic(Do you know how big the Antarctic is or how much ice crumbles off each year?), you also must consider the huge number of press reports worldwide about the brutal winter this year that erased 100 years of "warming" in one season! Yeah, I know, technically, it's an anomaly, but when every out of the ordinary weather event from severe hurricanes to who knows what is hyped as 'due to global warming', fair is fair right.

N.H. snowfall now 3rd in all-time list - USATODAY.com:

Today's snow has moved New Hampshire up a notch in the list of all-time snowy winters, making this the snowiest winter in 135 years.

The National Weather Service says that as of 7 a.m., an inch of snow had fallen in Concord from the latest storm. That inch moved the state into third place for all-time snowfall, at 113.4 inches. It hasn't snowed this much since the winter of 1872-73.
While seals continue dying and the polar bears continue drowning at sea, in the Arctic due to AGW-created melting ice, seal hunters in Canada have slightly different a different problem.

Thick ice hinders Canada's controversial seal hunt:
Canada's annual seal hunt, which the government promised would be more humane this year, cranked up slowly on Friday because of thick ice.

The government is allowing hunters to kill up to 275,000 young harp seals on the ice floes off Eastern Canada, but only three had been reported killed on the first morning of the hunt in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

"It's a very slow start," said Phil Jenkins, spokesman for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, noting that sealing boats were finding it difficult to get to the herds because of thick ice.
Polar bears are fairing no better. The ice is so thick in the Arctic that the polar bears can no longer break through to get to the seals.
Iceland fears bears that go with the floe

The ice has proved a headache for fishermen, who have been unable to put to sea, but it is what comes with pack ice that has caused most concern: polar bears.

People living around the fjord of Dyrafjördur, which last week was almost filled with the ice, were keeping an eye on the sea, conscious that the bears live on the pack ice that covers much of the Arctic ocean.
Now polar bears have taken to living on the pack ice so they can reach the thinner sections and open water so they still get dinner. Polar bears are really good swimmers, going up to a 100 miles in a single swim.

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Fair is fair, global warming I am officially declaring over, killed off by the winter freeze of 2007-08. It's been one hell of a winter all around the globe.

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