I just don't have the time to look it up, times being what they are. It's from the Internet, and I've developed a strong distrust for anything I find there, especially on Social Media. In fact, I was going to post on the increasing number of Social Media posts I see that are dead wrong - photos don't match text, facts wrong and such - until I was informed that it's part of the whole posting gig. That is, it benefits posts to have many comments for some measures of stats. Thus they post things that are wrong and sit back as hundreds rush into to say 'Hey! That's wrong'. It's a comment, and that's what matters.
That's not the only problem, but it adds to the distrust I've had for years. So the above image could be bunk and nothing more. The only reason I post it is because last year, during our local media's attempt to convince us that the mid-80s are life threatening, I looked up the all time high temps for the Midwest. And I believe there were only a couple times that the all time highs weren't in the 1930s. You know, the Depression, those droughts and dust bowls and all. Because I noticed this referenced the 1930s as a comparison date, and it seemed to fit with what I found last year, I decided to post.
The point being my belief that the climate changes, just as it always has. That often times we're watching cycles of changes where the climate fluctuates, changes, shifts and changes again. I'm not saying our approach to STEM hasn't had an impact on the climate. It probably has to a degree. But it's simpler than the politics of Global Warming. Or the two months long daily apocalyptic coverage of our summer temps this year.
(Tomm New Poster)
ReplyDeleteThe 1933 data was probably recorded by hand using mercury thermometers (alcohol for very low temperatures), for I doubt they had even analog recording thermographs then, in part due to a lack of electric motors that turned steadily at low speed. The technicians were probably low-paid government scientists or university instructors who had no notion of acting as hacks for a global elite to crush the middle class. They were raised in a scientific culture that believed in "humility before the facts", and pragmatically focused stuff like agricultural production and flood control. Different world.
Yep. Climate. Here in Fort Worth we have had several 100 plus days. Middle of August. in Texas. And the caterwauling 'climatistas' shriek!
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