This is gonna be a slobberknocker. :bahgawd:
Decided to post this here since this low energy moron @Booker T Garvey is too p*ssy to come to Higher Learning, and seems to think that I should debate with him in a Bushed thread.
Also posting this for general education purposes. There are links embedded throughout if you want to check my work.
Before I answer this clown (which he swears I won't do )Let me establish some key points that need to be addressed.
Now, let's get to this sh*tty-ass question:
Based on what I established above (and pay particular attention to #5), this question is irrelevant.
You can have rising climate and still see record low temps in some areas. That doesn't mean the climate isn't rising, nor does it indicate that average climate is decreasing. (Remember, climate is the overall average trend of weather, not weather itself.)
In short, to @Booker T Garvey : f*ck outta here with that bullsh*t. :cambybp:
Decided to post this here since this low energy moron @Booker T Garvey is too p*ssy to come to Higher Learning, and seems to think that I should debate with him in a Bushed thread.
Also posting this for general education purposes. There are links embedded throughout if you want to check my work.
Before I answer this clown (which he swears I won't do )Let me establish some key points that need to be addressed.
- Climate change is real.
It's not "cac science" or whatever glib, knee-jerk Hotep bullsh*t people push in TLR these days.
It's just science. The climate is changing.
- Climate ≠ weather.
Weather is short-term, climate is long term.
A rising climate doesn't automatically mean hotter temperatures.
- A rising climate ≠ a lack of cold weather or winter storms.
Rising climate can actually make winter storms worse in some areas, due to excessive moisture being introduced in high/low pressure systems.
- "Climate change" being a new term to replace "global warming" for PR reasons is a myth.
@Booker T Garvey pushes the idea that "climate change" has only been used for about a decade since rising temperatures fell short of early predictions in the 80's and 90's. He told me to "look it up".
I did, and I found that, in fact, scientists have been using the term "climate change" since 1958, and scientists have been using it synonymously with "global warming" since 1972. Therefore it's not a "new term."
- @Booker T Garvey is a trash poster.
Just stating facts. :kanyebp:
Now, let's get to this sh*tty-ass question:
Can you find evidence from the scientific community from the 80's or 90's that predicted -60 below temperatures in the U.S. in the 2000's?
Based on what I established above (and pay particular attention to #5), this question is irrelevant.
You can have rising climate and still see record low temps in some areas. That doesn't mean the climate isn't rising, nor does it indicate that average climate is decreasing. (Remember, climate is the overall average trend of weather, not weather itself.)
In short, to @Booker T Garvey : f*ck outta here with that bullsh*t. :cambybp: