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With each passing
day, those who believe in man-made global warming are demonstrated to be
more and more pathological in their obsession with a non-existent
problem. So megalomaniacal have they become that no amount of evidence
will get them to put their egos aside and, if nothing else, approach the
issue with some semblance of humility. Of course, when one's goal is
totalitarianism, one cannot be humble – the two are fundamentally
incompatible mindsets.
A simple bit of
logic would be enough to defuse this silly fraud once and for all, were
the true believers not so impervious to reason. Earth was once warm
enough to support dinosaurs, and once cold enough that only heavily
furred mammals like mastodons could survive. In neither era was humanity
even in existence. So how did those changes in planetary climate occur?
Obviously, the Earth is perfectly capable of warming and cooling all by
itself.
We also know that
smaller scale changes have occurred just within the last few centuries.
Why do you think the Vikings named a far northern island to which they
sailed “Greenland”? Hint: It wasn't because the land was covered with
white polar icecap. How did Greenland get green in the absence of modern
human industry? This was then followed by the “Little Ice Age,” running
from roughly the mid-16th to the mid-19th
centuries.
The year of 1816 was
known as “The Year Without A Summer,” when snowstorms hit northeastern
North America in June and frost killed crops in Europe. The commonly
accepted explanation for this is the eruption of the Mt. Tambora volcano
in what is now Indonesia. The vast quantities of ash and dust thrown
into the atmosphere helped to block out the sun's warmth, resulting in
an unusually cold year until it finally settled out. Read the rest...
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