
One year ago, on January 31, we were treated to another of these “Snowmageddon” scenarios. At the time, USA Today quoted Gary Szatkowski, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service, as saying: “It’s a little surprising that people are falling for this.”
I’m not surprised. People are gullible. Look at our politicians.
Here’s some “breaking news”: It’s January and in many parts of America, it snows; sometimes a lot. When I was a kid I got my sled and, together with other kids celebrating the snow day, took to the hills. We threw snowballs and came home soaked and exhausted. Mother would hang my wet clothes on a radiator to dry.
For those not buying into the cult of climate change, formerly known as “global warming,” the website climatedepot.com is an excellent source for authoritative science and reporting that debunks the claims of climate alarmists.
Recently, we heard assertions from some “reliable” people that 2014 was the hottest year on record. News anchors and reporters dutifully, and without their usual skepticism, conveyed the news as fact. The Associated Press reported that 2014 was the hottest year, citing NOAA and NASA data, but was later forced to clarify its story, conceding that it “. . . did not include the caveat that other recent years had average temperatures that were almost as high — and they all fall within a margin of error that lessens the certainty that any one of the years was the hottest.” NOAA and NASA also quietly had to concede that 2014 was probably not the warmest year, but I would venture to guess that very few people noticed the update.
Facts do not lessen the belief of cult members.
Consider some of the statements posted on climatedepot.com from scientists who question the honesty of those producing climate change “evidence.”
Climatologist Dr. Roy Spencer says the public is being misled: “I am embarrassed by the scientific community’s behavior on the subject.”
Real Science accused NASA’s Schmidt of “cheating” to “create the required talking point” of the “hottest year.”
Climatologist Dr. Tim Ball accused NASA’s Schmidt of “climate deception”: “‘Schmidt knows, after all his years with participating in the creation and naming of the RealClimate.org web site, that it is all about the headline.'”
As blogger Tom Nelson has correctly observed, NASA’s Gavin Schmidt “is referee and commentator, along with his paid job as coach and cheerleader for one side.”
The one-sided reporting and blind faith in climate change has infected politicians who are incapable of balancing the federal budget. So why put faith in them — or the meteorologists who track with them — that they can do anything other than talk about the weather?
By CAL THOMAS
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