Inconvenient Snow and Ice

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Al Gore is telling us, “bitter cold’ is “exactly what we should expect from the climate crisis.”

If warm is warming, and cold is warming, what isn’t warming?

Or, as logic dictates: if everything is global warming, then nothing is global warming. 

The global warming crowd is now experiencing this first hand. At the World economic forum in Davos, Switzerland. climate activists set up a mock Arctic base camp to educate world leaders about man-made global warming. Mother Nature didn’t cooperate, however, as the “Gore Effect” kicked in and dumped about six feet of snow on their little stunt during the last six days.

Rush Limbaugh also couldn’t resist chiding the global warming crowd yesterday on his program. After mentioning thegood work of his “buddy” Marc Moranoof CFACT, he went on to talk about how a recently commissioned ship out of Buffalo, NY, called the USS Little Rock, will be wintering in Montreal after its journey to Florida was interrupted by cold and ice.

Citing a Canadian news source, Limbaugh reported, “A Navy spokeswoman says the USS Little Rock was commissioned in Buffalo on Dec. 16 and was expected to make its way to its home port in Mayport, Florida. Instead, it’s caught in ice since Christmas Eve in Montreal, and it will not thaw sufficiently for this ship to move until mid-March.”

These aren’t the type of stories consistent with the Green narrative of a rapidly warming planet. And lest one say, as those on the Left are quick to blurt out at this point, “hey, weather isn’t climate,” let’s remind them that it wasthey,notus,who have long been trying to make just such a connection over the past few decades.

In 2000 “The Independent” published a now infamous article riddled with failed predictions by the global warming crowd.

Snow would be like “wolves,” something that we don’t see anymore but would “remain culturally important.”

“British children could have only virtual experiences of snow. Via the internet… or eventually ‘feel’ virtual cold.”

“The chances are now certainly stacked against the sort of heavy snowfall in cities that inspired impressionist painters” and 19th century poets.

“Sledges, snowmen, snowballs and the excitement of waking to find that the stuff has settled are all now part of a rapidly diminishing part of Britain’s culture.”

Via CFact

Right-Mind