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Diablo Winds And Record Temperatures in SF Bay Area


Diablo Winds And Record Temperatures in SF Bay Area19-01-2021 05:28
Spongy IrisProfile picture★★★★☆
(1643)
Wind gusts reached 82 mph last night on Mt Diablo. Gusty weather picked up last night with the wind coming from North and Northeast. A strength in wind rarely seen round these parts.

New record high temperatures also recorded for 1/17 in 2021 in Bay Area cities San Francisco, San Jose, and downtown Oakland, to name a few.

https://www.sfgate.com/weather/article/80-MPH-Winds-High-Temps-lead-to-Red-Flag-Warning-15879658.php

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohOtDA3dTAA



Edited on 19-01-2021 05:33
19-01-2021 06:13
Into the NightProfile picture★★★★★
(21599)
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.
Edited on 19-01-2021 06:13
19-01-2021 19:13
Spongy IrisProfile picture★★★★☆
(1643)
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


20-01-2021 02:57
Into the NightProfile picture★★★★★
(21599)
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


The Parrot Killer

Debunked in my sig. - tmiddles

Google keeps track of paranoid talk and i'm not on their list. I've been evaluated and certified. - keepit

nuclear powered ships do not require nuclear fuel. - Swan

While it is true that fossils do not burn it is also true that fossil fuels burn very well - Swan
20-01-2021 07:04
Spongy IrisProfile picture★★★★☆
(1643)
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


Didn't say winds never have been coming from the west past couple months. Just more often than not, looks like they have been coming from the east or north. Seems like winds from the west have been missing western US more so lately.


20-01-2021 16:17
Into the NightProfile picture★★★★★
(21599)
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


Didn't say winds never have been coming from the west past couple months. Just more often than not, looks like they have been coming from the east or north. Seems like winds from the west have been missing western US more so lately.

It's that Utah high. It's a stubborn one. It won't move.
We get the warm air up from where you are. It's quite balmy around here of late, with highs into the 50's, in January.

This is not the first winter we've had like this. I once helped by father build a fence during Christmas vacation because the weather was so nice and warm at that time.

This year, we got snow on Solstice day, but haven't seen a flake since (except of course in the mountains, where there is a LOT of snow this year due to the higher than normal precipitation this year). We did get a lot of rain here not so long ago, causing flood watches and warnings. It looks like this year we won't get much if any snow in the lowlands. The coldest ocean temperatures have past (the generally lag the solstice by a couple of weeks) and the Utah high is preventing the usual pattern this year. Now the Sun is moving northward again.


The Parrot Killer

Debunked in my sig. - tmiddles

Google keeps track of paranoid talk and i'm not on their list. I've been evaluated and certified. - keepit

nuclear powered ships do not require nuclear fuel. - Swan

While it is true that fossils do not burn it is also true that fossil fuels burn very well - Swan
20-01-2021 16:53
IBdaMannProfile picture★★★★★
(14412)
Spongy Iris wrote:
Wind gusts reached 82 mph last night on Mt Diablo. Gusty weather picked up last night with the wind coming from North and Northeast. A strength in wind rarely seen round these parts.

New record high temperatures also recorded for 1/17 in 2021 in Bay Area cities San Francisco, San Jose, and downtown Oakland, to name a few.

You are wasting bandwidth. Your post is spam. You posted completely irrelevant and uninteresting trivia without even pretending to offer any sort of point.


.


I don't think i can [define it]. I just kind of get a feel for the phrase. - keepit

A Spaghetti strainer with the faucet running, retains water- tmiddles

Clouds don't trap heat. Clouds block cold. - Spongy Iris

Printing dollars to pay debt doesn't increase the number of dollars. - keepit

If Venus were a black body it would have a much much lower temperature than what we found there.- tmiddles

Ah the "Valid Data" myth of ITN/IBD. - tmiddles

Ceist - I couldn't agree with you more. But when money and religion are involved, and there are people who value them above all else, then the lies begin. - trafn

You are completely misunderstanding their use of the word "accumulation"! - Climate Scientist.

The Stefan-Boltzman equation doesn't come up with the correct temperature if greenhouse gases are not considered - Hank

:*sigh* Not the "raw data" crap. - Leafsdude

IB STILL hasn't explained what Planck's Law means. Just more hand waving that it applies to everything and more asserting that the greenhouse effect 'violates' it.- Ceist
21-01-2021 03:40
Spongy IrisProfile picture★★★★☆
(1643)
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


Didn't say winds never have been coming from the west past couple months. Just more often than not, looks like they have been coming from the east or north. Seems like winds from the west have been missing western US more so lately.

It's that Utah high. It's a stubborn one. It won't move.
We get the warm air up from where you are. It's quite balmy around here of late, with highs into the 50's, in January.

This is not the first winter we've had like this. I once helped by father build a fence during Christmas vacation because the weather was so nice and warm at that time.

This year, we got snow on Solstice day, but haven't seen a flake since (except of course in the mountains, where there is a LOT of snow this year due to the higher than normal precipitation this year). We did get a lot of rain here not so long ago, causing flood watches and warnings. It looks like this year we won't get much if any snow in the lowlands. The coldest ocean temperatures have past (the generally lag the solstice by a couple of weeks) and the Utah high is preventing the usual pattern this year. Now the Sun is moving northward again.


That high pressure ridge looks to be surrounding Utah and extending into Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona.

Maybe it will wind up in a similar category as the "Ridiculously Resilient Ridge," which caused drought from ~ 2010 to 2016 in CA.

Rainfall this season has been 50 % lower than typical I read. Last rainy season it tapered off in February 2020 and seemed to become a drier climate.

2016 to 2019 were pretty wet years, refilling reservoirs from the drought.


21-01-2021 11:24
Into the NightProfile picture★★★★★
(21599)
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


Didn't say winds never have been coming from the west past couple months. Just more often than not, looks like they have been coming from the east or north. Seems like winds from the west have been missing western US more so lately.

It's that Utah high. It's a stubborn one. It won't move.
We get the warm air up from where you are. It's quite balmy around here of late, with highs into the 50's, in January.

This is not the first winter we've had like this. I once helped by father build a fence during Christmas vacation because the weather was so nice and warm at that time.

This year, we got snow on Solstice day, but haven't seen a flake since (except of course in the mountains, where there is a LOT of snow this year due to the higher than normal precipitation this year). We did get a lot of rain here not so long ago, causing flood watches and warnings. It looks like this year we won't get much if any snow in the lowlands. The coldest ocean temperatures have past (the generally lag the solstice by a couple of weeks) and the Utah high is preventing the usual pattern this year. Now the Sun is moving northward again.


That high pressure ridge looks to be surrounding Utah and extending into Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona.

Maybe it will wind up in a similar category as the "Ridiculously Resilient Ridge," which caused drought from ~ 2010 to 2016 in CA.

Rainfall this season has been 50 % lower than typical I read. Last rainy season it tapered off in February 2020 and seemed to become a drier climate.

2016 to 2019 were pretty wet years, refilling reservoirs from the drought.

No. High pressure areas don't stick around for years.


The Parrot Killer

Debunked in my sig. - tmiddles

Google keeps track of paranoid talk and i'm not on their list. I've been evaluated and certified. - keepit

nuclear powered ships do not require nuclear fuel. - Swan

While it is true that fossils do not burn it is also true that fossil fuels burn very well - Swan
22-01-2021 01:28
Spongy IrisProfile picture★★★★☆
(1643)
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


Didn't say winds never have been coming from the west past couple months. Just more often than not, looks like they have been coming from the east or north. Seems like winds from the west have been missing western US more so lately.

It's that Utah high. It's a stubborn one. It won't move.
We get the warm air up from where you are. It's quite balmy around here of late, with highs into the 50's, in January.

This is not the first winter we've had like this. I once helped by father build a fence during Christmas vacation because the weather was so nice and warm at that time.

This year, we got snow on Solstice day, but haven't seen a flake since (except of course in the mountains, where there is a LOT of snow this year due to the higher than normal precipitation this year). We did get a lot of rain here not so long ago, causing flood watches and warnings. It looks like this year we won't get much if any snow in the lowlands. The coldest ocean temperatures have past (the generally lag the solstice by a couple of weeks) and the Utah high is preventing the usual pattern this year. Now the Sun is moving northward again.


That high pressure ridge looks to be surrounding Utah and extending into Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona.

Maybe it will wind up in a similar category as the "Ridiculously Resilient Ridge," which caused drought from ~ 2010 to 2016 in CA.

Rainfall this season has been 50 % lower than typical I read. Last rainy season it tapered off in February 2020 and seemed to become a drier climate.

2016 to 2019 were pretty wet years, refilling reservoirs from the drought.

No. High pressure areas don't stick around for years.


The Ridiculously Resilient Ridge was characterized by a broad region of anomalously positive geopotential height on monthly to annual timescales. This persistent high pressure system acted to "block" the prevailing mid-latitude Westerlies, shifting the storm track northward and suppressing extratropical cyclone (winter storm) activity along the West Coast of the United States. Such a pattern is similar to—but of greater magnitude and longevity than—atmospheric configurations noted during previous California droughts.

This anomalous atmospheric feature disrupted the North Pacific storm track during the winters of 2012/13, 2013/14, 2014/15, resulting in extremely dry and warm conditions in California and along much of the West Coast. The Ridge comprised the western half of a well-defined atmospheric ridge-trough sequence associated with an unusually amplified "North American winter dipole" pattern, which brought persistent anomalous cold and precipitation to the eastern half of North America in addition to record-breaking warmth and drought conditions in California.



This 2020/2021 year hasn't been quite as dry as those "RRR" years, but it's still well below average...



Edited on 22-01-2021 01:30
22-01-2021 02:56
Into the NightProfile picture★★★★★
(21599)
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


Didn't say winds never have been coming from the west past couple months. Just more often than not, looks like they have been coming from the east or north. Seems like winds from the west have been missing western US more so lately.

It's that Utah high. It's a stubborn one. It won't move.
We get the warm air up from where you are. It's quite balmy around here of late, with highs into the 50's, in January.

This is not the first winter we've had like this. I once helped by father build a fence during Christmas vacation because the weather was so nice and warm at that time.

This year, we got snow on Solstice day, but haven't seen a flake since (except of course in the mountains, where there is a LOT of snow this year due to the higher than normal precipitation this year). We did get a lot of rain here not so long ago, causing flood watches and warnings. It looks like this year we won't get much if any snow in the lowlands. The coldest ocean temperatures have past (the generally lag the solstice by a couple of weeks) and the Utah high is preventing the usual pattern this year. Now the Sun is moving northward again.


That high pressure ridge looks to be surrounding Utah and extending into Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona.

Maybe it will wind up in a similar category as the "Ridiculously Resilient Ridge," which caused drought from ~ 2010 to 2016 in CA.

Rainfall this season has been 50 % lower than typical I read. Last rainy season it tapered off in February 2020 and seemed to become a drier climate.

2016 to 2019 were pretty wet years, refilling reservoirs from the drought.

No. High pressure areas don't stick around for years.


The Ridiculously Resilient Ridge was characterized by a broad region of anomalously positive geopotential height on monthly to annual timescales. This persistent high pressure system acted to "block" the prevailing mid-latitude Westerlies, shifting the storm track northward and suppressing extratropical cyclone (winter storm) activity along the West Coast of the United States. Such a pattern is similar to—but of greater magnitude and longevity than—atmospheric configurations noted during previous California droughts.

This anomalous atmospheric feature disrupted the North Pacific storm track during the winters of 2012/13, 2013/14, 2014/15, resulting in extremely dry and warm conditions in California and along much of the West Coast. The Ridge comprised the western half of a well-defined atmospheric ridge-trough sequence associated with an unusually amplified "North American winter dipole" pattern, which brought persistent anomalous cold and precipitation to the eastern half of North America in addition to record-breaking warmth and drought conditions in California.



This 2020/2021 year hasn't been quite as dry as those "RRR" years, but it's still well below average...

No such ridge. High pressure areas don't stick around long.


The Parrot Killer

Debunked in my sig. - tmiddles

Google keeps track of paranoid talk and i'm not on their list. I've been evaluated and certified. - keepit

nuclear powered ships do not require nuclear fuel. - Swan

While it is true that fossils do not burn it is also true that fossil fuels burn very well - Swan
22-01-2021 03:07
Spongy IrisProfile picture★★★★☆
(1643)
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
Spongy Iris wrote:
Into the Night wrote:
It's that Utah high. It's influencing weather all around the western area. High winds are seen all along the southern and eastern side of this strong high pressure area especially near mountains.

Mt. Diablo, as low as it is, is influenced by the Sierras. You are probably seeing it out of the North-Northeast because of the gap in the Lassen wilderness area.


The winds from the west have not been prevailing in western US. Maybe for past couple or few months. From around Utah to the Pacific coast, it seems mostly winds from east prevailing.

Even in the Pacific, just off west coast of US, winds have been prevailing from North and Northeast.


Guess you forgot that series of storms in December that came with the usual southwest winds.


Didn't say winds never have been coming from the west past couple months. Just more often than not, looks like they have been coming from the east or north. Seems like winds from the west have been missing western US more so lately.

It's that Utah high. It's a stubborn one. It won't move.
We get the warm air up from where you are. It's quite balmy around here of late, with highs into the 50's, in January.

This is not the first winter we've had like this. I once helped by father build a fence during Christmas vacation because the weather was so nice and warm at that time.

This year, we got snow on Solstice day, but haven't seen a flake since (except of course in the mountains, where there is a LOT of snow this year due to the higher than normal precipitation this year). We did get a lot of rain here not so long ago, causing flood watches and warnings. It looks like this year we won't get much if any snow in the lowlands. The coldest ocean temperatures have past (the generally lag the solstice by a couple of weeks) and the Utah high is preventing the usual pattern this year. Now the Sun is moving northward again.


That high pressure ridge looks to be surrounding Utah and extending into Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona.

Maybe it will wind up in a similar category as the "Ridiculously Resilient Ridge," which caused drought from ~ 2010 to 2016 in CA.

Rainfall this season has been 50 % lower than typical I read. Last rainy season it tapered off in February 2020 and seemed to become a drier climate.

2016 to 2019 were pretty wet years, refilling reservoirs from the drought.

No. High pressure areas don't stick around for years.


The Ridiculously Resilient Ridge was characterized by a broad region of anomalously positive geopotential height on monthly to annual timescales. This persistent high pressure system acted to "block" the prevailing mid-latitude Westerlies, shifting the storm track northward and suppressing extratropical cyclone (winter storm) activity along the West Coast of the United States. Such a pattern is similar to—but of greater magnitude and longevity than—atmospheric configurations noted during previous California droughts.

This anomalous atmospheric feature disrupted the North Pacific storm track during the winters of 2012/13, 2013/14, 2014/15, resulting in extremely dry and warm conditions in California and along much of the West Coast. The Ridge comprised the western half of a well-defined atmospheric ridge-trough sequence associated with an unusually amplified "North American winter dipole" pattern, which brought persistent anomalous cold and precipitation to the eastern half of North America in addition to record-breaking warmth and drought conditions in California.



This 2020/2021 year hasn't been quite as dry as those "RRR" years, but it's still well below average...

No such ridge. High pressure areas don't stick around long.


Next you'll tell me the drought never happened. Fake news!


22-01-2021 03:31
Into the NightProfile picture★★★★★
(21599)
Spongy Iris wrote:
Next you'll tell me the drought never happened. Fake news!


The so-called 'drought' that hits the SOTC from time to time is normal and natural. Much of the SOTC is a desert or near desert conditions.

The so-called 'drought' is really just mismanagement of water resources in the SOTC. Typical problems with oligarchies and dictatorships.


The Parrot Killer

Debunked in my sig. - tmiddles

Google keeps track of paranoid talk and i'm not on their list. I've been evaluated and certified. - keepit

nuclear powered ships do not require nuclear fuel. - Swan

While it is true that fossils do not burn it is also true that fossil fuels burn very well - Swan
22-01-2021 06:00
IBdaMannProfile picture★★★★★
(14412)
Into the Night wrote:The so-called 'drought' is really just mismanagement of water resources in the SOTC. Typical problems with oligarchies and dictatorships.

Well, there you have it. Climate Change due to human activity. QED.

Oh, and Climate Change due to human activity is unambiguously defined as the observed change in the global climate due to human activity. So there. Nanny-nanny-boo-boo! Choke on the thettled thienth, pal.

Oh, and the first law of econodynamics states that dollars can be printed, but you can never increase their number.

So ... YOUR WRONG!

.


I don't think i can [define it]. I just kind of get a feel for the phrase. - keepit

A Spaghetti strainer with the faucet running, retains water- tmiddles

Clouds don't trap heat. Clouds block cold. - Spongy Iris

Printing dollars to pay debt doesn't increase the number of dollars. - keepit

If Venus were a black body it would have a much much lower temperature than what we found there.- tmiddles

Ah the "Valid Data" myth of ITN/IBD. - tmiddles

Ceist - I couldn't agree with you more. But when money and religion are involved, and there are people who value them above all else, then the lies begin. - trafn

You are completely misunderstanding their use of the word "accumulation"! - Climate Scientist.

The Stefan-Boltzman equation doesn't come up with the correct temperature if greenhouse gases are not considered - Hank

:*sigh* Not the "raw data" crap. - Leafsdude

IB STILL hasn't explained what Planck's Law means. Just more hand waving that it applies to everything and more asserting that the greenhouse effect 'violates' it.- Ceist
22-01-2021 17:27
gfm7175Profile picture★★★★★
(3314)
IBdaMann wrote:
Into the Night wrote:The so-called 'drought' is really just mismanagement of water resources in the SOTC. Typical problems with oligarchies and dictatorships.

Well, there you have it. Climate Change due to human activity. QED.

Oh, and Climate Change due to human activity is unambiguously defined as the observed change in the global climate due to human activity. So there. Nanny-nanny-boo-boo! Choke on the thettled thienth, pal.

Oh, and the first law of econodynamics states that dollars can be printed, but you can never increase their number.

So ... YOUR WRONG!

.

(!) Official sources have verified the veracity of these claims.
Edited on 22-01-2021 17:28
22-01-2021 18:41
IBdaMannProfile picture★★★★★
(14412)
gfm7175 wrote:
IBdaMann wrote:
Into the Night wrote:The so-called 'drought' is really just mismanagement of water resources in the SOTC. Typical problems with oligarchies and dictatorships.

Well, there you have it. Climate Change due to human activity. QED.

Oh, and Climate Change due to human activity is unambiguously defined as the observed change in the global climate due to human activity. So there. Nanny-nanny-boo-boo! Choke on the thettled thienth, pal.

Oh, and the first law of econodynamics states that dollars can be printed, but you can never increase their number.

So ... YOUR WRONG!

.

(!) Official sources have verified the veracity of these claims.


Independent researchers have confirmed the story.

A bipartisan commision has revealed the findings to be true.

Fact Check: TRUE

.


I don't think i can [define it]. I just kind of get a feel for the phrase. - keepit

A Spaghetti strainer with the faucet running, retains water- tmiddles

Clouds don't trap heat. Clouds block cold. - Spongy Iris

Printing dollars to pay debt doesn't increase the number of dollars. - keepit

If Venus were a black body it would have a much much lower temperature than what we found there.- tmiddles

Ah the "Valid Data" myth of ITN/IBD. - tmiddles

Ceist - I couldn't agree with you more. But when money and religion are involved, and there are people who value them above all else, then the lies begin. - trafn

You are completely misunderstanding their use of the word "accumulation"! - Climate Scientist.

The Stefan-Boltzman equation doesn't come up with the correct temperature if greenhouse gases are not considered - Hank

:*sigh* Not the "raw data" crap. - Leafsdude

IB STILL hasn't explained what Planck's Law means. Just more hand waving that it applies to everything and more asserting that the greenhouse effect 'violates' it.- Ceist
22-01-2021 19:15
gfm7175Profile picture★★★★★
(3314)
IBdaMann wrote:
gfm7175 wrote:
IBdaMann wrote:
Into the Night wrote:The so-called 'drought' is really just mismanagement of water resources in the SOTC. Typical problems with oligarchies and dictatorships.

Well, there you have it. Climate Change due to human activity. QED.

Oh, and Climate Change due to human activity is unambiguously defined as the observed change in the global climate due to human activity. So there. Nanny-nanny-boo-boo! Choke on the thettled thienth, pal.

Oh, and the first law of econodynamics states that dollars can be printed, but you can never increase their number.

So ... YOUR WRONG!

.

(!) Official sources have verified the veracity of these claims.


Independent researchers have confirmed the story.

A bipartisan commision has revealed the findings to be true.

Fact Check: TRUE

.

Well, there you have it ITN, independent researchers, a bipartisan commission, and a fact checker have spoken. Conform or be terminated.
23-01-2021 04:40
James___
★★★★★
(5513)
gfm7175 wrote:
IBdaMann wrote:
gfm7175 wrote:
IBdaMann wrote:
Into the Night wrote:The so-called 'drought' is really just mismanagement of water resources in the SOTC. Typical problems with oligarchies and dictatorships.

Well, there you have it. Climate Change due to human activity. QED.

Oh, and Climate Change due to human activity is unambiguously defined as the observed change in the global climate due to human activity. So there. Nanny-nanny-boo-boo! Choke on the thettled thienth, pal.

Oh, and the first law of econodynamics states that dollars can be printed, but you can never increase their number.

So ... YOUR WRONG!

.

(!) Official sources have verified the veracity of these claims.


Independent researchers have confirmed the story.

A bipartisan commision has revealed the findings to be true.

Fact Check: TRUE

.

Well, there you have it ITN, independent researchers, a bipartisan commission, and a fact checker have spoken. Conform or be terminated.



And when looking for a decent argument, this nothing is it. Trump lost and now it's all about being "terminated". You guys really need to come up with better arguments.
Is your sperm count low? Maybe you guys just have low testosterone levels? We can solve this. You guys can perform better. Need visual stimulation?

p.s., that's a colander in her hands and she is "making salad". But I guess you guys prefer venison to a "good" salad, right?

p.s., if she is making the salad, salad is good.
Attached image:


Edited on 23-01-2021 04:44
23-01-2021 04:46
James___
★★★★★
(5513)
More salad. Really guys?
Attached image:

23-01-2021 05:37
James___
★★★★★
(5513)
James___ wrote:
More salad. Really guys?


Wouldn't you like to eat some salad tonight? Just asking for a friend.




Edited on 23-01-2021 05:39
23-01-2021 06:21
James___
★★★★★
(5513)
I did share this with someone who looks like her. She's a vegetarian and apparently tuna is vegan. Who would have thought?

The video; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5Sy-HsxAFQ&list=LL&index=2
What makes science fun. I mean seriously, why else bother with science?

Edited on 23-01-2021 06:48
23-01-2021 07:02
IBdaMannProfile picture★★★★★
(14412)
James___ wrote:p.s., that's a colander in her hands

Nope. That object is known by a different word: "bowl"

.


I don't think i can [define it]. I just kind of get a feel for the phrase. - keepit

A Spaghetti strainer with the faucet running, retains water- tmiddles

Clouds don't trap heat. Clouds block cold. - Spongy Iris

Printing dollars to pay debt doesn't increase the number of dollars. - keepit

If Venus were a black body it would have a much much lower temperature than what we found there.- tmiddles

Ah the "Valid Data" myth of ITN/IBD. - tmiddles

Ceist - I couldn't agree with you more. But when money and religion are involved, and there are people who value them above all else, then the lies begin. - trafn

You are completely misunderstanding their use of the word "accumulation"! - Climate Scientist.

The Stefan-Boltzman equation doesn't come up with the correct temperature if greenhouse gases are not considered - Hank

:*sigh* Not the "raw data" crap. - Leafsdude

IB STILL hasn't explained what Planck's Law means. Just more hand waving that it applies to everything and more asserting that the greenhouse effect 'violates' it.- Ceist
23-01-2021 07:06
James___
★★★★★
(5513)
IBdaMann wrote:
James___ wrote:p.s., that's a colander in her hands

Nope. That object is known by a different word: "bowl"

.



We simply have different purposes. I like both salad, vegan and tuna.
The video was made by someone. And their women liked their pursuits.
Doubtful you could imagine owning their vehicles and driving them like that.
Where it all begins. And with me, I'm up for the game.


p.s., the gals in the video might fit under the description of being used and abused.
Edited on 23-01-2021 07:12
23-01-2021 08:16
Spongy IrisProfile picture★★★★☆
(1643)
Cute Killer whale toy in that video... At 2:14

Hey check it out, climate change gives rise to Killer whales in the Arctic.

https://news.mongabay.com/2020/07/narwhals-beware-killer-whales-are-on-the-rise-in-the-arctic/

Tilikum must be pleased...

We have got a line in the sky...



Edited on 23-01-2021 08:28
23-01-2021 08:35
duncan61
★★★★★
(2021)
love it.Killer whales bad narwhals good.I know what happens to scientists who go to study something and come back and say everything is fine.They do not get to go again




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