Recent Posts

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A More Honest Climate Science? Maybe scientific journals are ready to move past the era of politicized pronouncements
By Marc Morano
May 16, 2024
10:43 am
https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-more-honest-climate-science-82f928a0?mod=opinion_lead_pos12&mc_cid=910009ce82

By James Freeman

A plague of our age is the abuse of scientific credentials to advance political ideologies. But maybe there’s hope that establishment scientific journals will now chart a different path. Giving cause for fresh hope is Nature magazine’s publication of a comment by Ulf Büntgen of the University of Cambridge, who writes on the importance of distinguishing scientific discovery from political advocacy:

… I am foremost concerned by an increasing number of climate scientists becoming climate activists, because scholars should not have a priori interests in the outcome of their studies. Like in any academic case, the quest for objectivity must also account for all aspects of global climate change research. While I have no problem with scholars taking public positions on climate issues, I see potential conflicts when scholars use information selectively or over-attribute problems to anthropogenic warming, and thus politicise climate and environmental change. Without self-critique and a diversity of viewpoints, scientists will ultimately harm the credibility of their research and possibly cause a wider public, political and economic backlash.

Likewise, I am worried about activists who pretend to be scientists, as this can be a misleading form of instrumentalization. In fact, there is just a thin line between the use and misuse of scientific certainty and uncertainty, and there is evidence for strategic and selective communication of scientific information for climate action. (Non-)specialist activists often adopt scientific arguments as a source of moral legitimation for their movements, which can be radical and destructive rather than rational and constructive. Unrestricted faith in scientific knowledge is, however, problematic because science is neither entitled to absolute truth nor ethical authority. The notion of science to be explanatory rather than exploratory is a naïve overestimation that can fuel the complex field of global climate change to become a dogmatic ersatz religion for the wider public. It is also utterly irrational if activists ask to “follow the science” if there is no single direction. Again, even a clear-cut case like anthropogenically-induced global climate change does not justify the deviation from long-lasting scientific standards, which have distinguished the academic world from socio-economic and political spheres.

https://www.climatedepot.com/2024/05/16/a-more-honest-climate-science-maybe-scientific-journals-are-ready-to-move-past-the-era-of-politicized-pronouncements/
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Survey Shows Biden’s Climate Scam Scare Tactics Aren’t Working
by Warren Beatty  5 hours ago 

First, the stage must be set. The joke that currently occupies the Bully Pulpit says he’s the first climate president, says he’s making history by confronting the climate crisis, not denying it. [emphasis, links added]

“I’m taking the most significant action on climate ever in the history of the world.” Now to his latest tactic.


Biden gave a warning on climate change in September 2021, when he surveyed damage caused by Hurricane Ida in New York and New Jersey.

“We’ve got to listen to the scientists … they all tell us this is code red. … The nation and the world are in peril, and that’s not hyperbole. This is everybody’s crisis.”

https://climatechangedispatch.com/survey-shows-bidens-climate-scam-scare-tactics-arent-working/
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NOAA’s Latest Climate Data Shows the Global Land Region Temperature Anomaly Peaked in February 2016 Over 8 Years Ago
22 hours ago Guest Blogger 43 Comments

Guest essay by Larry Hamlin

The graphs below from the NOAA April 2024 Climate Report  show comparisons of the latest April 2024 Global Land and Ocean average temperature anomaly results compared to all other April months from 1850 to 2024 and all January through April Global Land and Ocean average temperature anomaly results from 1850 to 2024


Unfortunately, NOAA’s latest climate report does not provide comparisons of the April 2024 average temperature anomaly results for all months over time which led to an incomplete and misleading evaluation of the April 2024 outcome.

Fortunately, NOAA’s extensive climate temperature data base provides the information and data needed for making comparisons of April 2024 with all other months with that information and comparison results discussed below.

To provide better visibility of the differences between the results of all monthly measured average temperature anomalies (versus just looking at the month of April) a 30-year period from January 1995 to April 2024 is being used.     

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2024/05/17/noaas-latest-climate-data-shows-the-global-land-region-temperature-anomaly-peaked-in-february-2016-over-8-years-ago/
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Climate Change Weekly #506: Climate at a Glance Videos: Climate Fact Checks for Youths
16 hours ago Guest Blogger

The Heartland Institute has been a leading voice promoting sound science, economics, and policies concerning the issue of supposed human-caused climate change, in print, on radio and television, online, and at conferences and hearings.

Both independently and in conjunction with other experts and groups, we have published thorough peer-reviewed scientific studies and short booklets, like Why Scientists Disagree About Global Warming, and lengthy, copiously referenced multi-authored, tomes in the multi-volume Climate Change Reconsidered  series produced by the Non-governmental International Panel on Climate Change. We’ve also published original research demonstrating the flawed nature of the existing ground-based temperature measuring system which supplies biased temperature data for the United States and is incorporated into larger data sets and used to claim humans are causing unnatural rapid global warming.

Daily we published items at Climate Realism which refute the climate disaster du jour  hyped by the mainstream media as further proof humans are causing a climate crisis. With this issue, we have now published 506 issues of Climate Change Weekly  discussing climate science, economic, and policy matters that are being ignored by the mainstream media, politicians, and in many respects by academia. Often the scientific studies discussed in CCW indicate that much less is known about the causes and consequences of climate change than the purveyors and mongers of climate doom would have the world believe. These studies often suggest that climate change is driven by factors other than human energy use, that the Earth has experienced warming and cooling before, and that there is no climate catastrophe in the offing.

gopbriefingroom.com/index.php?action=post;board=195.0
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It's useless junk.  F-15s are better.
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How we know that the sun changes climate (II). The present
Posted on May 17, 2024 by curryja | 42 Comments
by Javier Vinós

Part 2 of a 3-part series. Part I is here.

The effect of the Sun on climate has been debated for 200 years. The basic problem is that when we study the past, we observe strong climatic changes associated with prolonged periods of low solar activity, but when we observe the present, we are able to detect only small effects due to the 11-year solar cycle. There are several possible explanations for this discrepancy. But the main question is how the Sun affects climate.

In this article we examine the effects on climate caused by the 11-year solar cycle over the last few cycles and their relation to recent climate change.


The IPCC Says…
In its 5th Assessment Report, the IPCC used climate models to calculate the Sun’s contribution to warming. These models only take into account changes in the total energy coming from the Sun, which is known to vary by only 0.1%. Therefore, the IPCC’s answer is that the Sun has contributed nothing to the warming. This is absurd given our knowledge of past climate and the fact that we passed through a 70-year solar maximum in the 2nd half of the 20th century, one of the most active periods of solar activity in thousands of years.

https://judithcurry.com/2024/05/17/how-we-know-that-the-sun-changes-climate-ii-the-present/#more-31234
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Climate Change / Debunking the Cheap Renewables Myth
« Last post by rangerrebew on Today at 10:55:06 am »
Debunking the Cheap Renewables Myth
We keep getting told that wind and solar renewables are cheap, yet our bills keep going up. So, what's going on?
DAVID TURVER
MAY 15, 2024

Last week, I decided to write a Twitter/X post to summarise how much we are paying for renewables. It got far more traction than I anticipated, so I thought it would be helpful to convert it and extend it a little to make a bonus article on Substack that can act as a succinct response to all those who still insist on claiming renewables are cheap.

In the UK, renewables are subsidised by three different schemes. Feed-in-Tariffs (FiTs) fund mostly solar power. The latest report for 2022-23 shows the scheme cost over £1.7bn and average total payment was ~£193/MWh, about 3X the current cost of gas-fired power at around £65/MWh (see Figure A).
 
Contracts for Difference (CfDs) fund a range of technologies, but most of the subsidy goes to offshore wind. Latest data from the LCCC shows the subsidy per MWh fell dramatically during the energy crisis, but is now back at £95/MWh for offshore wind, £73/MWh onshore and £60/MWh for solar. April 2024 was a record month for overall subsidies with £268m paid out with average strike prices at £146/MWh for offshore wind, £113/MWh for onshore and £110/MWh for solar power (See Figure B).

https://davidturver.substack.com/p/debunking-cheap-renewables-myth
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F-35 Lightning II: Advanced Capabilities Marred by Readiness Challenges
Story by Mia Lee • 1w
 
The F-35 Lightning II stands as a testament to modern engineering, a multirole fifth-generation fighter jet that has claimed its place in the skies as the pinnacle of airborne combat technology.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/technology/f-35-lightning-ii-advanced-capabilities-marred-by-readiness-challenges/ss-BB1lXXtq?ocid=widgetonlockscreen&cvid=d5fa028690aa479b897a8a7d7ba98535&ei=118
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Second Amendment / Here's Why Gun Control Doesn't Work
« Last post by rangerrebew on Today at 10:44:14 am »
 
Here's Why Gun Control Doesn't Work
Story by Mike Fishmore • 15h
Gun ownership
© Source: Pixabay
The Second Amendment, ratified in 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights, has been a subject of debate due to its somewhat ambiguous language, particularly the reference to a "well-regulated Militia" and the right of the people to "keep and bear Arms."
 
Over time, the emphasis on individual gun ownership has overshadowed the initial focus on the role of a well-regulated militia and the safeguarding of a free state. This shift has prompted extensive discussions on the original intent of the amendment and the evolving societal context in which it is applied.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/here-s-why-gun-control-doesn-t-work/ss-BB1mAeOp?ocid=widgetonlockscreen&cvid=d5fa028690aa479b897a8a7d7ba98535&ei=90
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Interest costs on the national debt just surpassed spending on defense, Medicare
Story by Megan Henney •



US debt will be an ‘important election issue,’ Brenda O’Connor Juanas says: These numbers are ‘scary’
 
Interest payments on the nation’s ballooning debt just eclipsed spending on defense and Medicare, worrying policy experts who have warned this threatens to undermine U.S. economic stability.

In the first seven months of fiscal year 2024, which began in October, spending on net interest surged to $514 billion, surpassing spending on both national defense ($498 billion) and Medicare ($465 billion). In fact, interest costs have topped spending on veterans, education and transportation combined.
 
"Rising debt will continue to put upward pressure on interest rates," the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), a nonpartisan group that advocates for lowering the national deficit, said in a statement. "Without reforms to reduce the debt and interest, interest costs will keep rising, crowd out spending on other priorities and burden future generations."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/personalfinance/interest-costs-on-the-national-debt-just-surpassed-spending-on-defense-medicare/ar-BB1mzXyR?ocid=widgetonlockscreen&cvid=d5fa028690aa479b897a8a7d7ba98535&ei=57
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