Record Heat? Nope. Latest effort to gaslight humanity easily exposed as fraud
CO2 COALITION EXPOSES THE DECEIT
SOURCE: UK RELOADED
The featured article below is from the excellent website C02 Coalition.
We highly recommend that you take a tour of CO2 Coalition as it is a great resource for factual information and clear, well-reasoned commentary on the globalist-spawned Climate Hysteria.
The latest bout of hysteria, of course, has been the “record heat” of the “blistering furnace” variety that has been asserted for a couple of warm days in July (after a relatively cool June) that swiftly gave way to an ensuing period of relatively cool days. And of course we can’t quite discover where precisely this unprecedented blistering heat is supposed to have occurred, as the article below so aptly describes.
The shrieking assertions of the climate hysteria gaslighters are once again more noise than substance and so easily exposed as fabrications one can only marvel at how those making them so readily lay themselves open to ridicule.
Data Shows We’re NOT Seeing Record Heat
by Gregory Wrightstone
SOURCE: CO2 Coalition
Hotter Than the Fourth of July!
It was widely reported recently that July 4th, 2023 was the hottest day in Earth’s recorded history.
Paulo Ceppi, a climate scientist at London’s Grantham Institute stated: “It hasn’t been this warm since at least 125,000 years ago, which was the previous interglacial.” And, of course, it was reported that it was our fault due to our “sins of emission.”
This didn’t meet the smell test for the scientists at the CO2 Coalition. We know that previous warm periods were warmer than our modern temperatures. For example, during the Roman Warm Period there was citrus being grown in the north of England and barley was grown by Vikings on Greenland 1,000 years ago. Why aren’t they grown there now? It’s quite simple: Lower modern temperatures.
So, here at the CO2 Coalition, we did what scientists are trained to do:
We looked at the available data. Our Science and Research Associate Byron Soepyan reviewed temperature data from the US Historical Climatology Network and found that both the number of weather stations reporting temperature over 100 degrees F and the Maximum Average Temperature for July 4th were slightly declining since the record began in 1895 – not increasing – as Ceppi claimed.
The Great Texas Heat Wave
It is summer. It is hot in Texas. It is not unusual or unprecedented. Below is a chart of the percentage of days in Texas that were above 100 degrees Fahrenheit since 1895. Despite a significant and steady rise in CO2 emissions, there has been a decline in the occurrence of very hot days.