Are all the Doctors leading climate departments at top scientific universities in the U.S. like MIT and Georgia Tech also fools? Note that they all have directly stated that AGW does not exist. I guess that you will just label them "deniers" and state their careful factual research does not matter & should not be quoted. P.S. - All of your climate models have failed. If all 73 of your models for trading failed to provide alignment with the market then you would be deemed a complete failure - as well as blowing up your account.
The deniers are part of the three percent. If you want to believe in the three percent opinion go right ahead. It's what I would expect a total moron like you to do.
We got four inches of snow last night here in northern Atlanta. On top of the ice and snow we got yesterday. Damn global warming.
You keep acting like the messenger matters... Its the message that matters.. the data. I have not seen single agw nutter highly paid scientists deny a. the models were far more co2 sensitive then reality b. that accumulation or dissipation of CO2 trails changes in Ocean temperature. finally... your critique (below) makes no sense -- the author is making distinctions without any sort of important difference.
Where's the snow? On the ground in 49 of 50 states Snow is on the ground in 49 out of the 50 states — only the Sunshine State of Florida is completely snow-free, according to a map produced Thursday morning by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (This doesn't mean that those 49 states are snow-covered, of course, only that some part of each state has snow.) Although this map doesn't show it, there is snow in Hawaii, where webcams are showing snow on the high peaks of the mountain volcanoes of Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea. HAWAII SNOW: Webcam from peak of volcano The map also doesn't include Alaska, but it's a given that most of that state is snow-covered this time of year. A quick check with the National Weather Service forecast office in Fairbanks found 19 inches of snow on the ground there. There doesn't appear to be much snow on the ground in Texas or Louisiana, and with the forecast of mild temperatures, it doesn't figure to last much longer there, if it even makes it through the day Thursday. The map shows how sparse the snow is in parts of the West, as only small parts of Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico are showing snow because of the ongoing drought and warmth.
Maybe you should tell that to theNew York Times GW alsrmist dickweed who says we are witnessing the end of snow.
Anyway, some here may recognize a familiar strain in this article on another "too much of a good thing" substance... The man who tried to warn us about sugar By Julia Llewellyn Smith, The Daily Telegraph February 13, 2014 12:04 PM " A couple of years ago, an out-of-print book published in 1972 by a long-dead British professor suddenly became a collector Ugh. I give up on this new forum software. Baron, rollback please.