It doesn't matter if they are fudged added to subtracted multiplied or divided. All the temps are going up. Except the stratosphere which is going down as theory predicts. And the ice is melting.
No global warming is not " an invention of some policy wonk". That is an idiotic thing to say. Conservative? See.....CO2 is greenhouse gas and.....................oh fuk it nevermind.
Well then.... please publish the url what contains the raw historic data from temperature reporting stations for download. I would be happy to have it.
So you admit that raw temperature data from reporting stations is no longer available for download on the web, eh?
I actually don't know. But if it was you would use a y scale of one million to make it look perfectly flat. Because you are essentially a liar.
If you assert the raw temperature data from reporting stations is still available then post the url to the source. Otherwise everyone knows I am correct and you are wrong. It is that simple.
Seems you're now too late. Looks like it's been published. Keep up your spirit for the fight of whatever you really want, if you still want to! Maybe you definitely should upload your previously downloaded data on the Internet to the public for further study, after checking copyright and permission with the source provider. Good luck! Q http://www.argo.ucsd.edu/global_change_analysis.html Ocean temperature and heat content Over the past 50 years, the oceans have absorbed more than 80% of the total heat added to the air/sea/land/cyrosphere climate system (Levitus et al, 2005). As the dominant reservoir for heat, the oceans are critical for measuring the radiation imbalance of the planet and the surface layer of the oceans plays the role of thermostat and heat source/sink for the lower atmosphere. Levitus et al 2012, recently, and Domingues et al (2008) and Levitus et al (2009) previously, have estimated the multi-decadal upper ocean heat content using best-known corrections to systematic errors in the fall rate of expendable bathythermographs (Wijffels et al, 2008). For the upper 700m, the increase in heat content was 24 x 1022 J (±2.S.E.) since 1955. This is consistent with the comparison by Roemmich and Gilson (2009) of Argo data with the global temperature time-series of Levitus et al (2005), finding a warming of the 0 - 2000 m ocean by 0.06°C since the (pre-XBT) early 1960's. UQ