How can the Washington Times justify publishing claptrap like the following 
 article?
It is well written in terms of English language usage,  but that is  where 
any plaudits
need to end. Here is a an issue that falls under the rubric "science."  
Instead, the
whole essay is impressionistic, cherry picks snippets of information as if  
they
are definitive, and takes no account of evidence that supports a very  
different
viewpoint than that of the author.
 
When glaciers around the world, including North America, start to grow  
again
is the day that I will regard global warming as false, but not one day  
before.
no matter how over-the-top and stupid some climate alarmists may be.
 
Oregon is on  track to have the lowest rainfall in recorded weather  
history,
a 20+ inch shortfall this year. For the past decade the shortfall has  
averaged
around 10 inches. All that our record setting winter storm, just passed,  
did,
was to recover about 1 inch of precipitation ( equal to 10 inches of  snow).
Hopefully the past 10 years is a fluke, but this is not good.
 
Billy
 
-----------------------
 
 
 
 
 
 
PRUDEN: The global warming scam that will not  die

 
Dec 16, 2013
 
By _Wesley  Pruden_ (http://www.washingtontimes.com/staff/wesley-pruden/)  
- 
The Washington  Times
 
 
We were all supposed to be dead by now, fried to a toasty potatolike chip. 
Or  doomed to die with the polar bears. It was to be a soggy end for the 
most  beautiful planet in the cosmos and for all the passengers riding on it. 
The  global alarmists never quite got their story of fright and fear 
straight,  whether by now we would be fried or frozen. 
First they warned of global warming, and when they needed a new narrative  “
global warming” became “climate change.” They finally settled on something 
they  could prove because the climate does, in fact, change. First it 
rains, and then  the sun comes out. Then it rains again. Rain, sun, rain, sun, 
drip, drip and  dry. The narrative is ever new. 
There was always a scarcity of evidence that the globe was on a wild tear,  
but there was never a scarcity of alarm. We got bedtime stories of ghosts 
and  goblins from the graveyard, wild monsters from Boggy Creek, even a 
creature from  a black lagoon and all kinds of other things that make the night 
a 
time of  fearsome fun and games. _Al Gore_ 
(http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/al-gore/) , who had a lot  of time on 
his hands after his _White 
House_ (http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/white-house/)  gig  was aborted, 
even made a movie about it. It’s still popular in certain circles  on 
_Halloween_ (http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/halloween/)   night. 
Only 13 years ago (and 13 is the unluckiest of the numbers, which is pretty 
 scary, too), a scientist at the climate-research unit of Britain’s 
_University  of East Anglia_ 
(http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/university-of-east-anglia/)  predicted 
that “within a few years’ time” a snowfall would be 
 “a vary rare and exciting event. Children just aren’t going to know what 
snow  is.” Some of the newspapers eagerly cooperated with spreading the “
news.” One of  them reported that for the first time a well-known toy shop on 
London’s Regent  Street had no sleds on display. Who needs scientific 
evidence when you have a  story like that? 
That was then, and this is now, and Britain is huddled against predictions  
that 2013-14 will be one of the coldest and wettest winters in a very long 
time.  “Worst winter for decades,” cried the Daily Express. “
Record-breaking snow  predicted for November.” And so it came to pass. By the 
end of 
November, British  teeth were chattering, and snow, ice and plummeting 
temperatures were at hand  all across “the sceptr’d isle,” and it wasn’t yet 
winter. 
The kids were getting  lots of lessons in “snow,” the snow they were never 
going to see. 
The global-warming hysteria grew quickly after that early prediction of a  
scarcity of snow. Certain scientists with more ambition than sense saw  
opportunity lying close at hand. With the falling snow could come falling 
grants 
 to pay for learned papers. Learned academics have learned that a feverish 
alarm,  served with a dollop of hysteria, can move the learned nonsense out 
of the  faculty lounge and into the newspapers and onto television screens. 
And not just  in Old Blighty, whence the scam originated. 
_James  Hansen_ (http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/james-hansen/) , 
whose career at NASA gave him the credentials to be taken seriously  even when 
he didn’t sound serious, predicted that in the decade after 2020 the  
average annual temperature would rise by 9 degrees, with more heat to come. 
Soon  
we would be boiling like lobsters. An ambitious young man with his sights on 
 medicine or the law might set his sights higher, and consider a career in 
fans  and air conditioning. 
_Mr. Hansen_ (http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/james-hansen/) ,  in an 
op-ed essay in The Washington Post, blames everything on “climate change”  
— the European heat wave of 2003, the Russian heat wave of 2010, 
catastrophic  droughts in Texas and Oklahoma last year. To discount his view of 
what’s 
at  stake — a climactic version of hope and change — “would be like 
quitting your  job and playing the lottery every morning to pay the bills.” 
The admiration _Mr. Hansen_ 
(http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/james-hansen/)  and  his like-minded 
colleagues have for themselves is as 
breathtaking as their  contempt for all who disagree with them. The more their 
scam 
crumbles, the  louder they shout its particulars. _Mr. Hansen_ 
(http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/james-hansen/)  says  he started 
speaking out about 
climate change again, after a period of relative  reticence, because he did 
not want his grandchildren to say, “Pa, you understood  what was happening, 
but you never made it clear.” Now that events are making it  clear what a 
scam global warming really is, those grandchildren are more likely  to say, “
Pa, why did you tell all those fibs and stretchers for so  long?”


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