US Surface Temperature | June 2023 | -0.38 degrees F | Compared To 18 Year Average

I said it was hotter.

That is a personal observation retard.

WTF would anyone give a flying fuck about your WRONG personal observation when there are recorded FACTS.

And for the record "retard", when you say this as you did...

"...I live in Phoenix and it was far hotter 10 years ago then it is now...."

That is presented as an authoritative statement of fact and not opinion.

You have to say "it seemed hotter" or add an "imo" to the end to make it opinion.

So you are wrong in every regard but because you are stupid you will struggle to understand why.
 
WTF would anyone give a flying fuck about your WRONG personal observation when there are recorded FACTS.

And for the record "retard", when you say this as you did...

"...I live in Phoenix and it was far hotter 10 years ago then it is now...."

That is presented as an authoritative statement of fact and not opinion.

You have to say "it seemed hotter" or add an "imo" to the end to make it opinion.

So you are wrong in every regard but because you are stupid you will struggle to understand why.

Your avatar is creepy, it's like something out of a disgusting horror film.

Is that you?
 
Your avatar is creepy, it's like something out of a disgusting horror film.

Is that you?

Thats actor Joel Grey playing a chinese character in the movie Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins. In the 80s you could get away with white guys playing chinamen but not anymore
 
The Grip of Culture: The Social Psychology of Climate Catastrophism

My book ‘The Grip of Culture’, subtitled ‘The social psychology of climate change catastrophism’, is now published.

“Climate change catastrophism is a cultural disease haunting Western society. Andy West’s excellent study of this problem explains the different drivers of this disease. It is an important contribution to a debate where reason must prevail.” – Frank Furedi, emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Kent


You can find it in paperback on Amazon US, UK and Germany, plus it is also available as a FREE pdf from my publisher, the GWPF, see here.

The rear-cover synopsis reads:

“Attempts to explain attitudes to climate change, and the refusal of large parts of society to accept the idea of an imminent catastrophe, have largely foundered. This ground breaking book overturns the existing literature, developing a powerful new model of public attitudes based on the interaction of traditional religion and a new culture – a new faith – of climate catastrophism, which is instinctively accepted or rejected. At its centre is a series of measurements of public opinion, culled from major international polls, which make a strong case that society is now in the grip of a major new religion. That case is made still more powerful because the model is able to predict real-world outcomes, such as the deployment of renewables and the prevalence of climate protest groups in different countries.

The book ends with a warning. Cultures can bind societies together and cause great civilisations to grow and prosper. But they can also lead them to disaster. If society is truly in the grip of a new cultural entity, we should be very concerned.”

See this review by Andrew Montford:

“I HAVE been working in climate and energy for nearly 15 years, and it’s fair to say that it’s not often I find something that makes me radically change the way I look at the domain. But a new book, by Andy A West, has done just that.”

My book overlaps with some social aspects explored in Judith’s book, including the catastrophe narrative, the social nature of consensuses, and the highly tangled territory where group biases interact with, and damage, the enterprise of science. However, regarding the social aspects generally I see my book as exposing the ultimate root cause of the biases and the deep social need for arbitrary consensus. It does not explore much detail about what specific institutions and efforts are undermined by which biased advocate individuals or organisations, and indeed it does not delve into climate science or the IPCC procedures at all (see the note at the end of this post). The main presence of climate catastrophism is outside of science, and its culture can be characterised and measured from its footprint in global publics (inclusive of public authorities). However, climate catastrophism works to undermine all institutions that provide ‘rationality at social scale’, including democracy, the law (chapter 14), and science (which is considered generically).

https://judithcurry.com/2023/07/13/...ychology-of-climate-catastrophism/#more-30325
 
As always you can rely on climate scientists like Judith Curry to cut out the bullshit!

What’s causing the extremely warm temperatures in the North Atlantic?

Summary

The extreme North Atlantic conditions that developed in recent months are likely due to a combination of dynamical factors, including stochastic weather anomalies, regional positive feedbacks and global-scale changes. The high rate of recent Arc warming is particularly noticeable due to the extreme SST anomalies it produced; however comparable warming over periods of ~4 to 6 months occurred previously in late winter to spring seasons of 1983, 1987, 1989 and 2010 (Figure 2), which preceded a wide range of late summer hurricane anomalies.

The dominant cause of the warm SSTs is dynamical (atmospheric circulations) that modify surface wind speeds (evaporation; apparently the largest factor) and clouds (solar radiation). Minor non-cloud radiative impacts: Hunga-Tonga is a global effect, sulfate ship tracks is local ocean effect primarily in northern hemisphere, wildfire impact on oceans is relatively rare and event driven, and African dust is a regular summer feature that is characterized by discrete events. Cloud variability in most locations will dominate over aerosol forcing in terms of impacts on sea surface temperatures. Some minor Atlantic Ocean cooling can be expected with Canadian smoke and Saharan dust.

https://judithcurry.com/2023/07/02/...mely-warm-temperatures-in-the-north-atlantic/
 
The Holocene Thermal Maximum around Svalbard, Arctic North Atlantic; molluscs show early and exceptional warmth


Abstract
Shallow marine molluscs that are today extinct close to Svalbard, because of the cold climate, are found in deposits there dating to the early Holocene. The most warmth-demanding species found, Zirfaea crispata, currently has a northern limit 1000 km farther south, indicating that August temperatures on Svalbard were 6°C warmer at around 10.2–9.2 cal. ka BP, when this species lived there. The blue mussel, Mytilus edulis, returned to Svalbard in 2004 following recent warming, and after almost 4000 years of absence, excluding a short re-appearance during the Medieval Warm Period 900 years ago. Mytilus first arrived in Svalbard at 11 cal. ka BP, indicating that the climate was then as least as warm as present. This first warm period lasted from 11 to 9 cal. ka BP and was followed by a period of lower temperatures 9–8.2 cal. ka BP. After 8.2 cal. ka, the climate around Svalbard warmed again, and although it did not reach the same peak in temperatures as prior to 9 ka, it was nevertheless some 4°C warmer than present between 8.2 and 6 cal. ka BP. Thereafter, a gradual cooling brought temperatures to the present level at about 4.5 cal. ka BP. The warm early-Holocene climate around Svalbard was driven primarily by higher insolation and greater influx of warm Atlantic Water, but feedback processes further influenced the regional climate.
 
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