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TheClimateChanger

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  1. I didn’t start the discussion. Why don’t you instead call out the person or persons who did?
  2. Recent winters have been rather mild, although the most recent winter was colder. But in +1.5C world, they might actually be fairly ordinary winters. For all we know, last winter is as good as it gets in a +1.5C world. A warm winter in that world might bring even milder conditions. We just don't have enough data to say what a typical winter looks like in a +1.5C world, since we've only been at those levels for a couple of years. I mean the last glacial maximum was only ~6C colder, and that had mountains of ice burying many of these cities. Summer temperatures would have been hardpressed to get much above freezing for any extended periods of time, and snowfall would have been probable in every month of the calendar year. These days summers are warm and humid, with highs regularly in the 80s, and occasionally in the 90s. So, I don't think it should be controversial to say an increase of about 1/4 of the difference between pre-industrial average and glacial maximum is capable of causing a decrease in winter snowfall?
  3. Is there a mechanism by which snowfall can increase? I just don't understand what magical change is going to take place that we "cycle" into a snowier period. Makes zero sense in a rapidly warming world. Laughably stupid. Sure, there can still be snowier and colder winters from time to time, but I just don't see the current trend reversing? But maybe I am missing something?
  4. Cherrypicked? Please. Linear regressions from 1990 to the present show decreased snowfall at all of the closest stations. Say what you want about it being too short of a period, but the data clearly shows snowfall has decreased in my lifetime in the region. Regression of last 36 years (1989-1990 to 2024-2025), showing starting predicted value and ending predicted value. Toledo 39.0 -> 29.7 [excludes 1997/98 where only limited data is available; also, several years are missing altogether and there is other missing data, particularly 2003-2004, with no snow report prior to 1/1/04]. Erie, PA 109.9 -> 84.7 Mansfield, OH 53.6 -> 36.3 [excluding partial data in 97-98] Akron/Canton, OH 48.6 -> 41.3 [no data for 96-97] Pittsburgh, PA 44.2 -> 39.6 Even Buffalo, NY shows a negative trend over that period: 98.8 -> 90.1 Columbus, OH 29.0 -> 22.3 Dayton, OH 24.9 -> 23.4 Fort Wayne, IN 34.2 -> 28.7 Rochester, NY: 113.7 -> 80.4 Syracuse, NY: 151.1 -> 92.2 Cleveland, OH: 76.8 -> 44.0 Elkins, WV: 88.5 -> 45.4 Charleston, WV: 36.9 -> 18.6
  5. I thought you wanted it hotter. Also, not sure about drier summers, volcanos typically cause colder, wetter summers, no? 1992 was the 3rd wettest summer on record following the Pinatubo eruption.
  6. I don't know what trough was over the Ohio Valley last summer. The region saw the worst drought since the Drought Monitor began in 2000 for many areas, with the most 90+ days in decades [and hottest temps in decades in some spots].
  7. Severe Weather Statement National Weather Service Pittsburgh PA 302 PM EDT Fri May 16 2025 PAC125-161915- /O.CON.KPBZ.TO.W.0012.000000T0000Z-250516T1915Z/ Washington PA- 302 PM EDT Fri May 16 2025 ...TORNADO WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 315 PM EDT FOR SOUTH CENTRAL WASHINGTON COUNTY... At 302 PM EDT, a severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado was located 10 miles north of Waynesburg, moving east at 35 mph. HAZARD...Tornado. SOURCE...Radar indicated rotation. IMPACT...Flying debris will be dangerous to those caught without shelter. Mobile homes will be damaged or destroyed. Damage to roofs, windows and vehicles will occur. Tree damage is likely. Locations impacted include... Deemston, Marianna, Scenery Hill and Amity. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Move to an interior room on the lowest floor of a well-built building away from windows. If you are outdoors, in a mobile home, or in a vehicle, move to the closest substantial shelter and protect yourself from flying debris. && LAT...LON 4002 8024 4007 8024 4013 8011 4009 8008 4001 8006 4001 8020 TIME...MOT...LOC 1857Z 260DEG 31KT 4003 8025 TORNADO...RADAR INDICATED MAX HAIL SIZE...0.00 IN $$ Rackley
  8. Clearly the coldest spring on record in Nashua! Oh wait, if the month ended today, it would be 11th warmest [of 157 years] in nearby Concord. And 5th warmest out of a shortened 67-year hit-or-miss POR at Manchester. 1998's average is missing the entire month of March and tossed.
  9. Anyways, I digress. Look at this carbon capture scam. They couldn't even capture enough carbon to offset their own emissions!
  10. Not to mention, with no air conditioning or refrigeration, for that matter, climate change would have been much more devastating. There probably would've been billions of deaths already, so I think it would be viewed with much greater urgency. Of course, climate change wouldn't have progressed as it did without all of these modern amenities of industrial society in the first place.
  11. This might be controversial, but I'm not sure air conditioning has been a net positive. It has resulted in a huge rush of population to the so-called sunbelt. These places used to be backwoods hillbillies. I don't think most people realize this, but just 100 years ago, a sizable number of southern white people were illiterate. Not even talking about freed slaves, but the white population. This caused great harm to the interior northeast and Midwest, with a flight of companies to the south where there are laxer labor laws, low taxes, anti-Unionism, etc. If, after the defeat of the South and the freeing of the slaves, we had let them leave the Union, history would have been significantly different. We would have likely had more pro-Socialist politicians. Perhaps instead of a Georgia peanut farmer, a pro-labor Mafioso from Chicago or Detroit would have become president in 1976. Reagan would have stood no chance. The Southerners had nothing to lose since poor education and poverty was endemic to the region, so they just wrapped themselves in a flag (often, ironically, not even the American flag) and a bible. Can you imagine the megalopolitan paradise that an independent North, Midwest and West would have established without this flight to the bottom of the barrel on taxes and labor protections? It's somewhat problematic when a region responsible for 400k American deaths - that has always been unrepentant - can be allowed to become a region of growth at the expense of places who fought against the Southern War of Aggression. I mean the South's biggest exports in the mid 20th century were what - cotton and the KKK? Kind of like Hank Williams, Jr. "If the South Woulda Won" but instead the North wins and kicks the South out after freeing all of the slaves. In this hypothetical, the Great Depression probably doesn't occur - at least not with the same ferocity - and so Roosevelt is not elected to 4 consecutive terms. With no term limits, Bernie Sanders (or another left-leaning populist) may have become essentially president for life.
  12. Not sure the heat was the cause of the power outage. Sounds like severe thunderstorms took out two high voltage lines at a major power plant. And the riots were caused by opportunistic criminals, likely poisoned by the proliferation of leaded gasoline.
  13. By mean temperature, it is typically the hottest in the CWA. Maybe other portions of New Jersey outside of the Upton CWA are warmer. The siting near the Bay probably elevates overnight lows enough to offset the slight cooling effect on daytime maxima.
  14. Upstate data confirms 1977 as a cold summer. Syracuse - mean temp of 66.9F, which is 11th coldest on record. Last matched in 2000, and exceeded in 1992 - both recognized as extremely cold summers. Albany - mean temp of 68.0F, which is 16th coldest on record. As in the case of Syracuse, not seen since 2000. Pittsburgh - mean of 67.9F, second coldest on record. There hasn't been a year since that was even close to it. Perplexing how Central Park could reach 104F, when places upstream barely topped 90F that summer? What generated that heat? As you said, it can't get hot on southerly wind... so it must have come from the west? Yet there were no hot temperatures to the west.
  15. 1977 would be a summer of yore [in terms of cold, not heat] today. Freezing cold compared to most summers nowadays. Sorry, I don't buy all of those 100s at Central Park. Central Park is typically one of the cooler spots, not the absolute hottest spot. That makes zero sense. Why would a park be hotter than an asphalt-ridden airport? 74.8F mean at EWR is COLD compared to most summers. This is not believable:
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