Even the Pope sides with Futurecurrents

this is what I said.

1. you don't have to a scientist to know that computer models are not the same as real science. If they don't know how to model clouds and we know they don't because we have seen nasa and other scientists admit it... we know the models are just speculations not real science.

I was not intending to judge modeling in other areas.


Yes computer modeling certainly is real science you idiot. Try telling aeronautical engineers that computer modeling doesn't work.

And you still have not addressed the merchant of doubt thing.
 
http://www.vencoreweather.com/blog/...ext-week-and-then-expands-into-the-eastern-us

1480530799813
 
2016 Climate Trends Continue to Break Records
Two key climate change indicators -- global surface temperatures and Arctic sea ice extent -- have broken numerous records through the first half of 2016, according to NASA analyses of ground-based observations and satellite data.



Each of the first six months of 2016 set a record as the warmest respective month globally in the modern temperature record, which dates to 1880, according to scientists at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York. The six-month period from January to June was also the planet's warmest half-year on record, with an average temperature 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.4 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the late nineteenth century.
 
Record cold coming to ‘almost entire USA’ – Low temperature records set to be SHATTERED


Follow @ClimateDepot

Climatologist Dr. Roger Pielke Sr. announced: 'I cannot recall last time I have seen such a cold anomaly forecast across almost entire USA.'

1-Twitter.clipular-282x300.png


Cold Records are going to be SHATTERED! - “By the end of NEXT week, some states will be running 36 F BELOW NORMAL."

Meteorologist Paul Dorian of Vencore, Inc.: WIDESPREAD BLAST OF COLD AIR PLUNGES FROM ALASKA TO THE WESTERN US EARLY NEXT WEEK AND THEN EXPANDS INTO THE EASTERN US**
 
September 2016 Was the Warmest Ever Recorded

This September was the hottest September since modern recordkeeping began, according to researchers at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS).

In addition, it was the 11th month of record-high temperatures in the past year, according to the GISS, which began collecting data in 1880.

With the exception of June of this year, every month since October 2015 has set a temperature record.

July and August of this year were the hottest months ever recorded. June 2016 was previously reported to have been the warmest June on record, but a GISS updated analysis showed that it was actually the third-warmest June on record.

GISS Director Gavin Schmidt stressed in a statement that "while monthly rankings are newsworthy, they are not nearly as important as long-term trends."

Eberhard Faust, the head of climate risks research for Munich Re, a reinsurance company that tracks natural disasters, told ABC News today that there are several factors that may have influenced the past months of record-breaking temperatures.

One factor is the "global, long-term warming trend, which is driven by human-made climate change."
 
I notice he did not blame man made co2.

the warming trend which has now reversed in the last few months was caused by el nino.
La nina may be on the way. which typically will make things much cooler

2016 may go down as a warm one... but 2017 is likely to be cooler.


UAH_LT_1979_thru_October_2016_v6-550x318.gif



September 2016 Was the Warmest Ever Recorded

This September was the hottest September since modern recordkeeping began, according to researchers at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS).

In addition, it was the 11th month of record-high temperatures in the past year, according to the GISS, which began collecting data in 1880.

With the exception of June of this year, every month since October 2015 has set a temperature record.

July and August of this year were the hottest months ever recorded. June 2016 was previously reported to have been the warmest June on record, but a GISS updated analysis showed that it was actually the third-warmest June on record.

GISS Director Gavin Schmidt stressed in a statement that "while monthly rankings are newsworthy, they are not nearly as important as long-term trends."

Eberhard Faust, the head of climate risks research for Munich Re, a reinsurance company that tracks natural disasters, told ABC News today that there are several factors that may have influenced the past months of record-breaking temperatures.

One factor is the "global, long-term warming trend, which is driven by human-made climate change."
 
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