How many times have we climate realists been told that massive winter snow storms, cold snaps, and other weather phenomenon cannot be used to prove that anthropogenic global warming is a complete load of mule fritters? Ah, but……
In Weather Chaos, a Case for Global Warming
The floods battered New England, then Nashville, then Arkansas, then Oklahoma — and were followed by a deluge in Pakistan that has upended the lives of 20 million people.
The summer’s heat waves baked the eastern United States, parts of Africa and eastern Asia, and above all Russia, which lost millions of acres of wheat and thousands of lives in a drought worse than any other in the historical record.
Seemingly disconnected, these far-flung disasters are reviving the question of whether global warming is causing more weather extremes.
The collective answer of the scientific community can be boiled down to a single word: probably.
Because, you know, the climate is changing. Unlike the rest of the past 4 billion years of Earth’s history, during which time the climate was static and completely predictable.
