There is a reason I started calling it Hotcoldwetdry all the way back in 2011. And why it’s called a cult
Climate Change Is Fueling Extremes, Both Hot and Cold
On a typical winter day, the Arctic air that has gripped much of the United States this week should be a few thousand miles to the north, sitting atop the North Pole.
But as man-made climate change continues to disrupt global weather patterns, that mass of cold air, known as the polar vortex, is straying beyond its usual confines.
The escaped polar vortex is just one instance of extreme weather playing out right now around the world. With so much cold air much farther south than usual, typically frigid regions have become relatively balmy.
They just keep repeating this like a 2 year old who heard daddy say “f***”. On and on and on.
Colder colds. Hotter hots. These are the intense bouts of unusual weather that scientists for decades warned would become more common with global warming.
“This is the thing we’ve talked about with climate change,” said Judson Jones, a Times meteorologist and reporter. “The extremes are going to be more extreme.”
Which is a lie.
Warmists used to say that winter weather and cold were going to go away. Remember this?
The doomsday cult came up with a talking point to explain winter, namely, that it is also your fault.

On a typical winter day, the Arctic air that has gripped much of the United States this week should be a few thousand miles to the north, sitting atop the North Pole.

Our esteemed host is right in the middle of what the Weather Channel is calling “winter Storm Giannis,” supposedly about to dump three to five inches of
global warmingclimate change on Raleigh.