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By the way, the warm water just below the ocean’s surface this year is on par with that of the biggest El Niño ever recorded, in 1997-98. That event caused $35 billion in damages and was blamed for around 23,000 deaths worldwide.
Rezlooper
They can call it whatever they want, but I'll stick with climate change, global warming, whatever. Remember, last year was one of "the hottest on record" without El Nino. They already know this year is going to surpass last year and the year after that will surpass this year...Eventually they'll run out of names for it and have to face the truth.
jjkenobi
Rezlooper
They can call it whatever they want, but I'll stick with climate change, global warming, whatever. Remember, last year was one of "the hottest on record" without El Nino. They already know this year is going to surpass last year and the year after that will surpass this year...Eventually they'll run out of names for it and have to face the truth.
Last year was not hot here at all. The kids got to go swimming maybe five or six times. And this winter broke hundreds of records for cold. We're all hoping for some hot weather.
the2ofusr1
reply to post by Rezlooper
Oh and about the AGWarming "On Jan. 6, 2014, alone, approximately 50 daily record low temperatures were set, from Colorado to Alabama to New York, according to the National Weather Service. In some places temperatures were 40 degrees Fahrenheit colder than average. Now, an animation created from NASA satellite data shows just how the Arctic air brought a deep chill to the U.S this winter." wattsupwiththat.com...
I guess we could say it's colder because it's warmer lol
Nice snow in the mountains and plenty of rain in the desert.
defcon5
I find it amusing that every year now we have an “el nino”.
I don't recall ever hearing the term before the 80's, and its supposed to be “anomalous” by its very definition. Yet somehow this “anomaly” seems to have become the yearly norm.