It’s Hot Out, but It’s Been a Lot Hotter, In More Places, For Longer, with Less CO2 – And Anything Else is a Lie

by
Steve MacDonald

Small fortunes have been dumped into media (like NPR, for example) to promote climate columns and cult stories promoting apocalyptic prognostications. You did this (whatever it is), and only socialism can save us! This week “This” is more of that hottest hotness ever (with a side of rain and flooding).

New England has seen what may turn out to be record rainfall for July, but it is not extreme or exceptional. In fact, after years of normal or just above normal, punctuated by “media that cry wolf” drought stories, you could say we were due. I won’t waste time on that because the bigger story is global and warming.

Record heat, blah blah blah. And it’s not even a new lie.

 

 

It’s hot every summer, and it’s always the hottest, whatever ever, but the narratives the paid-for climate mountebanks in the corporate media are selling these days are bigger bottles of piss than usual.

The Globe is melting! … Bullsh!t.

In 1957 a temperature of 100 degrees was recorded above the Arctic Circle. It was hot up there back then, and with only a fraction of the fraction of a fraction of atmospheric CO2, we are meant to fear today over cooler temps.

Back in the 1920s and 1930s, temps soared, setting what continued to be the hottest temps and sustained heatwaves on record, not just in the US but around the world. In other words, the hottest, whatever ever folks losing their minds today need to shut up and look back about 100 years to find the truth. But as Tony Heller reminds us in Climate Fakery Part 11, they can’t or won’t do that because it puts a hitch in their global warming fraud step.

Check out the epic fraud.

 

 

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

Share to...