The heatwave of late August to early September 1953 was much hotter than the current heat wave. This year isn't even close to being a record. But thanks for the continuous stream of #FakeNews, superstition and junk science Bill.
https://realclimatescience.com/2018/08/the-heatwave-of-august-24-september-6-1953/ …pic.twitter.com/1Rg2wN9PYY
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It was 107 degrees at Hagerstown, Maryland on August 31, 1953 - twenty-five degrees warmer than this year's forecast. The abuse of science by people like
@BillNye and@MichaelEMann is completely inexcusable. https://realclimatescience.com/2018/08/the-heatwave-of-august-24-september-6-1953/ …pic.twitter.com/apbkNBVSbH
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If you had actually read the link I sent you, you would understand why your article is fraudulent, and why hiding pre-1979 data is extremely unethical. https://realclimatescience.com/2018/07/hiding-the-inconvenient-satellite-data/ …pic.twitter.com/ZhxrnrZ5yt
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ah, trumpsters: denying true science and facts, since 2016 ;)
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I have been exposing climate fraud since 2008. Lisa is unable to dispute any of the historical evidence I have presented, so she makes ad hominem attacks and appeals to authority.
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If it's record heat, why don't we call it something that refers to heat, like say, "Global Warming"? Calling it "Climate Change" sounds like the turning of the weather, which is what many of us look forward to during the year.
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Because climate and weather are two very different things :)
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Climate is generally measured over a very long period of time, whereas weather is what's happening at a given moment :)
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Thanks
@sci_connor! That's correct, climate change is not the changing seasons nor the changing everyday weather. Climate change refers to how the climate, not the weather, continues to change over a much longer period of time. :) -
Oh no! So, showing a weather report on TV is not how we should refer to "climate change"? Bummer on Nye for doing it. That silly scientist
@BillNye.
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Bill was helpfully showing that specific, extreme weather events (like the historic heat we are experiencing) can happen as a result of climate change.
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Still sounds like a fuzzy semantic to me. I'm going to go plant a tree.
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this is a helpful reference for the future, the layout is kind of cluttered and it's a bit tech-y, but it's a good summary: https://19january2017snapshot.epa.gov/climatechange/climate-change-basic-information_.html …
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Actually, it’s called “weather.” Regards, -Atmospheric scientists
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One record high temperature is just weather. A pattern of record high temperatures is climate change. In the past year, record highs have outnumbered record lows by 2:1. In the 50's it was 1:1.http://www.climatesignals.org/data/record-high-temps-vs-record-low-temps …
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Dunno about you Bill, but it's a nice cool 92F here in central PA...pic.twitter.com/68zZYRGOpt
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