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Old September 8th 17, 07:59 PM posted to sci.space.policy
Rob[_8_]
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Posts: 57
Default Houston Houston, do you hear me?

Fred J McCall wrote:
Rob wrote:

wrote:
On Wednesday, September 6, 2017 at 12:55:13 AM UTC-4, Fred J. McCall wrote:
jacob navia wrote:

Le 31/08/2017 Ã* 15:46, Fred J. McCall a écritÂ*:
In other words, like all GCC True Believers, the evidence only matters
when you say it does. If the AVERAGE temperature is going up, the
AVERAGE storm should be more severe and the AVERAGE number should be
going up. Why are neither of those two things true?

Categorie 5 Hurricane Irma will hit the U.S. this week-end. It is the
strongest hurricane since 10 years, with sustained gusts of 180 miles
per hour (289 Km/h) at the center.

There is no blinder person as the man who doesn't want to see.


So why the 10 year gap between 'strongest storm' given continual
global warming? Speaking of 'blinder' and all...

Then on Wednesday, September 6, 2017 at 6:48 AM, Fred J. McCall wrote:
A couple storms in one year isn't 'climate'.

You've got that right.

It is quite normal to have a 10 year gap between 'strongest storm'.
This is not about weather, it is climate.


And a week later, the strongest storm in recorded history hits
the carribean. Of course Fred still doesn't see any change.


Once again, one year of bad storms doesn't make 'climate'. I'm sorry
you're ignorant.


It was never claimed that bad storms make 'climate'.
It was claimed that storms get worse because of warming.
Of course not every storm. Of course not every year.
But it is apparent that the strongest storms are in recent years.