Location: Dude, I am so sorry about whatever made you like this. Take it easy. Joined: 07.06.2007
Jan 22 @ 3:41 AM ET
SDRRepublic64 -Jan. 21, 2015 at 12:16pm
Didn’t watch him either. ALL I SEE IN OBAMA, IS EVIL, EVEN IN HIS VOICE. God gives me that discernment and if anyone doesn’t see or hear that evil in Obama, then they are part of the delusional crowd that Satan happily loves.
THIS PRESIDENT IS VERY, VERY, EVIL. Wake up people, please wake up and look at that man. Ask God to help you discern the evil in people and you will see it. I cannot look at Obama without getting literally ill. That is what happens when you gaze upon pure evil and God gives you that gift of discernment.
Right now, Obama is just being led by Satan with his demons (spiritual persuasion). Obama doesn’t realize how he is being manipulated by evil spirits. If Obama doesn’t repent, he will meet Satan face to face and it will be very ugly and sick. There are those of us who actually see these evil spirits working around people and it is hard to get past that sometimes without it affecting you emotionally.
NASHIK: The fewer sunspot activities on the Sun witnessed since the last two solar cycles might lead to a "mini ice age-like situation" in coming years, Shrinivas Aundhkar, the director of Mahatma Gandhi Mission, Centre for Astronomy and Space Technology, Nanded, said here on Tuesday.
"The sunspots that can be seen on the Sun have comparatively less temperature compared to other surfaces on it (Sun)," he said while addressing a gathering for a lecture, Get Ready for Little Ice Age, held as part of the Narendra Dabholkar lecture series.
Aundhkar, who has worked with scientists across the world on Sun-Earth connection, said, "The Sun undergoes two cycles that are described as maximum and minimum. The activity alternates every 11 years, and the period is termed as one solar cycle. At present, the Sun is undergoing the minimum phase, reducing global temperatures."
He said winter temperatures have dropped in the northern polar cap and is leading to severe winters. "This has also triggered the jet stream, which is active in the northern parts of the globe to shift in inter tropical climate zone like India. As a result, cold wind conditions were witnessed during the last two years. The unseasonal hailstorms in November and December are a result of the influence of the jet stream. This has also led to steady weakening of magnetic energy of the Sun, leading to mini ice age like situation," he said.
"The Sun, our energy source, goes through phases of violent (maximum phase) and quiet (minimum phase) activity every 11 years, which is called one solar cycle. The effects of minimum activity of a solar cycle are seen for about a year. However, it has been revealed that the minimum activity was seen for more than four years in the recently concluded solar cycle. Thus, it was the longest and quietest minimum phase in the past 100 years," the scientist said.
"The Earth may be heading towards a mini-ice age period, which is similar to what was observed in the 17th century. During the time, the sunspots on the Sun were absent. This led to a drop in northern hemisphere temperature by 2-3 degrees. The current scenario is almost same. Such climatic conditions might affect the agricultural pattern and health and trigger disasters in the worst scenario," he added.
the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has varied greatly throughout history and was about 1000 parts per million (ppm) 60 million years ago. It was around 280 ppm in pre-industrial times but has risen to close to 400 ppm today.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) claims that a rise of CO2 levels to 560 ppm could cause an increase in average global temperature of between 2 and 4.5 degrees Celsius by 2100. It has called on countries to take action to reduce emissions so that concentrations will be stabilized at a long-term level of 380 ppm and a temperature increase of 2 degrees.
In fact, however, even though CO2 emissions have grown by about 50% since 1990, there have been no increases in average global temperatures at the earth’s surface since around 2000 (almost 15 years) and no increases in average temperatures in the atmosphere since 1998 (17 years).
The IPCC projections of future warming are based on 108 computer models that rely on several assumptions, and one of the most important assumptions concerns the sensitivity of the climate to CO2 concentrations. The actual sensitivity since 1990 has been below what was projected by 97% of the models. The warming trend is just under 0.75 degrees per century. At this rate, it would take about 267 years to get to the two-degree target the IPCC has set as an upper limit. That does not constitute an emergency requiring costly global action.
The snowstorm brought 19.3 inches of snow to O'Hare International Airport, Chicago's official weather recording station, by early today, according to WGN-TV/Channel 9's Chicago Weather Center.
The National Weather Service says that makes for the fifth-highest snowfall total since records started being kept in the late 1800s.
Boston ended up with just over 2 feet of the white stuff -- 24.6 inches -- for their biggest January snowfall on record. The annual average snow for Boston is 43.2 inches and they got over half of that in just one storm.
Over 50 locations across five states -- Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Maine and New York -- got 30-plus inches of snow this week.
Below are the highest amounts in each of those states -- with three towns in Massachusetts getting three feet of snow -- Auburn, Hudson and Lunenburg.
Ten-foot drifts were reported at Southwest Harbor, Massachusetts, and winds gusted to 78 mph in Nantucket, while Marshfield, also in Massachusetts, experienced 14 consecutive hours of blizzard conditions. Boston had 9.
CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago's weekend blizzard was one for the record books.
The National Weather Service says that the 19.3 inches of snow was the fifth highest snowfall total since records started being kept in the late 1800s.
The Super Bowl Sunday storm's accumulation beat the previous fifth-largest blizzard of March 1930 by a tenth of an inch.
Damn that man made global warming, making it snow so much.
Location: i love how not saying dumb things on the internet was never an option. Joined: 09.29.2005
Feb 3 @ 3:55 PM ET
SDRRepublic64 -Jan. 21, 2015 at 12:16pm
Didn’t watch him either. ALL I SEE IN OBAMA, IS EVIL, EVEN IN HIS VOICE. God gives me that discernment and if anyone doesn’t see or hear that evil in Obama, then they are part of the delusional crowd that Satan happily loves.
THIS PRESIDENT IS VERY, VERY, EVIL. Wake up people, please wake up and look at that man. Ask God to help you discern the evil in people and you will see it. I cannot look at Obama without getting literally ill. That is what happens when you gaze upon pure evil and God gives you that gift of discernment.
Right now, Obama is just being led by Satan with his demons (spiritual persuasion). Obama doesn’t realize how he is being manipulated by evil spirits. If Obama doesn’t repent, he will meet Satan face to face and it will be very ugly and sick. There are those of us who actually see these evil spirits working around people and it is hard to get past that sometimes without it affecting you emotionally.
God have mercy on America.
SDRRepublic64
- Crimsoninja[92]Log in to Reply
he should probably just keep it to the hockey site.
Despite the doom and gloom rhetoric from environmentalists, the world is not descending into climate chaos, asserts “skeptical environmentalist” Dr. Bjorn Lomborg.
Many so-called climate alarmists warn that mankind’s use of fossil fuels is making the weather more extreme as the planet rapidly heats up. But Lomborg says this is not borne out by the facts.
“This ignores that much of the data are actually encouraging,” Lomborg writes in the Wall Street Journal. “The latest study from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change found that in the previous 15 years temperatures had risen 0.09 degrees Fahrenheit. The average of all models expected 0.8 degrees. So we’re seeing about 90% less temperature rise than expected.”
Claims that weather has gotten more extreme have also fallen flat on their faces, according to Lomborg. A study published last year in the scientific journal Nature found that the amount of the planet suffering drought has decreased since 1982, and damage from Hurricanes has been decreasing in the last century when adjusted for population and wealth.
Lomborg is not the only one to point out such statistics. University of Colorado climate scientist Dr. Roger Pielke’s research has also found no upward trend in extreme weather. Pielke testified in the Senate that it’s “misleading and just plain incorrect to claim that disasters associated with hurricanes, tornadoes, floods or droughts have increased on climate timescales either in the United States or globally.”
Lomborg also points out that while Arctic sea ice has shrunk in recent decades, “models also predicted that Antarctic sea ice would decrease, yet it is increasing” and that “sea levels are rising, but the rise is not accelerating—if anything, two recent papers … have shown a small decline in the rate of sea-level increase.”
Environmentalists have had a hard time recently, at least in the U.S., trying to convince people that global warming is threatening their lives. A recent CNN poll found that 57 percent of Americans don’t see global warming as a threat.
Frigid weather and major snowstorms have not helped their case — despite trying to argue that global warming is actually causing colder winters.
Lomborg actually agrees with environmentalists that the world has warmed, but disagrees that it’s going to be catastrophic. Further, Lomborg still wants to tackle global warming, but says the best way to protect people from natural disasters is by ending poverty, not banning fossil fuels.
“This is important because if we want to help the poor people who are most threatened by natural disasters, we have to recognize that it is less about cutting carbon emissions than it is about pulling them out of poverty,” Lomborg argued.
How would this help? By lifting more people out of poverty, they would be more resilient to the future impacts of global warming. Lomborg says the dramatic decline in the number of people dying from natural and climate disasters is “due to economic development that helps nations withstand catastrophes.”
“If you’re rich like Florida, a major hurricane might cause plenty of damage to expensive buildings, but it kills few people and causes a temporary dent in economic output,” Lomborg said. “If a similar hurricane hits a poorer country like the Philippines or Guatemala, it kills many more and can devastate the economy.”
“In short, climate change is not worse than we thought. Some indicators are worse, but some are better,’ Lomborg wrote. “That doesn’t mean global warming is not a reality or not a problem. It definitely is. But the narrative that the world’s climate is changing from bad to worse is unhelpful alarmism, which prevents us from focusing on smart solutions.