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Posted: 8:34 a.m. Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Global Warming Caused the Tornadoes? 

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Tornado
One of several tornadoes observed by the en:VORTEX-99 team on May 3, 1999, in central Oklahoma. Note the tube-like condensation funnel, attached to the rotating cloud base, surrounded by a translucent dust cloud.

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By Neal Boortz

Whenever there is an excuse to push this phony global warming debate, the Obama Media will take the opportunity.  Why?  Do you really need to ask?  Who are the people behind this phony global warming nonsense?  It’s the left, in case you haven’t checked.  It’s the people who believe in big governments who seize wealth and distribute it according to political considerations.  People are concerned about tornadoes.  This is seen by the left as an opportunity to promote their “environmental justice” global warming nonsense.  Look at Diane Sawyer, for instance.  She wants to know if this is a preview of life under global warming.  Well isn’t that great.  She didn’t ask if global warming was the cause.  The belief that the tornadoes are being caused by global warming was the very premise of her question.  But is she right?   Here’s some info for you.    

  • Climatologist Victor Gensini of the University of Georgia says that "weather and climate are different concepts, and just as it is difficult to tie any specific snowstorm or drought to climate change, the same goes for tornado outbreaks."  (Source)
  • Dr. Howard Bluestein, a meteorology professor at the University of Oklahoma says: “I don't think we can prove whether or not the occurrence of all these bad events this year are due to global warming whatsoever. They could be simply due to natural variability." (Source)
  • Harold Brooks, research meteorologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Oklahoma says, "This year is an extraordinary outlier.”  But when you examine the records over time, "we see no correlation between global or US national temperature and tornado occurrence.  The single deadliest tornado in US history, described in early accounts, killed 695 people when a massive twister tore up parts of Missouri, southern Illinois and southwestern Indiana in 1925 (before global warmers had their panties in a wad).  (Source)

 Sucks to be Al Gore, I guess.

Neal Boortz

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Neal Boortz chronicles his 42 years of talk radio in his book "Maybe I Should Just Shut Up and Go Away" Available on line and printed from Barnes and Noble and Amazon.

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