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NickB79

(19,257 posts)
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 11:53 AM Apr 2012

A Republican meteorologist looks at climate change (Not what you might expect)

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2012/04/02/douglas/

I'm going to tell you something that my Republican friends are loath to admit out loud: climate change is real. I'm a moderate Republican, fiscally conservative; a fan of small government, accountability, self-empowerment and sound science. I am not a climate scientist. I'm a Penn State meteorologist, and the weather maps I'm staring at are making me very uncomfortable. No, you're not imagining it: we've clicked into a new and almost foreign weather pattern.

To complicate matters I'm in a small, frustrated and endangered minority: a Republican deeply concerned about the environmental sacrifices some are asking us to make to keep our economy powered-up. It's ironic. The root of the word conservative is "conserve". A staunch Republican, Teddy Roosevelt, set aside vast swaths of America for our National Parks System, the envy of the world. Another Republican, Richard Nixon, launched the EPA. Now some in my party believe the EPA and all those silly "global warming alarmists" are going to get in the way of drilling and mining our way to prosperity. Well, we have good reason to be alarmed.

Weather 2.0.: "It's a new atmosphere floating overhead."

These are the Dog Days of March. Ham Weather reports 5,299 records in the last seven days — some towns 20 to 35 degrees warmer than average; off-the-scale, freakishly warm. 17,360 records since March 1. Sixteen times more warm records than cold records since March 1. The scope, intensity and duration of this early heat wave are historic and unprecedented. And yes, climate change is probably a contributing factor. "Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get." 129,404 weather records in one year, nationwide? You can't point to any one weather extreme and say "that's climate change". But a warmer, wetter atmosphere loads the dice, increasing the potential for historic spikes in temperature and more frequent and bizarre weather extremes.


Paul Douglas has been a well-known, well-respected weatherman here in Minnesota for the past decade or more, FYI.
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A Republican meteorologist looks at climate change (Not what you might expect) (Original Post) NickB79 Apr 2012 OP
Right on science, wrong on most other issues. libinnyandia Apr 2012 #1
Agreed, but it's refreshing to hear a Republican be right on something for once NickB79 Apr 2012 #2

NickB79

(19,257 posts)
2. Agreed, but it's refreshing to hear a Republican be right on something for once
Wed Apr 4, 2012, 12:05 PM
Apr 2012

Usually they get the science completely wrong as well, and in this case getting the science wrong could condemn humanity to collapse.

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