> Climate Change Memes?

Climate Change Memes?

Posted at: 2015-03-12 
The things we get from most Alarmists are

Corporations are bad

Capitalism is evil

Free markets are unfair

Government is the solution to our major problems,

We are running out of resources.

There are too many people

CO2 is a pollutant

Droughts will get worse

Wet places will get wetter

Storms will become super-storms

Good animals will get scare

All good bugs like bees will be gone and only biting bugs and poisonous weeds will be left. Poison ivy and mosquitos are on the rise

Malaria is increasing

War for reduced resources increasing.

Oh yeah, viruses of the mind will increase

This is the online home for the Climate Meme Project ― a crowdfunded research effort to map the landscape of ideas that help or hinder action on climate change. We have come here to bypass traditional funding routes and go directly to the people with a mass appeal for climate action on the world stage.

Hard to beat Jim & Maxx. I look @ it as a forced meme:



A new Climatist meme is introduced almost daily.

Here's a 'greatest hits' List of Climate Cult Memes:

http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/warmlist.ht...

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And yet they cannot prove those statements in a court .

Its all here say .

Meme : a pervasive thought or thought pattern that replicates itself via cultural means; a parasitic code, a virus of the mind especially contagious to children and the impressionable.

How many of these can you name? How about the Super Typhoons and storms.

~There are more tropical storms today.

~They are stronger than in the past, all because of global warming.



“Monster typhoon Haiyan roars across Philippines.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-24846813

“Super Typhoon Haiyan tears Philippines apart!”

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/super-typhoon-haiyan-tears-philippines-apart/story-e6frg6so-1226756953316

Super Typhoon Leaves More Than 150 Dead In Philippines

http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/11/09/244118213/super-typhoon-leaves-more-than-100-dead-in-philippines

'Off The Charts' Super Typhoon Haiyan Hits Philippines

http://www.wbur.org/npr/243736249/super-typhoon-haiyan-bears-down-on-philippines-years-most-powerful-storm

“Super Storm” Sandy barely a category 1 hurricane.

We can choose to believe that Superstorm Sandy, and the most severe drought in decades, and the worst wildfires some states have ever seen were all just a freak coincidence. Or we can choose to believe in the overwhelming judgment of science―and act before it's too late. ~ Barrack Obozo

“there is little or no evidence that global warming steered Sandy into New Jersey or made the storm any stronger.” ~ news article in Science

http://www.sciencemag.org/content/342/6159/688.full

List of the most intense tropical cyclones:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_most_intense_tropical_cyclones

Haiyan, at its peak, was measured at 895 hPa.

Typhoon Tip was 870 hectopascals.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal_%28unit%29

http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/JCLI-D-11-00719.1

"In recent decades, economic damage from tropical cyclones (TCs) around the world has increased dramatically. Scienti?c literature published to date ?nds that the increase in losses can be explained entirely by societal changes (such as increasing wealth, structures, population, etc.) in locations prone to tropical cyclone landfalls, rather than by changes in annual storm frequency or intensity. However, no homogenized dataset of global tropical cyclone landfalls has been created that might serve as a consistency check for such economic normalization studies. Using currently available historical TC best-track records, a global database focused on hurricane-force strength landfalls was constructed. The analysis does not indicate signi?cant long-period global or individual basin trends in the frequency or intensity of landfalling TCs of minor or major hurricane strength. The evidence in this study provides strong support for the conclusion that increasing damage around the world during the past several decades can be explained entirely by increasing wealth in locations prone to TC landfalls, which adds con?dence to the ?delity of economic normalization analyses.

While there is continued uncertainty surrounding future changes in climate (Knutson et al. 2010), current projections of TC frequency or intensity change may not yield an anthropogenic signal in economic loss data for many decades or even centuries (Crompton et al. 2011). Thus, our quantitative analysis of global hurricane land-falls is consistent with previous research focused on normalized losses associated with hurricanes that have found no trends once data are properly adjusted for societal factors."