One reason the climate change narrative is all wrong!

avatar
(Edited)

Weather is a complex science that cannot be attributed to a single factor ... especially to those who want to blame "climate change" on human-made CO2 emissions. The climate changes all the time. The last 20-30 years have been very warm which most people have attributed to greenhouse gases that mankind has released due to industrialization. The body in the UN which has promulgated this narrative will be reversing this judgement in a paper due to be released in 2022. Over two hundred papers have been written analyzing data collected over several years. Not one of those papers has been able to link humans with the climate we are experiencing now. All have pointed toward the sun as being the most important factor.

Valentina Zharkova, from Northumbria University, has a 93 percent success rate at predicting solar behaviour. She briefly describes the mechanism of sunspots where are highly correlated with global warming. We are now entering a period which is called the Modern Minimum ... a period of time that instead of warming, there will be a trend toward cooling. Approaching but not quite reaching the decline that was found during the Maunder Minimum - the Little Ice Age - which happened less than 1000 years ago. Unfortunately, the narrative that the experts and the IPCC (UN body - International Panel on Climate Change) describe it as only being a "modest cooling of the Northern Hemisphere during the period" Mann et al. (1998) and Jones et al. (1998). This "modest cooling" is responsible for the starvation deaths of over 50 percent of the European population.

In China, tentative reconstruction of population levels in Tangcheng county in Jiangnan between 1631 and 1645 shows that some areas suffered almost 60 percent losses. The number of taxable households in western Poland also fell by more than 50 percent between the census of 1629 and that of 1661 while, further east, tax registers in what is now Belarus showed falls of between 40 and 95 percent in urban populations between 1648 and 1667. In Germany, parts of Pomerania and Mecklenburg in the north, like parts of Hessen and the Palatinate in the center, apparently lost two-thirds of their population between 1618 and 1648. Württemberg, in the southwest, boasted a population of 450,000 in 1618 but only 100,000 in 1639.
Source: James Marusek
U.S. Department of Defense (ret)



0
0
0.000
0 comments