Cancelled flights ? (Page 1/3)
MidEngineManiac DEC 31, 07:35 PM
I actually wondered when this would happen. Canadian pilots are in the same boat.

Vaxxed ? Your medical certificate is invalid.

https://www.bitchute.com/video/yECdXucXX81X/
rinselberg DEC 31, 08:52 PM
Sounds like total bullcrap to me. That this has anything to do with these winter weather-declared flight cancellations.

I'm not "seeing" it.
WonderBoy JAN 01, 08:24 AM

quote
Originally posted by rinselberg:

Sounds like total bullcrap to me. That this has anything to do with these winter weather-declared flight cancellations.

I'm not "seeing" it.


Don't you mean global-warming climate change declared flight cancellations? Stick to the script/narrative, sheesh... or the sheep will stop believin. WEF/CB/UN.

2030 or bust.
Ring in the new year with a headie MiKhelob Ultra
rinselberg JAN 01, 08:41 AM
I just posted about Winter Storm Elliot and what climate scientists are saying about it, in the other Totally O/T section of the forum.

cliffw JAN 01, 10:58 AM

quote
Originally posted by rinselberg:
I just posted about Winter Storm Elliot and what climate scientists are saying about it, in the other Totally O/T section of the forum.



Would a climate scientist even have a job if Global Warming was not invented ?
rinselberg JAN 01, 11:14 AM

quote
The field of climate science emerged in the second half of the twentieth century. Though it is sometimes also referred to as “climatology”, it differs markedly from the field of climatology that came before. That climatology, which existed from the late-nineteenth century (if not earlier), was an inductive science, in many ways more akin to geography than to physics; it developed systems for classifying climates based on empirical criteria and, by the mid-twentieth century, was increasingly focused on the calculation of statistics from weather observations...

Climate science, by contrast, aims to explain and predict the workings of a global climate system—encompassing the atmosphere, oceans, land surface, ice sheets and more—and it makes extensive use of both theoretical knowledge and mathematical modeling. In fact, the emergence of climate science is closely linked to the rise of digital computing, which made it possible to simulate the large-scale motions of the atmosphere and oceans using fluid dynamical equations that were otherwise intractable; these motions transport mass, heat, moisture and other quantities that shape paradigmatic climate variables, such as average surface temperature and rainfall. Today, complex computer models that represent a wide range of climate system processes are a mainstay of climate research.

The emergence of climate science is also linked to the issue of anthropogenic climate change. In recent decades, growing concern about climate change has brought a substantial influx of funding for climate research. It is a misconception, however, that climate science just is the study of anthropogenic climate change. On the contrary, there has been, and continues to be, a significant body of research within climate science that addresses fundamental questions about the workings of the climate system. This includes questions about how energy flows in the system, about the roles of particular physical processes in shaping climates, about the interactions that occur among climate system components, about natural oscillations within the system, about climate system feedbacks, about the predictability of the climate system, and much more.





quote
Originally posted by cliffw:
Would a climate scientist even have a job if Global Warming was not invented?


The answer to that, in brief, is "Yes."

[This message has been edited by rinselberg (edited 01-01-2023).]

rinselberg JAN 01, 05:21 PM
The history of the scientific understanding of carbon dioxide and global warming is now painstakingly documented at the American Institute of Physics website.

"The Discovery of Global Warming"
April 2022

"Introduction and Summary: The story in a nutshell"
https://history.aip.org/climate/summary.htm

"The Carbon Dioxide Greenhouse Effect"
https://history.aip.org/climate/co2.htm


quote
In the 19th century, scientists realized that gases in the atmosphere cause a "greenhouse effect" which affects the planet's temperature. These scientists were interested chiefly in the possibility that a lower level of carbon dioxide gas might explain the ice ages of the distant past.

At the turn of the century [1900], Svante Arrhenius calculated that emissions from human industry might someday bring a global warming. Other scientists dismissed his idea as faulty. In 1938, G.S. Callendar argued that the level of carbon dioxide was climbing and raising global temperature, but most scientists found his arguments implausible. It was almost by chance that a few researchers in the 1950s discovered that global warming truly was possible.

In the early 1960s, C.D. Keeling measured the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere: it was rising fast. Researchers began to take an interest, struggling to understand how the level of carbon dioxide had changed in the past, and how the level was influenced by chemical and biological forces. They found that the gas plays a crucial role in climate change, so that the rising level could gravely affect our future.

[This message has been edited by rinselberg (edited 01-01-2023).]

cliffw JAN 02, 08:46 AM

quote
Originally posted by cliffw:
Would a climate scientist even have a job if Global Warming was not invented ?




quote
Originally posted by rinselberg:
The answer to that, in brief, is "Yes."



Oh my. You reject the wise advice to not believe everything you hear/read and only 1/2 the things you see.

What special education does a 'climate science' take compared to a what a climatologist ?
rinselberg JAN 02, 01:48 PM
Let me highlight this a second time:

"The Discovery of Global Warming"
April 2022

"Introduction and Summary: The story in a nutshell"
https://history.aip.org/climate/summary.htm

I think that a "cliffw" could get an idea about what goes into the education of today's climate scientists from a perusal (on his part) of the text that comprises (or is comprised by) this article.
cliffw JAN 02, 03:40 PM

quote
Originally posted by rinselberg:
I think that a "cliffw" could get an idea about what goes into the education of today's climate scientists from a perusal (on his part) of the text that comprises (or is comprised by) this article.



I think you could just tell me since you already read it.