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Sat, 16 Oct 2021
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NPC

Moronic Contradiction: How can we all switch to solar power if Bill Gates blocks the sun with pollution?

woman_beach
The crazy Left never seems to think anything through before announcing schemes for the "greater good" or to "save the planet" from global warming. Take for instance the "Green New Deal." We are all supposed to believe that somehow we can replace every fuel-burning machine in America in 10 years, including every factory, machine plant, automobile, farm tractor, and tractor trailer truck, with solar-powered and wind-powered alternatives. We do this or we all burn alive two years later. That's the soap box speech dominating the leading Democrats' tour of every staged and soldout "town hall" meeting preparing for the 2020 Presidential race.

Yet, as absurd as that all sounds, the entire plan is plain-as-day CONTRADICTED by their own other plan to stop global warming (now renamed climate change) in its tracks - called ScoPEx - or Bill Gates' stratosphere corporate pollution extreme scheme to block out the sun with "particulate matter." So, then Bill, please inform all us stupid humans how solar-powered anything will run all the machines? That's what we thought. It won't. It's just another moronic contradiction they either didn't think about themselves or figure nobody else will.

Snowflake

September snow descends on Mt. Rose Highway in Nevada

Mt. Rose Highway on September 10

Mt. Rose Highway on September 10
It's still technically summer, but it sure felt like winter for a fleeting moment in the high country on Tuesday.

Video taken along the Mt. Rose Highway between Incline Village and Reno showed the road covered in a fresh layer of snow.

The video was taken at about the 8550' level after a couple of small showers and thunderstorms moved through the area.

Many people were wondering if the deluge was something other than snow, like sleet. However, according to NWS Reno, Tuesday's incident was definitely snow or snow pellets known as "graupel" - snowflakes that are covered with ice.


Snowflake

Tirol Glacier ski areas in Austria opening Friday after 22 inches of September snowfall

Stubai

Stubai
The Stubai glacier in Austria's Tirol region will open this Friday, 13th September, after a 55cm (22 inch) snowfall over the weekend. Solden say they will also open their glacier skiing this Friday.

Heavy snowfall across the Alps saw most areas with slopes above 1500 metres see fresh snow, with accumulations above 3,000 metres adding up to at least 50cm at resorts in Austria, Italy and Switzerland.

Only four glacier areas are currently open in the Alps, Hintertux in Austria (pictured below), Passo Stelvio in Italy and Saas Fee and Zermatt in Switzerland. All report great conditions now the skies have cleared after the fresh snowfall.


Comment: Early snowfall piles up in the Alps - up to 20 inches deep


Cloud Precipitation

7 dead as floods worsen in Cambodia

Farm owner Nornn Vanny lost more than 700 pigs due to flash floods in Preah Vihear province’s Tbeng Meanchey district on Monday

Farm owner Nornn Vanny lost more than 700 pigs due to flash floods in Preah Vihear province’s Tbeng Meanchey district on Monday
The flood situation in Cambodia has worsened since rivers levels began to rise in early September. Flooding has now affected 11 provinces and displaced thousands. Further heavy rain is expected over the coming days.

Quoting the country's National Committee for Disaster Management (NCDM), the Phnom Penh Post said that 7 people have died in the recent floods, which have displaced 6,893 families and inundated thousands of homes. Flooding has also caused severe damage to crops and livestock.

Steung Treng, Kratie, Kampong Cham, Preah Vihear and Tbong Khmum are thought to be among the worst affected areas.


Info

Ice Age Farmer Report: UK coldest in 30 yrs - Aus. grains demise - "Chicken causes cancer" - Lab-grown cheese

grains
NSW/QLD grain yields have been predicted at 40-50% of 10-year averages — and GrainCorp is trying to get OUT of the grains business. The Beast from the East returns! UK forecasts coldest winter in 30 years. "Alt-shrimp" and lab-grown cheese introduced as the war on real food continues, attempting to make you wholly dependent on the technocracy's nasty lab-grown food. And propaganda rags have run away with a "Chickens Cause Cancer" headline, based on a correlation. Christian breaks it down.


Sources

Cloud Precipitation

Floods hit Coromandel Peninsula, New Zealand after 10 inches of rain in 24 hours

Flooding in Otama new Zealand 10 September.
© Thames Coromandel District Council
Flooding in Otama new Zealand 10 September.
Heavy rain on 10 September, 2019, caused flooding and landslips in the Coromandel Peninsula of New Zealand.

Thames Coromandel District Council said that more than 260mm of rain fell in 24 hours in the Pinnacles mountains in Coromandel Forest Park.

Flooding left some areas isolated and prompted some evacuations. Landslips also left roads closed
. No injuries or fatalities were reported.

( Warning - Below video contains strong earthy kiwi language.)


Propaganda

Category Five climate nonsense from Vox

climate cartoon
Climate journalism gets more and more ridiculous by the day. They no longer make any attempt to be credible.


Arrow Down

Huge sinkhole swallows taxi after opening up on Chinese road

sinkhole
A taxi driver had to sprint to freedom from his cab moments after it was swallowed up by an enormous sinkhole.

The cabbie, named Guo, ran from his car after the 13ft deep chasm opened up in Ningxia, northern China.

The 33-year-old had just dropped off a fare. 'After my passenger got out, I drove forwards, then my car suddenly began sinking into the ground. I was shocked and immediately tried to open my door to get out,' he said. 'But my car became misshapen in the sinkhole, so I had to kick it open and ran out.'


Comment: The lowdown on sinkholes:




Bizarro Earth

Gigantic heat anomaly brewing in the Pacific threatens a return of 'the Blob'

Pacific Blob 2019
© NOAA
A menacing heatwave is brewing in the Pacific Ocean, and it's got scientists worrying about the return of 'the Blob'.

Roughly five years ago, a huge patch of unusually warm ocean water appeared off the coast of North America, stretching from Mexico's Baja California Peninsula all the way up to Alaska.

It was nicknamed the Blob, after a horror film monster that consumes everything in sight. The heatwave, which lasted for several years, was an equally indiscriminate killer.

According to estimates, during this time the southern coast of Alaska lost more than 100 million Pacific cod. Thousands of seabirds were found washed up on the shore, and about half a million were decimated in total. In one year alone, populations of humpback whales dropped by 30 percent. Salmon, sea lions, krill, and other marine animals also vanished in astonishing numbers, as toxic algae bloomed.

The Blob caused ecosystems and industries alike immense losses - so much so that researchers from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are now closely tracking these events.

The current heatwave, they say, has not only popped up in the same area, it's grown in much the same way and is almost the same size.

Side by side, a comparison of both their early stages is ominous. Like the blob, the current marine heat wave emerged only a few months ago, as the winds that cool the ocean's surface began to die down.

"Given the magnitude of what we saw last time, we want to know if this evolves on a similar path," says marine ecologist Chris Harvey from the Northwest Fisheries Science Center.

Comment: See also:


Snowflake

First snowfall of the season coats the Tetons, 4 to 10 inches in the forecast

Rendezvous Peak
© Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Webcam
Rendezvous Peak
A dusting of snow coated Rendezvous Peak last night into this morning marking the first snowfall of the 19/20 winter season. The National Weather Service has issued a special weather statement for the region: expect one to three inches of snow, 4 to 10 inches above 10000 feet through Wednesday night. The rain is expected to turn to snow by late tonight and continue Wednesday and Wednesday evening.

The 2020 Old Farmer's Almanac is predicting that this winter, there'll be s'no escape from shivers, snowflakes, and slush: "Snowy, icy, and icky" conditions, "wet and wild" periods, and "a parade of snowstorms" will transform the landscape.