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Climate Crisis Refutes Climate Catastrophe – So There Is No CO2- and Human-Made Climate Change After All?Currently, news keeps popping up that it’s hot, too hot. According to the prevailing narrative, this is obviously due to far too much CO2 and consequently humans causing it. But is that really the case? There is a saying that goes something like this: “Those who do not know the past cannot understand the present or shape the future.” But what about knowledge of the past when it comes to the climate topic? News about the hottest year, hottest month, hottest day always refers to relatively short retrospectives or at best to the beginning of weather records. But what about before that? Reese and Ërnst take a long look back in THE HUNGER STONES (Unstrut without water). It goes back to the year 1194, when historical sources report that the Unstrut river near Freyburg could be crossed on dry feet. People were very worried. The Pope instructed the residents to carve hunger stones. Hunger stones existed in many other regions too. I recommend watching the video. The year 1194 was during a period called the Medieval Warm Period (approx. 900 to 1300 AD). I asked the artificial intelligence ChatGPT about the temperatures back then. ChatGPT either can’t or won’t really answer this question. This might be because ChatGPT is programmed to follow the prevailing narrative. It assumes that today’s temperatures are higher than those of the Medieval Warm Period. But is that really so? If yes, why has the Unstrut not almost dried up in recent decades? At that time, it’s estimated that only about 300 to 400 million people lived on the entire planet, just under 5% of today’s global population. There were extensive forests because agriculture did not consume so much land. There were no large sealed surfaces, no big cities, and certainly no industry. The AI states that the CO2 concentration back then was around 280 ppm. The Mitteldeutsche Zeitung published an article in 2020 titled Historian dedicates himself to the Unstrut: River of Extremes. It looks back as far as 1500. Floods occurred relatively frequently, low water levels were rare. The low water events meant water mills could only work to a limited extent or not at all. Freight traffic faced economic problems because cargo ships could no longer be loaded as usual without running aground. The article does not mention that the Unstrut could be crossed on dry feet. But how is it possible that 830 years ago the Unstrut was almost dry even though temperatures and CO2 levels were supposedly lower than today? Or is the story of human-made climate change not true? Does the climate crisis back then refute the myth of today’s climate catastrophe? Critics like Prof. Werner Kirstein contradict the current politically mandated climate change hype, which is based on distorted data, because the temperature spikes of past warm periods were removed from the temperature curves. The claim that CO2 was around 280 ppm before the industrial age is based on only using the lowest measurements to support the narrative of rising CO2 levels. It also seems well-established that atmospheric temperature always rises first, followed by a delayed increase in CO2 levels. So, the opposite of the misinformation widely spread by the media. Accordingly, climate fluctuations have always existed, even during times when humans could not influence the climate. Kirstein points to fluctuating solar activity, which has a significant impact on the temperatures of the Earth's atmosphere. It is assumed that the currently higher temperatures are due to increased solar activity. It is suspected that this temporary solar activity could soon come to an end, leading to cooler temperatures again. He also lists historical events with longer drought periods. Kirstein refers to the IPCC statement about climate models: "In climate research and modeling, we should recognize that it is a coupled nonlinear chaotic system. Therefore, long-term predictions about climate development are not possible." Climate zealots and proponents of human-made climate change will certainly disagree. For them, there is no doubt. But if the critics are right, it could happen that just when the last coal power plants go offline in Germany, temperatures will drop, winters will become longer and colder, and even the climate zealots will realize that the energy yield from snow-covered solar panels and iced wind turbines is not enough to heat homes, enable electronic payment in supermarkets, or charge electric cars—especially since their range during prolonged frost is far below what manufacturers specify at normal temperatures. Maybe we'll be lucky and can then rely on nuclear and coal power from our neighboring countries. The statements of politicians would then be exciting, probably telling us again that they couldn’t have known better and trusted science. The science that had told politicians what they wanted to hear, since critical scientists are often silenced. The climate zealots could then wrap themselves in blankets in cold apartments, philosophize about how to heat sufficiently with tealights and clay flower pots, and pat themselves on the back for successfully stopping climate change, even though this will cost many cold-related deaths. That worldwide lower temperatures reduce agricultural yields will, like many other things, be ignored. You have to set priorities. Right?! Author: AI-Translation - Michael Thurm | vor dem 01.07.2024 |
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