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Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Truth Sometimes Wins

Gallup is out with an analysis of its polling data on global warming since 2001.  Every year since that date, Gallup has polled thousands of people to determine their views of so called climate change.  In 2001, right when Al Gore was busy filming his propaganda about global warming, there were 39% of the American public that was seriously concerned about man made global warming.  In 2014, that number remains unchanged at 39%.  During the thirteen years in the interim, the number got as high as 42% and as low as 33%, but the trend of true believers was flat.  On the other side of the equation, the number of Americans who were skeptics (those who did not worry about or accept man made global warming) was just 12% in 2001.  That figure stayed pretty constant until 2008 when it began to rise perceptibly.  Today, 25% of Americans fall into this category of global warming skeptics.  The rest of the people fall somewhere in the middle.

This polling data is important because it shows that even after a decade and a half of almost non-stop attempts to brainwash Americans into believing that debate is over regarding global warming and its causes, essentially all of the people who are making a decision on this issue are concluding that global warming is not a problem caused by man.

This is not a surprising result.  After all, the actual argument for the existence of global warming goes something like this:  1.  Scientists designed computer models to show global warming based upon the assumption that warming was real and that it was caused by human activity.  2. The models predicted serious warming due to human activity.  3. The actual data shows that the models are wrong.  4. Despite the lack of warming and the proof that the models are wrong, we still have to believe that humans have caused global warming because some hacks at the UN issued a report that says so (and which will keep funding coming in to their agency.)

Enough said.



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