Monday, 23 December 2019

WETTEST SEATTLE SINCE 1900, DRIEST AUSTRALIA SINCE 1903 — REPEATING CYCLES TO BLAME, NOT CO2

DECEMBER 22, 2019,  CAP ALLON


We humans need to play the blame game, we love a scapegoat — there are few things more satisfying than hanging a complex worldly issue on a singular, easy-to-understand hook.

The term ‘Climate Change’ has been hijacked by the activists, that’s clear now.

These ill-informed marionettes are being controlled by the UN & IPCC via the MSM; manipulated into hanging ALL extreme weather events on the man-made carbon dioxide emission ‘hook’.

This CO2 explanation, however, is an affront to science and logic as ALL historical and proxy data points to the fact that this trace gas (0.04%) has only-ever been beneficial to our planet, increasing the quality of life and biodiversity.

Levels of the stuff were once 6,000+ ppm, and, as a result, life exploded! While contrastingly, atmospheric concentrations were very recently as low as 180 ppm, and life began to struggle. If levels ever dipped below 150 ppm then plants and creatures would cease to exist as we know them.

There is no ‘controllable’ bogeyman out there, no matter how much tax you pay — this is a myth.

Humans are powerless against the cycles of the cosmos — in particular, those of the sun.

The best we can do is prepare accordingly, and ride any catastrophe out.

WETTEST SEATTLE SINCE 1900

Seattle residents woke up to their wettest December 20 in 119 years on Friday, as an atmospheric river soaked the city with heavy rain, leading to floods, landslides, and traffic disruptions.

More than 3 inches (78 mm) wound-up falling, busting the previous record of 2 inches (51 mm) set back in 1900, according to the NSW Seattle:


This, like all events in nature, is a repeating cycle.

You need look no further than the sun for a clear and obvious correlation:

The year 1900 falls within the minimum between low solar cycles 13 and 14, cycles very similar to 24 — the one we currently find ourselves in the minimum of.

DRIEST AUSTRALIA SINCE THE 1891-1903 ‘MEGADROUGHT’
A hotter climate means an increase in water evaporation. This results in drier soils and thirstier livestock.

Australia’s dirt has been baked-red by the sun’s routine scorching, and the intensity of these ‘bakes’ is –surprise-surprise– also cyclic, again matching up perfectly with solar output.

The ‘once in a century drought’, which ran from 1891 to 1903, caused an ecosystem collapse affecting more than a third of the country.

The drought was one of the world’s worst recorded ‘megadroughts’, which at its peak saw much of the country receive less than 40 percent of its annual rainfall, with 1902 remaining the driest year on record.
CSIRO researcher Dr. Robert Godfree said: “In New South Wales, most rivers stopped flowing and dust storms filled dams, buried homesteads and created ghost towns as people fled.”

“Wildlife and stock starved or died of thirst. Native birds and mammals died under trees, in creeks, and on the plains.

“Tens of millions of sheep and cattle were killed, and hundreds of millions of rabbits died of starvation after stripping the landscape of its plant life,” Godfree said.


History is repeating:

The ‘megadrought’ of 1891-1903 falls within weak solar cycles 12 and 14, cycles very similar to the one we’re currently in the record-deep solar minimum of now — 24:

This may seem counter intuitive — low solar activity = a drier/hotter Australia?

But the factors at play aren’t merely the heat coming off the sun.

When solar wind is reduced, earth’s defenses against incoming radiation (our magnetosphere) is also weakened. Galactic Cosmic Rays from the cosmos continue to bombard and penetrate our atmosphere while our defenses are lowered, and the impact these particles have on our climate is huge.

And there are many cascading factors at play — for more on a few of them, including cloud seeding, see the articles below, or for more on the changing jet stream, keep scrolling:  at: https://electroverse.net/wettest-seattle-since-1900-driest-australia-since-1903/


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