When I was a child, we has cold snowy winters. miserable windy springs, warm rainy summers, and lovely dry autumns. That has all changed – we now have cold snowy winters. miserable windy springs, warm rainy summers, and lovely dry autumns.
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- 65 Years Of Progress!
- El Nino To The Rescue?
- Worst March Drought On Record
- ChartGL Process Control Demo
- The Biggest Money Laundering Scam
- Drought In The Headwaters Of Lake Powell
- Unrealistic Expectations Of Water Availibility
- Did Bill Gates Do This?
- Worst March Drought On Record In The US
- The Real Hockey Stick Graph
- Analyzing The Western Water Crisis
- Gaslighting 1924
- Climate Abstract Generator
- Climate Abstract Generator
- “Why Do You Resist?”
- Climate Attribution Model
- Fact Checking NASA
- Fact Checking Grok
- Fact Checking The New York Times
- New Visitech Features
- Ice-Free Arctic By 2014
- Debt-Free US Treasury Forecast
- Analyzing Big City Crime (Part 2)
- Analyzing Big City Crime
- UK Migration Caused By Global Warming
Email Subscription
Join 1,948 other subscribersRecent Comments
saveenergy on 65 Years Of Progress! Jeff L. on Analyzing The Western Water Cr… Morgan Wright on Great Lakes Approaching 100% I… Morgan Wright on Great Lakes Set Another Spring… gelcarrion0t on New Visitech Features saveenergy on Ice-Free Arctic By 2014 gelcarrion0t on Ice-Free Arctic By 2014 gelcarrion0t on Debt-Free US Treasury Forecast gelcarrion0t on Seventeen Years Of Fun Barbara Stockwell on Nuclear Safety In The US

US or UK ? Which part of SW UK ? North or south?
Hehehe. And you can bet it’s more than just Italy!
http://rt.com/business/italy-mafia-launder-money-renewables-703/
116 Billion Euros per annum! That’s a lot of money to launder. Maybe next time they should hide it at the bottom of the ocean with Trenberth’s missing heat!
😀
Next years, we has again all those things. No worry, eh? (Hee-Hee-Hee)
drought maps and forecasts free for the mocking here:
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2013/20130701_shorterdroughtoutlooks.html