Arctic cooling coming

On December 23, 2011, in Uncategorized, by starsh1p

No area of the earth gives Warmists erections like the Arctic. They are always talking about it. For reasons that I have never tried to follow, they say that the effects of global warming will be greatest and most significant there. And since the ice-cover there has always waxed and waned, they can

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Arctic cooling coming

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Perhaps if more Warmists spent time where the polar bears live, this wouldn’t have to happen (BBC News) It is an image that is sure to shock many people. An adult polar bear is seen dragging the body of a cub that it has just killed across the Arctic sea ice. Polar bears normally hunt seals but if

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Bummer: Polar Bear Kills and Eats One Cub, Proves of Globull Warming

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There are some things much of the public would really like to say to members of Congress. As Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska) found out on Friday, House hearings can be the best opportunity. Dr. Douglas Brinkley, a professor at Rice University, let him have it. From Politico : At a Natural Resources Committee hearing Friday on oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska) mistakenly addressed the professor as “Dr. Rice” while calling his testimony “garbage.” Brinkley interrupted, saying: “It’s Dr. Brinkley, Rice is a university,” and “I know you went to Yuba [Community College in California] and couldn’t graduate — ” Then it was Young’s turn to interrupt. “I’ll call you anything I want to call you when you sit in that chair,” he told the witness. “You just be quiet.” Brinkley countered: “You don’t own me. I pay your salary. I work for the private sector and you work for the taxpayer.”

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Rep. Don Young gets verbal smack from witness

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An image from the District Governor of Spitsbergen's office shows the dead polar bear that attacked students camping on a remote Arctic glacier in Norway, Friday, Aug. 5, 2011 . The bear was shot and killed by other members of the group. (AP Photo / Arild Lyssand / District governor of Spitsbergens office / via Scanpix)

OSLO, Norway (The Blaze/AP) — A polar bear attacked a group of British students camping on a remote Arctic glacier as part of a high-end adventure trip, killing a 17-year-old boy and injuring four other young people Friday before a trip member fatally shot the bear. Two were hospitalized with severe head injuries, according to the British Schools Exploring Society, the organizer of the trip. The other two had injuries that were less serious. Hospital officials said Saturday all four victims are recovering after surgery. The attack took place on the Svalbard archipelago, which is home to about 2,400 people and 3,000 polar bears and attracts well-off and hardy tourists with stunning views of snow-covered mountains, fjords and glaciers. The British Schools Exploring Society is affiliated with Britain’s Royal Geographic Society and has run expeditions for young people to remote and challenging corners of the globe for at least 75 years. Expedition members were spending three to five weeks in the Arctic, and had each paid 2,000 pounds (US$3,300) to 3,000 pounds (US$4,900) to join the trip, designed to mix science experiments with adventure. Participants were hunting for Arctic fossils and taking part in environmental experiments, including a project to install hydro and solar power systems. The group also was clearing beaches of tidal debris. Before heading to the Arctic, youngsters had been urged to raise their fitness levels to cope with the challenging terrain, and to prepare for a diet of freeze-dried meals. The campers were in a group of 80 people, most of them between 16 and 23, the British Schools Exploring Society said. Many posed Wednesday for a final photo together before splitting into smaller groups to head out to more remote parts of the Arctic. On Friday morning, some of the youths were camping on Spitsbergen Island, the largest in the Svalbard archipelago, and a place where researchers say there is not much food available for polar bears during the summer. The bears, which can grow to around 10 feet (3 meters) and weigh up to 1,200 pounds (550 kilograms), are the world’s largest non-aquatic predators. Although they don’t usually hunt humans, they can attack nearly anything if they are hungry. With their broad paws and claws as long as two inches (5.1 centimeters), polar bears are extremely dangerous and visitors to Svalbard are advised always to be armed, avoid confrontation and store smelly food securely. The bear attacked a group of 13 people in the early morning, leaving them with moderate to severe wounds that included head injuries, officials said. One of the campers shot the bear, said Liv Asta Oedegaard, a spokeswoman for the Svalbard governor’s office. The injured were evacuated by helicopter to Tromsoe, the nearest city on the Norwegian mainland. “With great sadness the British Schools Exploring Society confirms the tragic death this morning of one of the members of its expedition in Svalbard,” said Edward Watson, chairman of the British Schools Exploring Society. He named the teen as Horatio Chapple, who hoped to study medicine. “By all accounts, he would have made an excellent doctor,” Watson said, adding that his thoughts were with the family. The parents of the dead teenager have been informed and the names of the dead and injured would be released once Norwegian authorities had concluded investigations, he said. The attack happened about 25 miles (40 kilometers) outside Svlabard’s capital, Longyearbyen, the main tourist hub with a population of about 2,000. Visitors are urged to carry high-powered rifles whenever venturing outside Longyearbyen. Polar bear safety brochures advise campers against setting up their tents in areas where bears roam. Oedegaard said campers normally lay a tripwire around tents before they go to sleep. An emergency flare is triggered if an animal crosses the wire. It was unclear whether the British campers’ wire had worked properly, she said. “It is not unusual to camp here, but it is necessary to carry weapons,” she said. In a July 27 posting on the society’s website, expedition member Marcus Wright wrote that the group had encountered polar bears shortly after arriving in Longyearbyen. “I think we must have all dreamed of polar bears because the next day we were eagerly waiting for the ice floes to break up so we could move on to base camp,” Wright wrote in his blog posting. Wright wrote that the group had spotted a polar bear across a fjord, and also another bear floating on some ice. “This time we were lucky enough to borrow a kind Norwegian guide’s telescope to see it properly,” he wrote. Other postings detailed that the group had been trained in using bear flares to protect their camps, and also received rifle training. Kjersti Noraas, a Svalbard tourism coordinator, said around 30,000 tourists visit the islands every year and although most choose to go on guided tours, “quite a few come to camp in the wilderness.” The last fatal polar bear attack in Svalbard occurred in 1995, when two people were killed in separate incidents, according to Magnus Andersen, a researcher at the Norwegian Polar Institute. He said an average of three bears a year were killed from 1993 to 2004 in encounters with humans. Andersen called Friday’s attack the most serious he’d seen.

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Polar Bear Attacks School Group, Kills 17-Year-Old British Boy on Remote Arctic Island

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At Telegraph UK , ” Nature’s brutal lesson for young Arctic explorers .” Also at Scottish Daily Record , ” Polar bear rips through tent and kills British teenager in camp attack terror .”

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Polar Bear Kills British Teenager in Norwegian Arctic

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AP – President Obama on Tuesday signed an executive order creating an interagency working group to coordinate energy development in Alaska, a move hailed by lawmakers who want to see drilling in Arctic outer continental shelf waters.

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Obama creates group for Alaska energy development
(AP)

Politifact continues to masquerade as an agent of truth when it is, in fact, a mouthpiece for the left. It took great pains to slowly establish itself as something resembling a ref on a field, but once that reputation was established it has gone out of its way to peddle lefty talking points. Consider it labeling as “a lie” the accurate Republican claim that the Democrats intend a government take over of healthcare — something even Democrats admit Obamacare intends. Now Politifact is going after Senator Rob Portman for saying As an immediate bridge, we should increase access for oil exploration and production in energy-rich areas of the country like the Outer Continental Shelf, and in parts of Alaska Get ready. What is Politifact saying? Not so fast, say the experts. Pretend that environmentalists dropped all objections to drilling for oil on the Outer Continental Shelf — that area that lies offshore between states’ jurisdictions and the end of United States oceanic boundaries. Also pretend that the public decided its need for oil trumped what environmentalists see as the sanctity of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, or ANWR. Since we’re just pretending, everyone join in: Drill, baby, drill. Then wait. See ya around 2021 . That is exactly what the Democrats said in 2001 when George Bush tried it. Today is the tomorrow the Democrats told us yesterday was too far away to do anything about. Politifact continues the Democrats’ talking points. Politifact likewise chooses to ignore that its argument that somehow Rob Portman isn’t telling the truth is exactly the argument the Democrats used ten years ago to tell us not to drill.

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Yet Again Politifact Shows Itself to be Leftist Propaganda Masquerading as an Agent of Truth

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The Winter of Al Gore’s Discontent

On February 7, 2011, in Uncategorized, by old dog

The gospel of the Holy Church of Global Warming promised us the tropics, but all we got was the Arctic Circle.

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The Winter of Al Gore’s Discontent

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Obama EPA to Shell: Screw you

On February 4, 2011, in Uncategorized, by If Bush Did It

Here’s a perfect companion article to my lead story on Team Obama’s eco-radical culture of contempt. There’s red tape…and then there’s green tape: Shell Alaska has dropped plans to drill in the Arctic waters of the Beaufort Sea this year and will concentrate on obtaining permits for the 2012 season, company Vice President Pete Slaiby said Thursday. The recent remand of air permits issued by the Environmental Protection Agency was the final driver behind the decision, Slaiby said at a news conference. Alaska receives upward of 90 percent of its general fund revenue from the petroleum industry, and top state officials reacted strongly to the decision. U.S. Sen. Mark Begich, D-Alaska, blamed the Obama administration and the EPA. “Their foot dragging means the loss of another exploration season in Alaska, the loss of nearly 800 direct jobs and many more indirect jobs,” Begich said. “That doesn’t count the millions of dollars in contracting that won’t happen either at a time when our economy needs the investment.” The EPA issued Shell an air permit, but the agency’s review board granted an appeal because of limited agency analysis regarding the effect of emissions from drilling ships and support vessels. Weasel Zippers quips: Stall, baby, stall.

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Obama EPA to Shell: Screw you

I know you’re excited. It’s Friday, and you are just dying to head out this weekend and meet some green-hotties who will yap your ear off about sustainability, recycling, an ice free Arctic in a hundred years, how you can reduce your carbon footprint (so she can continue driving her Hummer H3), and other romantic

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Snap! Treeshagger Has The 15 Places To Meet A Green-Hottie

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