The Settled Science of Catastrophic Man-Made Global Warming Violates the Laws of Physics

Written by Charles R. Anderson, Ph.D.

President Trump has just recently announced that the U.S. will not participate in the Paris Climate Agreement.  He implied that he regarded it as a bad deal for the U.S. economy, while not necessarily disputing its premise that man’s use of fossil fuels was going to cause a disastrous deterioration of the Earth’s climate.

Continue Reading 1 Comment

What Would Happen If We Blew Up the Moon?

Written by Rae Paoletta

The Moon is the Tango to Earth’s Cash, the Hall to our Oates, the Lennon to our McCartney before they hated each other. Simply put, our planet and the Moon are soul mates: except, of course, if something were to happen to one of them. Like, I don’t know, what if we just blew up the Moon?

Continue Reading

A Critical Lesson from the NASA Earth Energy Budget

Written by Charles R. Anderson, Ph.D.

The essence of the argument that an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide, an infrared-active or greenhouse gas, causes the Earth’s surface to become warmer lies in a radiation-dominant viewpoint in the transport of energy between the surface and the atmosphere.  This viewpoint is depicted in the NASA energy budget shown below:

Continue Reading 1 Comment

Astronomers track the birth of a ‘super-Earth’

Written by Daniel Stolte

A new model giving rise to young planetary systems offers a fresh solution to a puzzle that has vexed astronomers ever since new detection technologies and planet-hunting missions such as NASA’s Kepler space telescope have revealed thousands of planets orbiting other stars: While the majority of these exoplanets fall into a category called super-Earths—bodies with a mass somewhere between Earth and Neptune—most of the features observed in nascent planetary systems were thought to require much more massive planets, rivaling or dwarfing Jupiter, the gas giant in our solar system.

Continue Reading

One step closer to a gonorrhea vaccine?

Written by The Lancet

A discontinued vaccine against a bacteria that causes brain inflammation also shielded people against gonorrhea, the first drug ever to offer such protection against the sexually transmitted disease, researchers said Tuesday.

Continue Reading

Climate Models = Climate Astrology

Written by Dr. Benny Peiser, GWPF, guest post

Climate scientists now expect California to experience more rain in the coming decades, contrary to the predictions of previous climate models.

Continue Reading

How artificial intelligence could battle sexual harassment in the workplace

Written by John Brandon

“Your email was blocked, we’ve contacted an HR representative.”

This message could go a long way towards weeding out some of the sexual explicit messaging in the workplace, most recently highlighted by a New York Times report.

Although it would by no means block all suggestive comments that occur in the workplace, there is a way to make an artificial intelligence (AI) become more aware of what is happening in the digital realm.

Continue Reading