Who’s afraid of the big bad climate monster?

Written by Miranda Devine

In Al Gore’s latest cinematic dose of climate scaremongering, a young Asian man is crying. “I feel so scared” he wails, before a vision of solicitous uncle Al patting his hand in an attempt to soothe away his fears of the apocalypse. Scaremongering is what Gore does best, and fear is the business model that has made him rich, though his every apocalyptic scenario has failed to materialize.

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Will the sun put the brakes on global warming?

Written by Michael Guillen Ph.D.

The sun is like a teenager that cycles through mood swings – from dramatic to chill and back again – roughly every eleven years. But this time it’s different. It now appears the sun is heading for a rare, super-chill period that threatens to add some unexpected drama to today’s climate change discussion.

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Arctic To Be Ice Free On November 10

Written by Tony Heller

I applied the top mathematical skills of the multi-billion-dollar climate alarm industry (™Michael Mann ®Gavin Schmidt) and have determined that the Arctic will be ice free on November 10, with temperatures at -15C and 24 hours of darkness.

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Rush Limbaugh is right about Climate Change

Written by Alan Siddons

No doubt you’ve heard Rush Limbaugh’s occasional rants about the issue of man-made climate change. It’s a hoax, he says, complaining that the science isn’t based on actual data but on computer models. Well, I’d like to address that point.

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Plummeting July 16 Temperatures In The U.S.

Written by Tony Heller

The US used to be very hot on July 16, but temperatures have plummeted. The hottest July 16 was in 1936 when afternoon temperatures averaged over 94 degrees. The only other year that happened was in 1901.

The last hot July 16 was 2006, and since then July 16 temperatures have plummeted. The coolest July 16 was in 2014, with 2015 and 2016 (NASA’s hottest year ever) also among the 20 coolest years.

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The cosmic dance of three dead stars could break relativity

Written by Joshua Sokol

Imagine you’re an astronomer with bright ideas about the hidden laws of the cosmos. Like any good scientist, you craft an experiment to test your hypothesis.

Then comes bad news – there’s no way to carry it out, except maybe in a computer simulation. For cosmic objects are way too unwieldy for us to grow them in Petri dishes or smash them together as we do with subatomic particles.

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