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As of Wednesday, 37.1 percent of the lakes remain covered in ice. While
that's way down from a high of 92.2 percent in early March, pictured
above -- and the second-highest ice cover since recording began in 1973
-- it's still an unprecedented amount of ice to have at this time of
year. |
breitbart
Scientists believe they have discovered a near-unprecedented
phenomenon - rarer, more elusive and mysterious than even the God
Particle: an article in The Huffington Post on the subject of the environment and climate change which doesn't once mention 'man-made global warming."
This extraordinary event was observed in an April 17th HuffPo article entitled '
The Great Lakes Are Still Almost Half Frozen, And It Could Affect The Environment For Years'.
The article notes that ice coverage on the lakes remains unseasonally
thick - the second highest ice-cover for the time of year since
recording began in 1973. It also dutifully mentions, as all HuffPo
pieces must, that there have been disastrous environmental consequences,
in this case "unprecedented duck deaths" and "disruptions to the fish
ecosystem."
However, what the piece doesn't do - and this is what is puzzling
scientists around the world - is try to blame the phenomenon on carbon
dioxide emissions, global warming, or man's selfishness, greed and
refusal to amend his lifestyle.
"We're mystified, seriously. A HuffPo article on the environment
which doesn't try to guilt-trip us into giving up meat and hot showers
and bombing our economy back to the dark ages in order to combat
man-made global warming. How can this possibly be?" asked Professor Otto
Spengler of the University of East Anglia's Department of
Environmentalist Bullshit Studies.
"Of course, everyone half-way sane in the world now recognises that
Anthropogenic Global Warming theory is a busted flush and that global
mean temperatures haven't risen since 1997," continued Prof Spengler.
"But the thing you have to realise about HuffPo - and Slate and Salon
and the Guardian and the New York Times - is that the whole global
warming scare was never really about science at all. It was about
religious belief."
"That's why, for example, a few years ago you had that wonderful
article by George Monbiot in the Guardian claiming that even the
unseasonally cold, snowy winter that year was yet another sign of global
warming."
"But the truth is much simpler than that," explained Prof Spengler.
"Writing off these guys as simply nuts is cruel and demeaning. I prefer
to think of these people as special - and in need of our gentle
sympathy, much as we might apply to those Cargo Cult Pacific islanders
who worship Prince Philip as their god. These people have dedicated
their whole lives and spent many, many years worshipping their own
environmental gods - variously known as Gaia, ManBearPig, and the IPCC -
and it is proving deeply traumatic for them to have their dearest
article of faith ripped away from them by harsh reality. Man-made global
warming just isn't happening for them in the way they wanted it too and
they're feeling a bit lost and bereft. It's like being suddenly told by
the Rev Jones: "No more Kool-Aid for you!" Or like climbing the top of
the mountain to be assumed to heaven by the great spaceship, only to
realise that the spaceship just isn't coming."
Professor Spengler and his team have been working through the night
to try to analyse the phenomenon and have come up with two competing
theories.
1. It's a terrible accident. "Huff Po has a very
strict rule which states that all environmental problems are the fault
of mankind, that the planet is warming catastrophically and that only by
funneling more money into the pockets of Al Gore and anyone, like those
nice people at Solyndra, who donated to the Obama re-election campaign
can it be preserved for future generations. Perhaps the author of the
piece simply forgot this rule. The penalty will be severe: exile to one
of HuffPo's Siberian yoghurt-weaving collectives, at least, if not
actual death."
2. There has been an incredible, tectonic shift in
HuffPo's understanding of the world. It is now swinging round to the
more scientifically plausible viewpoint that climate is driven by solar
activity and that this late season freeze on the Great Lakes is yet
another sign that we may be entering a prolonged period of global
cooling.
"But we think the first explanation is more likely," added Prof Spengler.
"The HuffPo - like the Guardian and the BBC - doesn't really do
science because the readers find it upsetting. They much prefer
environmentalist propaganda about how it's all man's fault and we should
sack the bankers now. Remember those Pacific Island Cargo Cultists:
HuffPo readers really are pretty basic in their understanding of the
world."
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