Last winter was much colder than average,
The past two years though... Temps have dropped fast, while winters have started to get longer and tougher. This winter is worse then any late 90's winter I knew.
I've been keeping weather records since 1976.
While all this is interesting, a limited set of measurements in just a single place even over long periods of time doesn't *necessarily* tell you the whole story.
I personally do most of my own judgment based on the ski season in the northeast. While I would expect most of these things to correlate reasonably well just because they may not doesn't mean a whole hell of a lot.
These days in winter every time it goes below 32F people say "whatever happened to global warming." I played varsity hockey at MIT from 1971 to 1975 and we skated in an outdoor rink generally at night and it was very common for the temperature to be below 0F and we thought nothing of it. I still live in the same general area where just below freezing is now considered cold.
However all of this is really not much more than anecdotal information. Interesting, but doesn't really prove much.
Just today I think they had record cold and snow in Austin, TX while two days earlier we hit a record of 69F in Boston. One of the implications of global warming is that the extremes in *both* directions both hot and cold get greater. In some way that's counter intuitive but it's true.
You know Mumble's, when someone links to a site while mentioning the contents, that usually means they know about it. I'd watch the video response, but you appear to have hosed the link.
Please tell me which one and I'll try to fix it.
I've definitely watched *every* video link that I've posted in this thread and in fact checked the last 8 or so links that I've posted and they all work for me, but again tell me which one doesn't work for you and I'll see what I can do.
Your source check didn't dispute this, just that the NOAA decided there wasn't any error in their information.
The short story is that there were 70 or so stations that were deemed to be of sufficiently high quality and the graphs from those specific stations were then compared to the correlated graphs from all the stations and the result showed no noticable statistical difference which led one to believe that the maintenance level or location did not spoil the results. They also went into detail as far as being in the vicinity of UHI (Urban Heat Island) again showing no noticable statistical difference.
There was certainly a lot more to the video that what I mentioned above so it's still a worthwhile view and I did just check it and it worked for me. You might also try to enter the link directly it's http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_0-gX7aUKk. You might also try a different browser, IE if you use FF or vice versa, I've seen that make a difference particularly for an embeded video.
You'll have to stomach a fair amount of what you will undoubtedly consider propaganda but if you can get past that to the basic science I do think video is informative.
The point is even if a particular station has some kind of error as long as it's a constant error it doesn't matter. Clearly the absolute temperature of any particular station will be different than the absolute temperature at some other station. That's why you cannot combined data from different stations. Each station should generate it's own curve that will be offset by some arbitrary constant. It's the addition or subtraction of this arbitrary constant from each of the individual curves that generates the final data.
Clearly if you're taking a continuous data stream from one site and then you do something that changes the offset of that station whether it's to paint it, or move it or whatever there's no problem with doing that but only as long as you do not combine the two data streams. You can consider the data continuous up until the point of the change and that data is useful but once you've made a change it's as if you created a brand new station that now starts it's own data stream. Just as long as the data pre-change is not merged with the data post-change there is no issue.
I could spend a few billion here, a few billion there, and make sure I got my cut of it.
Conceptually yes but that *is* fraud at the minimum and there are severe penalties for that. Mostly it's lobbying money to gain access and that money is then used to ensure reelection. I don't really believe there's a whole lot of exchanging cash directly for services. But I agree there's some wink, wink, nod, nod and once out of office someone falls backwards into a pit of money. I do think this is more likely of republicans rather than democrats but by no means do I think democrats are excluded.
I think your best argument in this regard is to make the claim that scientists toe the line of the consensus view so that they continue to get grant money. That's probably the most believeable scenario. However my response to that is that I could see how once a huge consensus became established that would be a motivating factor to keep it in place but it would not account for how the consensus came to be in the first place.
But certainly there is money on both sides of the equation it's just how much money are we talking about. The ExxonMobils of the world's financial interest in the outcome far outweighs the potential of easy money from the other side of the table. That doesn't mean that there is no financial incentive on the side of AGW just that the financial incentive against AGW dwarfs it in comparison.