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31 Thoughts to “-45C In Yakutia As Deep Winter Grips Siberia; Northern India Shivers; The Brightening Bombshell; + Fossil Fuels Aren’t for Turning — But the Agenda Is”
G’day Cap,
Great to see that you are posting a few articles on Facebook. One benefit of the Climate change “Awakening” is that contributors like you will no longer be so vehemently pursued.
The referenced Mean Surface Level Pressure global map below has something I have never seen before.
It shows a procession of low-pressure systems in both hemispheres.
The storms I mentioned to Deb that would hit Britain are unleashing.
Cheers, coolest ones.
The coolest ones are in Yakutia, the coldest village on earth. If you want to see how the coolest ones adapt to the coldest weather, see the video linked above by Anthony.
One thing they stress over and over is the necessity for hard work. This is where a lot of modern people are going to lose it. Survival in a cold climate requires hard work. There are still people in this country with a good work ethic, but the percentage is much lower than it was 50 or 100 years ago.
If it does get colder, there will be mass migration to warmer climes by those who are unwilling or unable to put out consistent physical effort.
The people of Yakutia look very healthy and appear to have good values. I have long believed that the trouble makers, criminals etc are people who are looking for an easy life. They would rather mooch or steal from others than get up and go to work every day. A lot of those types will be heading south where the livin’ is easy.
I took a look at Yakutia when Anthony posted the reference.
I was left wondering what they did for a vitamin D source.
I have been informally studying microbiology since covid started competing with climate and Piltdown man.
We used to hear that Esquimaux subsisted entirely on amimal flesh, yet they suffered no nutritional deficiencies. In the case of the Yakut, they must have some vegetation available in the summer at least, or else how would they have trees to burn?
Piltdown Man? Three examples of famous frauds, I suppose.
Not many people are studying microbiology in their spare time. I’ve always known you were either an extraordinary human, or not a human at all. I wonder if I will ever know for sure which.
Planktonic Algae produces vitamin D. SeaLife eats the algae. Fish eats the SeaLife. Seal eats the fish.
Esquimaux eats the seal. That is a simplified food chain of how vitamin D is acquired.
The people in Yakutia eat the fish, taking a short cut.
Deblingtonhead? Yes Moffin! The coccolithophores turn more than a million tons of CO2 into captured CO2 every year in the form of calcium carbonate. Think ‘the white cliffs of dover’.
I adopted them because I got to pronounce the word correctly and then actually spell the word.
I gained knowledge of coccolithophores from Dr. Patrick Moore videos, the scientist founding member of Greenpeace.
The people in Yakutia use chainsaws and modern nets for ice fishing. All fish is caught in the summer and the fish is saved in the freezer for winter food:
This video shows the traditional Munkha ice fishing in Yakutia, an ancient ritual where the whole village work together to catch enough fish for the long Arctic winter. https://youtu.be/p55xWMvJRM8?t=518
Couldn’t watch that video. Too much like 2001, which I hated. Just a lot of heavy breathing, no explanations. Too artsy.
I might’ve known you were not drawn to the coccolithophore for its artistic beauty. You’re more the clunky, practical type, tho uncharacteristically sensitive for that type. I honor your sensitivity.
Spinky-
I liked your video. It had some of the same people as Anthony’s video. It was realistic and told a story. I didn’t see any chainsaws, tho, and the ice was clearly not 2 meters thick.
“Lindzen explained the basic math behind what he called ‘climate alarm.’ He said the emphasis on lowering specific emissions like carbon dioxide (CO₂) simply doesn’t produce the worldwide temperature changes advocates say it will.
The scientist noted that the planet’s temperature has fluctuated significantly throughout recorded history and science still can’t definitively prove what the exact cause of both extreme warming and cooling events has been.
‘We don’t understand the glaciation that occurred in the 15th century. You know, so what was going on then? Inadequate CO₂?’ Lindzen said of the event in the Northern Hemisphere known as the Little Ice Age.”
—HA! A great question. The Little Ice Age happened because of no SUVs and little CO2 1300-1500?? Keep these articles coming, Daily Mail and anyone who will objectively look at the data.
Cap an others like him – and their readers – are carrying the day.
MORE…
“However, many of the studies predicting a climate apocalypse also assume that every bit of warming automatically adds more water vapor to the atmosphere, which is a much stronger heat-trapper than CO₂.
Lindzen called this assumption wrong, noting that nature typically fights major planetary climate swings, instead of making them worse.
His theory, called the Iris effect, suggests that when the tropics get too warm, powerful thunderstorms punch holes in the clouds, *opening an ‘iris’ that lets extra heat escape into space.*
This directly counters water vapor’s heat-trapping power by reducing the blanket of moisture-rich clouds that would otherwise trap more warmth.”
When the water vapor becomes so strong that fog is created. The fog reflects the sun’s radiation into space.
That’s why it’s colder in the rain forest than in the desert.
Looks like the climate scam will soon be a thing of the past. Perhaps you should move on to the next great controversy — the AI among us. Plenty of material there for articles/discussion, and more coming all the time. Job security for you. 😄
G’day Cap,
Great to see that you are posting a few articles on Facebook. One benefit of the Climate change “Awakening” is that contributors like you will no longer be so vehemently pursued.
Thank you Dave.
And here’s hoping!
Another great article, thank you so much for the information.
Thank you Raymond.
The name of Yakutia has come up here and elsewhere … and this beautiful lady makes it look — almost habitable …
https://www.youtube.com/@KiunB
That was interesting, especially the final statement.
Hi coolest electroverse readers.
The referenced Mean Surface Level Pressure global map below has something I have never seen before.
It shows a procession of low-pressure systems in both hemispheres.
The storms I mentioned to Deb that would hit Britain are unleashing.
Cheers, coolest ones.
https://www.bom.gov.au/australia/charts/global/gmslp.000.shtml
The coolest ones are in Yakutia, the coldest village on earth. If you want to see how the coolest ones adapt to the coldest weather, see the video linked above by Anthony.
One thing they stress over and over is the necessity for hard work. This is where a lot of modern people are going to lose it. Survival in a cold climate requires hard work. There are still people in this country with a good work ethic, but the percentage is much lower than it was 50 or 100 years ago.
If it does get colder, there will be mass migration to warmer climes by those who are unwilling or unable to put out consistent physical effort.
The people of Yakutia look very healthy and appear to have good values. I have long believed that the trouble makers, criminals etc are people who are looking for an easy life. They would rather mooch or steal from others than get up and go to work every day. A lot of those types will be heading south where the livin’ is easy.
I took a look at Yakutia when Anthony posted the reference.
I was left wondering what they did for a vitamin D source.
I have been informally studying microbiology since covid started competing with climate and Piltdown man.
Oh Deb? Yes Moffin! Deb. The fish they eat appear to be oceanic, not from rivers. That is their main source of the seco-steroid, vitamin D.
We used to hear that Esquimaux subsisted entirely on amimal flesh, yet they suffered no nutritional deficiencies. In the case of the Yakut, they must have some vegetation available in the summer at least, or else how would they have trees to burn?
Piltdown Man? Three examples of famous frauds, I suppose.
Not many people are studying microbiology in their spare time. I’ve always known you were either an extraordinary human, or not a human at all. I wonder if I will ever know for sure which.
If you are actually AI, once they get you fitted out with a robot body, will you come and cook for me?
Deb Says. “Piltdown Man? Three examples of famous frauds, I suppose.”
Perfect interpretation Deb. You are sharper than all but my best knife.
We often seem to be on the same wavelength. I hope that means you’re human, as I’d hate to find out that I have a high compatibility quotient with AI.
Planktonic Algae produces vitamin D. SeaLife eats the algae. Fish eats the SeaLife. Seal eats the fish.
Esquimaux eats the seal. That is a simplified food chain of how vitamin D is acquired.
The people in Yakutia eat the fish, taking a short cut.
My favourite algae is the coccolithophore. I have pet ones cruising around in the temperate ocean.
Of course you do. 🙄
Okay, Moffin –
I can see why you adopted them. They’re darned cute! 😊
How can people in Yakutia make holes in the 2-meter-thick ice for fishing?
Who says it’s 2 meters thick?
How can an AI with a metaphorical skull 2 meters thick make comments on this website?
Moffin/Spinky-
Here’s where I am. Correct me if I’m wrong.
The first one is either human or an AI pretending to be human. The second one is either AI or a human pretending to be AI.
I’m not sure where to go from there, but at least I know where I am.
This video shows them ice fishing and an auger is used. Unsure about traditional ice opening. Best to skip sections of the video to avoid tedium.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7UvQEulHtI&t=2299s
Deblingtonhead? Yes Moffin! The coccolithophores turn more than a million tons of CO2 into captured CO2 every year in the form of calcium carbonate. Think ‘the white cliffs of dover’.
I adopted them because I got to pronounce the word correctly and then actually spell the word.
I gained knowledge of coccolithophores from Dr. Patrick Moore videos, the scientist founding member of Greenpeace.
The people in Yakutia use chainsaws and modern nets for ice fishing. All fish is caught in the summer and the fish is saved in the freezer for winter food:
This video shows the traditional Munkha ice fishing in Yakutia, an ancient ritual where the whole village work together to catch enough fish for the long Arctic winter.
https://youtu.be/p55xWMvJRM8?t=518
. Moffin –
Couldn’t watch that video. Too much like 2001, which I hated. Just a lot of heavy breathing, no explanations. Too artsy.
I might’ve known you were not drawn to the coccolithophore for its artistic beauty. You’re more the clunky, practical type, tho uncharacteristically sensitive for that type. I honor your sensitivity.
Spinky-
I liked your video. It had some of the same people as Anthony’s video. It was realistic and told a story. I didn’t see any chainsaws, tho, and the ice was clearly not 2 meters thick.
The hole from the chainsaw is at 2:15 in the video.
The ice is thicker in the winter. It’s permafrost:
The Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea wash the Northern shores of Yakutia. Nine to ten months a year the seas are covered with a 1.5 to 2 meter-thick ice crust.
https://www.yakutiatravel.com/facts-about-yakutia/environment
The people in Yakutia buy their food in supermarkets.
Fishing is just an old tradition, not needed for survival:
A typical supermarket in Yakutsk.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5TKFLB8WXg
ARTICLE
Top MIT scientist blasts ‘climate hysteria,’ says global warming fears are driven by money… not evidence
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-15236133/Scientist-climate-change-hysteria-nonsense.html
Referencing Richard Lindzen, Professor Emeritus of Meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
“Lindzen explained the basic math behind what he called ‘climate alarm.’ He said the emphasis on lowering specific emissions like carbon dioxide (CO₂) simply doesn’t produce the worldwide temperature changes advocates say it will.
The scientist noted that the planet’s temperature has fluctuated significantly throughout recorded history and science still can’t definitively prove what the exact cause of both extreme warming and cooling events has been.
‘We don’t understand the glaciation that occurred in the 15th century. You know, so what was going on then? Inadequate CO₂?’ Lindzen said of the event in the Northern Hemisphere known as the Little Ice Age.”
—HA! A great question. The Little Ice Age happened because of no SUVs and little CO2 1300-1500?? Keep these articles coming, Daily Mail and anyone who will objectively look at the data.
Cap an others like him – and their readers – are carrying the day.
MORE…
“However, many of the studies predicting a climate apocalypse also assume that every bit of warming automatically adds more water vapor to the atmosphere, which is a much stronger heat-trapper than CO₂.
Lindzen called this assumption wrong, noting that nature typically fights major planetary climate swings, instead of making them worse.
His theory, called the Iris effect, suggests that when the tropics get too warm, powerful thunderstorms punch holes in the clouds, *opening an ‘iris’ that lets extra heat escape into space.*
This directly counters water vapor’s heat-trapping power by reducing the blanket of moisture-rich clouds that would otherwise trap more warmth.”
When the water vapor becomes so strong that fog is created. The fog reflects the sun’s radiation into space.
That’s why it’s colder in the rain forest than in the desert.
Cap-
Looks like the climate scam will soon be a thing of the past. Perhaps you should move on to the next great controversy — the AI among us. Plenty of material there for articles/discussion, and more coming all the time. Job security for you. 😄
Deb