http://businessandmedia.org/articles/2008/20081218205953.aspx

- - -

"You know, to think that we could affect weather all that much is pretty
arrogant," Myers said. "Mother Nature is so big, the world is so big, the
oceans are so big - I think we're going to die from a lack of fresh water or
we're going to die from ocean acidification before we die from global
warming, for sure."

Myers is the second CNN meteorologist to challenge the global warming
conventions common in the media. He also said trying to determine patterns
occurring in the climate would be difficult based on such a short span.

"But this is like, you know you said - in your career - my career has been
22 years long," Myers said. "That's a good career in TV, but talking about
climate - it's like having a car for three days and saying, 'This is a great
car.' Well, yeah - it was for three days, but maybe in days five, six and
seven it won't be so good. And that's what we're doing here."

"We have 100 years worth of data, not millions of years that the world's
been around," Myers continued. 

Dr. Jay Lehr, an expert on environmental policy, told "Lou Dobbs Tonight"
viewers you can detect subtle patterns over recorded history, but that dates
back to the 13th Century.

"If we go back really, in recorded human history, in the 13th Century, we
were probably 7 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than we are now and it was a very
prosperous time for mankind," Lehr said. "If go back to the Revolutionary
War 300 years ago, it was very, very cold. We've been warming out of that
cold spell from the Revolutionary War period and now we're back into a
cooling cycle."

Lehr suggested the earth is presently entering a cooling cycle - a result of
nature, not man.

"The last 10 years have been quite cool," Lehr continued. "And right now, I
think we're going into cooling rather than warming and that should be a much
greater concern for humankind. But, all we can do is adapt. It is the sun
that does it, not man."

Lehr is a senior fellow and science director of The Heartland Institute, an
organization that will be holding the 2009 International Conference on
Climate Change in New York March 8-10.

Another CNN meteorologist attacked the concept that man is somehow
responsible for changes in climate last year. Rob Marciano charged Al Gore's
2006 movie, "An Inconvenient Truth," had some inaccuracies.

"There are definitely some inaccuracies," Marciano said during the Oct. 4,
2007 broadcast of CNN's "American Morning." "The biggest thing I have a
problem with is this implication that Katrina was caused by global warming."

Marciano also said that, "global warming does not conclusively cause
stronger hurricanes like we've seen," pointing out that "by the end of this
century we might get about a 5 percent increase."

His comments drew a strong response and he recanted the next day saying "the
globe is getting warmer and humans are the likely the main cause of it."

- - -

Let's see how fast Myers gets bullied into recanting. The Thought Police are
in full force and will squish this fly in the ointment of their
"indisputable scientific consensus" before too long. We can't have anybody
openly questioning the whole premise of this juicy little fear-mongering,
vote-grabbing, power-consolidating hoax--not without punishment or
repentance.

- Bob 




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