Club Cobra Keith Craft Racing  

Go Back   Club Cobra > General Discussion > Lounge

MMG Superformance
Nevada Classics
MMG Superformance
Main Menu
Module Jump:
Nevada Classics
Nevada Classics
Keith Craft Racing
MMG Superformance
Advertise at CC
Banner Ad Rates
Keith Craft Racing
MMG Superformance
April 2026
S M T W T F S
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30    

Kirkham Motorsports

 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Rate Thread Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
  #11 (permalink)  
Old 10-28-2007, 02:33 PM
427 S/O's Avatar
CC Member
Visit my Photo Gallery

 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Senoia, Ga.
Cobra Make, Engine: 427SO with big twin autolite inlines on custom intake, jag rear, top loader, wembeldon white, guardsmen blue stripes
Posts: 3,155
Not Ranked     
Default

More from Lumo....I like this guy.



If you compare the predictions about the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season with reality as of August 23rd, 2006, you will see an incredible example of a breathtaking bias in the media - a good toy model of the media's manipulation with the climate in general.

Let us start with the predictions.

In March 2006, USA Today (and Reuters) told their readers that the "2006 hurricane season could be worse than the 2005". To "prove" their point, they quoted a United Nations bureaucrat:


"We have reason to fear that 2006 could be as bad as 2005," Jan Egeland, the undersecretary general for humanitarian affairs who coordinates U.N. emergency relief, told Reuters last week.
This is apparently what they call scientific evidence. The same prediction has been repeated in virtually all media you can imagine. For example, you could read it in the Insurance Journal. Some predictions relied on experts, namely Dr. William Gray from Colorado. For example, he said:

"Information obtained through November 2005 indicates that the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season will be much more active than the average 1950-2000 season. We estimate that 2006 will have about 9 hurricanes (average is 5.9), 17 named storms (average is 9.6), 85 named storm days (average is 49.1), 45 hurricane days (average is 24.5), 5 intense (Category 3-4-5) hurricanes (average is 2.3) and 13 intense hurricane days (average is 5.0)."
Trust me that there has been a lot of this stuff - BBC, CNN, MSNBC, New Scientist, NPR - together with theories that the hurricanes are caused by global warming and all this propaganda we have seen millions of times. Finally, we can get to the actual data:

2005 Atlantic hurricane season
2006 Atlantic hurricane season
By August 23rd, 2005, we had seen 12 storms. They started with the letters A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H,I,10,J,K. Five of them have been hurricanes. Emily and Katrina were category 5 hurricanes and Dennis was a category 4 hurricane - still a strong major hurricane.

By August 23rd, 2006, we have seen 4 storms: Alberto, Beryl, Chris, Debby. Neither of them has been a hurricane - not even a small hurricane. Debby is the first one that at least has a chance to become a minimal hurricane on Sunday or so - but be sure that it won't become one. 2006 is not only milder than 2005 but also than 2004, 2003, and most other years. Right now, in the middle of the season, 2006 is below the average.

December 2006 update: Indeed, it seems that the number of tropical storms (9) as well as hurricanes (5) as well as (minimal) major hurricanes (2) will stay below the average of 1950-2000. The season officially ended at the end of November. The absence of any tropical storms from the early October can be partially explained by a new El Nino.

The first tropical storm that will become a hurricane, Ernesto, will only form 4 days after this posting is completed. It will be downgraded back to a tropical storm in a day.

So far, the predictions for the storms in 2006 have been wrong more than three-fold. The hurricane predictions have so far been infinitely wrong. Let me now assume that the rest of the hurricane season won't change the situation qualitatively. What happens when it is almost obvious that the doomsaying predictions will be dramatically falsified? Well, no one will tell you that the alarmist predictions were just a piece of crap. The USA Today won't publish any errata. And no one, except for The Reference Frame, will propose that something should be changed about the hurricane science because of this dramatic failure.

William Gray and Philip Klotzbach started with a modest reduction of their prediction for this year at the beginning of August. But they still predicted an above-the-average season. Instead of 9 hurricanes, they now predict 7 hurricanes while the actual number so far is zero. Why didn't they just say that their prediction was wrong so that they could lower the prediction to a realistic number of 4-5 hurricanes instead of 7 hurricanes? Isn't scientific dishonesty a part of the answer?

Note added later: On September 1st, 7 will be indeed lowered to 5.


Note that William Gray is one of the good guys - a kind of "skeptic" who is himself under a severe attack of the groupthink of his colleagues. Despite his strangely slow correction of his radical prediction, he at least realizes that the hurricane variation is caused predominantly by natural factors - unlike people like James Elsner...

What does everyone do if it turns out that 2006 is going to be not only below the average but clearly below the average?

Your guess is correct: nothing will happen at all. It is OK to scare people. It is OK to fill newspapers with a lot of nonsense and junk science as long as it is politically correct. No corrective measures are necessary, except for corrections of politically incorrect scientific conclusions that simply can't be tolerated. As far as the climate goes, we don't live in a scientific world in which falsified predictions would have some consequences. We're not learning anything from the errors.

And remember that it has only been a few months since these predictions that will probably be wrong. After a few months, no one cares. Most predictions that the climate scientists are producing talk about years like 2050. These charlatans are safe: permanently safe.

Every person with common sense could predict that 2006 won't be as bad as 2005 simply because the hurricanes are random phenomena, and because 2005 was far worse than the average, it is almost guaranteed that 2006 would be much milder. Even if there were some correlation between natural climate trends (or even the human activity) on one side and the hurricanes on the other side, it is completely clear that these effects are negligible in comparison with the annual fluctuations.

The only exceptions - people who are not quite able to think like this - are the scientists who are actually paid for such predictions. They have already told us so much nonsense about the so-called "global warming" and all of its hypothetical consequences that they have started to believe this crap themselves. Of course that the real jerks are the politicians and the journalists-activists who are primarily responsible for misleading the public; but it couldn't work if the scientists did not invest their credentials into this dirty game. Many of the scientists are effectively employed as intellectual prostitutes indirectly paid by the far left charlatans.

Until the "experts" are fired or otherwise punished when their predictions fail so miserably - which can only happen if there is some real competition in their field - the world of the hurricane predictions won't have a chance to become a scientific world. And that's the memo.
__________________
Perry

Remember!, there's a huge difference between a 'parts' changer, and a mechanic.
Reply With Quote
 


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT -7. The time now is 06:04 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0
The representations expressed are the representations and opinions of the clubcobra.com forum members and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and viewpoints of the site owners, moderators, Shelby American, any other replica manufacturer, Ford Motor Company. This website has been planned and developed by clubcobra.com and its forum members and should not be construed as being endorsed by Ford Motor Company, or Shelby American or any other manufacturer unless expressly noted by that entity. "Cobra" and the Cobra logo are registered trademarks for Ford Motor Co., Inc. clubcobra.com forum members agree not to post any copyrighted material unless the copyrighted material is owned by you. Although we do not and cannot review the messages posted and are not responsible for the content of any of these messages, we reserve the right to delete any message for any reason whatsoever. You remain solely responsible for the content of your messages, and you agree to indemnify and hold us harmless with respect to any claim based upon transmission of your message(s). Thank you for visiting clubcobra.com. For full policy documentation refer to the following link: CC Policy
Links monetized by VigLink