Climate Change Is Here: It’s Going To Get Cooler, Says NASA

... “We see a cooling trend,” Martin Mlynczak of NASA’s Langley Research Center said two years ago, a remark largely ignored but still relevant. “High above Earth’s surface, near the edge of space, our atmosphere is losing heat energy. If current trends continue, it could soon set a Space Age record for cold.”..

... For the record, global temperatures dropped from 2016 through late 2019. We don’t know about any unprecedented cooling in the last two years. But maybe the climatistas need to consider that solar activity affects our climate. The Little Ice Age, in which Europe and North America experienced brutally cold winters and mild summers, coincided with the Maunder (solar) Minimum of 1645 to 1720. They don’t want to deny science, do they?

A couple of months ago science told us “the sun has entered into the modern Grand Solar Minimum (2020–2053) that will lead to a significant reduction of solar magnetic field and activity like during Maunder minimum leading to noticeable reduction of terrestrial temperature.”

“This global cooling during the upcoming grand solar minimum 1 (2020–2053),” says Valentina Zharkova, “can offset for three decades any signs of global warming and would require inter-government efforts to tackle problems with heat and food supplies for the whole population of the Earth.”...


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Apparently NASA has just figured out that it's the sun that causes earth to warm and cool, not man. Ever since sunspots were first observed (in 1610), the only climactic factor that without fail and 100% of the time tracks perfectly with Earth's temperature cycles -- including the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Warming Period -- is sunspots.



If your theory holds that CO₂ is responsible for Global Warming, yet you have Global Cooling going on when atmospheric CO₂ levels are the highest they've been in a million years (give or take), guess what? Your theory is thoroughly fucked up.

And if anybody's watching, the highest temperature ever recorded was in 1913 or 1931 (depending on whose accounts you believe). In either case that begs the question how the planet could undergo the better part of a century of unprecedented increases in CO₂ production ... yet the hottest day ever was still (at least) 90 years ago.