KBMaster wrote:Surprisingly, it hasn't been extremely hot down here in Fl. I don't go outside that much, but when I do, it's not sweltering.
I can handle heat sometimes. I can handle it better than the cold though.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Define "hot" for florida
It's pretty warm in Maryland, and it's getting annoying. The coolness of the school computer lap and my laptop keeps me feeling good.
Pent wrote:Gloabl warming...XD
termyt wrote:It's in the upper 80's here in oHIo - about 20 degrees highr than normal. (That's around 30 degrees to our friends anywhere else in the world).
Bobtheduck wrote:I know you were joking, but what bugs me is that people believe this... Times of extreme heat is NOT a result of global warming, but cyclical weather patterns... In a number of years, we will have particularly mild seasons... It changes... Weather patterns go through cycles that are longer than people live, so they look at these changes as something permanent, but they aren't...
Global warming refers to the overall temperature on the surface of the earth... I believe it is something to the effect of one degree (celsius, I'm guessing) over the period of 100 years... While that is reason to worry for our great great etc grand children, it'll be a couple hundred years of that pattern before it's enough to do anything, and by that time, mankind's involvement in global warming will be so diminished, that we'll basically be a drop in the bucket compared to natural sources...
Oh, and while I'm ranting, the O-zone has next to NOTHING to do with Global Warming... O-zone filters UV light... Also, it is aparantly a pollutant when it's low in the atmosphere, and is a natural by-product of many industrial processes... Now, I'm not an engineer or a physicist, but I'm wondering... Why can't this be put to use, say in filling in that hole over Australia and reversing damage done by CFCs (which is very little, as of now, since holes form NATURALLY in the Ozone layer, though CFCs will damage it to where it can't repair itself... Eventually...) It's too bad we can't use the CFCs to eliminate the low atmosphere Ozone (and lowering pollution), and prevent it from reaching the Ozone layer...
To be a bit more in the spirit of this conversation, I LIKE the heat. I'm a big fan of hot summer days. It isn't the hottest yet, either... I don't like it when it's the ABSOLUTE hottest it gets really anywhere in california (not counting mountains), but the time leading up to that, I like...
Joshua Christopher wrote:Sorry, I read the thread title and thought you were talking about me! My apologies!
Doe Johnson wrote:I think it's actually in the 60s here in Kansas. It was warmer the past few days, but today it's rainy out. It feels like a warm rain to me though, I walked to the library earlier and wasn't all that cold.
Joshua Christopher wrote:Sorry, I read the thread title and thought you were talking about me! My apologies!
Doe Johnson wrote:I think it's actually in the 60s here in Kansas. It was warmer the past few days, but today it's rainy out. It feels like a warm rain to me though, I walked to the library earlier and wasn't all that cold.
Bobtheduck wrote:I know you were joking, but what bugs me is that people believe this... Times of extreme heat is NOT a result of global warming, but cyclical weather patterns...
Global warming refers to the overall temperature on the surface of the earth... I believe it is something to the effect of one degree (celsius, I'm guessing) over the period of 100 years...
It's too bad we can't use the CFCs to eliminate the low atmosphere Ozone (and lowering pollution), and prevent it from reaching the Ozone layer...
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