European weather not sign of human activity

Ok let’s just pause ….. and reflect on how terrible it must be to be affected by Europes polar opposites right now. Fire and Drought, Floods and Storms. But just to show how limited in scope our TV media is “Floods in Southern Ethiopia Leave 7,000 Homeless” and “Storms dumped up to 4 inches of rain Tuesday across southern Arizona”.

“Torrential rains have caused havoc across central and eastern Europe, killing up to 34 people”. So as fires rage in Portugal (Arson suspected), Floods ravage more central parts and freak winds belt across Northern parts, you’d be easily lead into a discussion about global warming. Mainstream media are begining to report that these events may not be attributed to global warming, I bet they won’t go as far as saying freak weather is partly or mainly caused by the sun (common sense really), but hey it’s a start.

Commenting on climate models, in a BBC Article :

‘When we run these climate models for future years, we find we were getting very, very hot days. These were so hot, they can’t be explained just by more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere’ said Dr Haylock. Source

It’s vital we have a proper view on climate change, one that takes into consideration every possible aspect one that isn’t a demonic view and one that doesn’t blame every weather event on our own pressence, yet we must at the same time reduce our energy needs (or seek supply from the sun) and learn to live in a sustainable way.

Solar Rain, a book I highly recommend (and I highly recommend following that hyperlink), lays down the basic theroy: Sunspots => Solar Flares => Magnetic Field Shift => Shifting Ocean and Jet Stream Currents => Extreme Weather and Human Disruption (mitch battros). Today’s sunspot count: 85 which is quite low really, but there have been three M-Class flares this week from a sunspot that exploded from nowhere, within hours it had grown to a fairly hefty size.

Mitch writes :

They are coming from sunspot region 789, but region 800 also possesses a threat of continued flares. Today’s sunspot count is at 85. I would expect this to go down as 789 rotates around the western limb. But there seems to be more to this story than ‘literally’ meets the eye. Watch for continued extreme weather to occur within the next 48 to 72 hours.

Of course freak weather can also be attributed to local geology, such as the Bostcastle Floods of last year. Solar rain details undeniable links between increased solar activity and freak weather events, in fact freak weather is so common, it happens almost everyday, hardly a freak occurance really.

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