This is what science looks like when it’s consumed by a doomsday cult
“I think we also need to stop asking the question of whether or not this event was caused by climate change. All events nowadays are augmented by climate change,” said @NIUlive meteorology professor @gensiniwx. https://t.co/S4XM9UIIM7
— 350 US (@350_US) December 21, 2021
From the cult screed
At least five people died as a powerful and extremely unusual storm system swept across the Great Plains and midwest amid unseasonably warm temperatures, spawning hurricane-force winds and possible tornadoes in Nebraska, Iowa and Minnesota. (snip through some of the other weather)
The storm shifted north of the Great Lakes into Canada on Thursday, with high winds, snow and hazardous conditions continuing in the upper Great Lakes region, the National Weather Service said. More than 400,000 homes and businesses were without electricity in Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and Kansas, according to poweroutage.us, which tracks utility reports.
High winds, snow and other harsh weather conditions were reported north of the Great Lakes area, according to the National Weather Service. At least 13 tornadoes were reported on Wednesday, with high winds clocking in at over 70mph throughout parts of Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa.
“To have this number of damaging wind storms at one time would be unusual any time of year,” said Brian Barjenbruch, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Valley, Nebraska. “But to have this happen in December is really abnormal.”
Snow and weather is unusual? Tornadoes might by less than normal, but, there is a long history of them happening periodically in December. So are windy conditions. Weather happens. Weird/unusual weather happens all the time, because the Earth’s system is dynamic. It is not fully predictable and always as expected.
Scientists have said that extreme weather events are probably due to human-caused climate change, but trying to find a cause for a specific weather event, such as storms throughout many regions in the US, requires additional analysis that requires time and can be inconclusive.
“I think we also need to stop asking the question of whether or not this event was caused by climate change. All events nowadays are augmented by climate change,” said Northern Illinois University meteorology professor Victor Gensini.
“We need to be asking, ‘to what extent did climate change play a role and how likely was this event to occur in the absence of climate change?”’
So, they cannot say with scientific certainly, but, they’re happy to say it with climate cult certainty.
Read: “All Events Nowadays Are Augmented By ‘Climate Change'” Or Something »