Minnesota regionals are gaining quick guys

Man, that was just plain stupid to post that. What comes around goes around my friend. Can't say you weren't warned.
 
hey i haven't even yet and we're not dating its all good. +1 for not having anything else on mind at that moment get it?
 
because i broke my back. but im not unemployed anymore! im back at my old prep cook job at the retirement community downtown. w00t for rum and cokes at the horseshoe after work.
 
+1 for taking 10 seconds to find the plus sign

+1 for being on spare at home

- 2 for having to go back in 10 minutes
 
http://www.bellinghamherald.com/102/story/375112.html

Fluctuations in solar radiation could mean colder weather in the

decades ahead, despite all the talk about global warming, retired

Western Washington University geologist Don Easterbrook said Tuesday.

Easterbrook is convinced that the threat of global warming from mankind’s carbon dioxide pollution is overblown.

In

a campus lecture, he cited centuries of climate data in an effort to

convince a somewhat skeptical audience that carbon dioxide’s impact on

climate is being much exaggerated by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore

and by scientists who appear to have won the debate over global

warming.

“Despite all you hear about the debate being over, the debate is just starting,” Easterbrook said.

30-YEAR TREND

Easterbrook

doesn’t deny that the Earth’s climate has been warming slowly since

about 1980. But he argued that this warming trend fits a longstanding

pattern of warming and cooling cycles that last roughly 30 years.

Sunspot activity and other solar changes appear to explain the 30-year

cycles, he said.

If that pattern persists, the earth could now be close to the next 30-year cooling cycle, Easterbrook said.

He

noted that the 2007-08 winter set records for cold and snow in many

parts of the globe. According to the data he displayed, the Earth’s

temperature hit a peak in 1998 and has been steady or slightly cooler

since then.

“One cold winter doesn’t mean much of anything,” he said. “A 10-year trend is interesting.”

He contended that warming periods appear to match periods of sunspot activity, which currently is at a low point.

Easterbrook noted that astrophysicists have been expecting that activity to begin increasing soon, but so far it has not.

Prolonged

periods of low activity could lead to a dramatic cooling such as

occurred in Europe during the so-called “Little Ice Age,” a term

loosely used to describe cooler weather in the 14th to 19th centuries,

Easterbrook said.

CONTRASTING PREDICTIONS

Easterbrook

didn’t predict another Little Ice Age, but did offer his own climate

predictions for the rest of the 21st century — predictions in sharp

contrast with those of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

set up by the United Nations.

The panel, which shared the 2007

Nobel Peace Prize with Gore, predicts a 10-degree Fahrenheit rise in

global temperature by 2100, resulting from carbon dioxide created by

the burning of fossil fuels. Easterbrook said the temperature change

from now until the end of the century will be minor, and so will any

change in sea level.

A quick scan of scientific literature

available online indicated some conflict in scientific opinions on the

effect of solar activity on climate.

Some scientists see a

significant effect, but others, including those on the IPCC, insist

that there is overwhelming evidence for carbon dioxide’s impact, and

that impact far outweighs any solar effects that can be demonstrated.

If the warming trend of the past 30 years really is reversing, it won’t take too long to become apparent.

“In

three years we’ll at least know the direction we are headed,”

Easterbrook said. “If we are one degree warmer in 2010 than we were in

2005, I will appear here and eat my words.”

While Easterbrook is skeptical about the risks from carbon dioxide, he said he strongly supports efforts to curb air pollution.

“There are a lot of things being put in the atmosphere right now that are way more dangerous than (carbon dioxide,)” he said.

But Easterbrook is far more worried about global population growth.

At

present growth rates, the world would add another 3 billion people by

2050, putting enormous strains on supplies of food, water and other

resources.

“Nobody is talking about it,” he said. “Nobody is doing anything about it, and it’s happening.”
 
Couple inches tonight and a few more tomorrow to hopefully cover up the nasty ice layer at lower elevations.
 
+1 weed for the mailman

Janice Heizer of Omak received a little surprise March 25 while working her 20-mile mail route around Tonasket.

At first, nothing appeared out of the ordinary to the 53-year-old

veteran postal carrier as she reached out her car window to insert mail

into a Tonasket roadside mailbox. That is, until she opened the box.

Inside the box, Heizer said she found a small amount of marijuana, a brass pipe and a note scrawled on a napkin reading "Enjoy."

Heizer said she reported the find to her boss, who

called the Okanogan County Sheriff's Office. She waited at the mailbox

until the cops arrived to confiscate the pipe and pot.

The police report, provided by Sheriff Frank

Rogers, said the mailbox's owner didn't know anything about it. With no

suspects, the pot and pipe were destroyed.

In her 21 years on the job, Heizer says she's encountered a surprise or two, "but never anything like this."
 
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