@JayWeber3 The 2021 growth spike was real and historic, but it was a chaotic bounce-back from a global pandemic rather than standard, stable economic growth.
@JayWeber3 Ask the AI of your choice and you'll get: This text is a mixture of accurate historical data points and standard political framing. It accurately identifies key economic statistics, but packages them to support opposing political arguments.
@JayWeber3 Summary The text uses selective goalposts. If you judge an economy solely by sustained GDP growth, the 80s and 90s win. If you judge it by job market resilience and unemployment lows, the early 2020s score historically high.
@JayWeber3 walking UNalive Tony is way to far left and the current crop of his replacements are commies. I guess that's where JB wants to go. Go live in China if that's what you want. Don't screw up WI for everyone else.
The Trump administration has decided to reconstitute the U.S. Global Change Research Program, which produces the National Climate Assessments. My good friend Dr. @MatthewWielicki has been appointed as the Director of it.
I have a lot of confidence that the next NCA assessment, should they do a new one, will be based on REAL data as opposed to quasi-religious rhetoric, odd metrics, and modeling garbage.
All of the right people are upset about it and I am here for it.
@BasedMikeLee except for a few corageous individuals, like yourself and rick scott, the senate has become a stinking cespool like the rest of our government. our side hasn't learned a thing about how to get things done. sadly, only the LEFT knows how.😱😭
New York City's “all-time” record high temperature of 106°F was recorded on today's date in 1936. Could you imagine the hysteria if that occurred today? Heck, the panicans hyperventilated over Central Park reaching 100°F this past Friday, which only tied the daily record high maximum set in 1901 and tied in 1966.
In September 1854, a massive heatwave gripped the central and eastern U.S. It was over 100°F from the Great Plains to East Coast during the first week of the month. St. Louis, Missouri reached 100°F four times, including three straight days from September 2–4th. It peaked at 102°F there on September 3rd, 1854. If that occurred this year, climastrologists would be 100% certain that your Toyota Camry and Texas Roadhouse T-bone steak are to blame.