Had to change my bio as I've lost my passion for cricket, my city, development, politics, news & weather. How long before they take my love for AFL/West Coast
Harley Reid does it all himself for an UNBELIEVABLE solo goal đ„
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"A decentralised, water-dominated climate driven by regional ocean currents and chaotic cloud formations cannot be managed, taxed or centralised. This offers no financial leverage for global governance."
Exactly this
Treating a minor shift in a trace gas as a 'code red' planetary emergencyâwhile ignoring the massive planetary buffer systemsâis a failure of perspective.
The oceans are a vast thermal and chemical flywheel. Because they are so vast and deep, their capacity to absorb, store, and redistribute heat and gases operates on centuries-long timescales. This dwarfs the short-term models of centralised bureaucracies. For example, the oceans contain 86% of the world's global carbon reservoir; yet the atmosphere holds a mere 1% to 2%.
Science itself shows that human-produced COâ adds only around 3.4% to the full annual global carbon cycle. But natural climate variation has been enlisted by globalist power brokers to drive a campaign blaming COâ for a future catastrophe. The roles of water vapor, clouds and oceans are being bypassed. They don't suit the agenda. Yet oceans cover 72% of the Earth's surface to an average depth of 2.3 miles and contain 91% of all the world's retained heat energy. The atmosphere retains hardly any.
They are so vast that all variations in concentrations of soluble COâ are readily absorbed into the marine sink. As oceans warm they retain less COâ; when they cool, they retain more. This is known as Henry's Law. Natural processes heavily influence how much COâ resides in the atmosphere at any given time.
The human contribution, while measurable, is a fractional perturbation within a massive, dynamic system dominated by water vapor, cloud albedo and the sheer thermal inertia of the oceans. This also overlooks the complex, self-regulating feedback of cloud albedo.
As evaporation increases, cloud cover expands, acting as a natural planetary shield that reflects incoming solar radiation back into spaceâa chaotic, balancing mechanism that a simplified, COâ-centric model cannot fully capture.
Water vapor is the Earth's most abundant greenhouse gas, making up to 4% of the atmosphere by volume in the tropics. This is 40,000 ppm compared with COâ at roughly 420 ppm. Yet water vapor has been minimised by a simplified political narrative because, unlike well-mixed atmospheric gases, it is not uniformly distributedâits concentrations are constantly shifting over the vast expanses of the seas.
We seem to know more about the topography of the Moon than the geography and dynamics of the deep oceans. The tropics and rainforests are accepted zones of peak water vapor. These are also primary zones for storm activitiesâlike monsoons and seasonal rainfallâessential to atmospheric turbulence and heat redistribution.
Basic physics reveals that water vapor and clouds account for a vast majority of Earth's natural greenhouse effectâroughly 70% to 85%âwhile COâ is a minor shadow at around 9% to 12%. Its role is important to the atmospheric mix, but this doesn't mean it runs the world's climate. Water absorbs and traps infrared radiation on a massive scale, playing the dominant role in weather, cloud formation and precipitation.
The 'global warming or bust' agenda minimises the importance of cloud albedo and regional complexity. By flattening water vapor into a simple mathematical slave to COâ, global models ignore the chaotic, self-regulating dynamics of cloud formation (which reflects sunlight and cools the earth) and localised tropical dynamics.
A decentralised, water-dominated climate driven by regional ocean currents and chaotic cloud formations cannot be managed, taxed or centralised. This offers no financial leverage for global governance.
A well-mixed, uniform trace gas like COâ, however, provides the perfect metric for a centralised system and a whopping (and unnecessary) $275 trillion grid duplication.
Image: The oceanic flywheel; Deep-sea thermohaline circulation currents that regulate global heat distribution over centuries. Source: ttsz / Getty Images
"That was then this is now"
I agree - kneeling is pointless symbolism. But to dismiss it as such now after doing it then is pathetic & disgraceful hypocrisy
David Lammy took the knee for American citizen George Floyd.
Today he is asked if he will take the knee for one of our own, innocent Brit Henry Nowak.
He refuses - labelling it as âsymbolism.â
Everything wrong with the Labour Party in one video.
Tech regressions on my @Samsung Galaxy that I loved but will apparently never get back:
1. @Android swipe text that actually predicted my words
2. @googlemaps that remained visible while on a hands-free call
3. Autocompleting @x hashtags
4. A transparent @weatherzone 5x1 widget
"Its just put my modelling career on hold" - Tim English when asked on @FOXFOOTY if there were concussion concerns from having his face busted open. Yeah, I reckon he's fine! đ #AFLHawksDogs
After Henry Nowak Tragedy, Peter Hitchens Makes Controversial Call to Abolish Britainâs Entire Police Force and Start Again
âI have to say itâs been a long time since Iâve thought or imagined for a moment that I would ever say, âOh, great. The police have arrived.â Itâs astounding to me how long it has taken our society to notice the disaster which has happened to the police.â
Hitchens, a long-time critic of Britainâs broken policing system, doesnât mince words on the solution:
âMy position has been now for some time⊠The only thing we can do now is to create a new police force on sound principles and train it and as soon as itâs ready abolish and dismiss all the existing police forces which are totally useless and could not by any effort or any will of man be turned into anything that was useful. They all need to go off and do something else.â
This isnât the left-wing âdefund the policeâ idea. Itâs a conservative call to scrap the broken system and start again from scratch, end two-tier policing and go back to the original basics of good policing: preventing crime before it happens, having officers who are part of the local community, and policing that ordinary people actually support.
Black man tells the truth about Henry Nowak and BLM đ„
âWhy do you think everyone covered what happened to George Floyd and no one covered what happened to Henry?â
âHeâs whiteâ
âGeorge Floyd got a lot of publicity thanks to Black Lives Matter. They made a lot of money.â
âWhat did Black Lives Matter do for you?â
âNot a damn thingâ
âIâm black! Stand behind me, Iâm black!â
A black protester offered to help white protesters with his privilege at the June 2 demonstration in Southampton, England over the in-custody death of Henry Nowak.