It is as I described: cherry picking quotes that support alarmism. GFDL, on the other hand, provides the conclusions of 125 scientists
debating about whether or not the observed extreme weather patterns had anything to do with the global change in temperature. The consensus they formed was one of indecision citing "evidence for and against." It wasn't one-sided like Skeptical Science.
I like scientists that don't have ulterior motives. NOAA, as far as warming is concerned, has been the most neutral governmental organization I've seen on the subject. GFDL, as well as analysis of weather's effect on warming at
Boulder Labs, are especially noteworthy in this regard.
80 miles is better than 800 miles. Computer models still suck but it's the best available and they originated at GFDL. I suspect the models will catch up as Boulder Labs completes it work on modelling weather over the next several decades.
Why the hostility? I can name one place for sure:
Yucca Mountain. It's also a
matter of probability:
It was time.
What is the
National Hurricane Center? What more do you want (rhetorical question)?
You know, I can't tell if you're trolling me, or just haven't read through everything. You link to the GFDL Wikipedia page. Jesus, that's a low bar of proof.
How about we fix that? How about we search what they've published, related to hurricanes. How about you do some reading here, because I'm sick and tired of you using a source which disagrees with your own conclusions:
http://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/global-warming-and-hurricanes
The conclusion, in case you don't read it for yourself, is that they predict hurricanes are becoming more severe. They conclude that frequency may either decrease or remain constant, but the magnitude of rainfall will be 10-15% higher. Seems like they're agreeing with what I said.
Not enough proof? They cite three studies that propose a new model, back the model up and remove the man made warming conclusion, and then utilize current models and data to prove the voracity of the first two studies.
Seem like you cherry picked tornadoes, and I focused on hurricanes. To prove your point you'd have to prove climate change influences no severe weather phenomena, while to be right I only have to demonstrate one that climate change does impact. It isn't a fair competition, but that's why I've come to my conclusions.
As to Yucca Mountain, get serious. Fit just 10% of the world population there, and I'll admit you've got a point. For now, you've cited that location because it was deemed safe for nuclear waste storage. It took how many years to find it, and how many billions of dollars just to make it fit for that purpose? If I live in tornado alley I get tornado insurance. If I live near the ocean I get flood insurance. Our government is debating whether or not our policy should be written on parchment or paper, instead of looking at the policy terms. Instead of planning people are seeking to levy blame. Denying climate change is idiotic. Denying global warming, global cooling, or temperature models that only use data from the last decade isn't stupid. Problem is, people equate denying crappy science with denying monumental truths. The argument that all climate change can be denied, because some jerk-offs decided to falsify a portion of data is moronic. Likewise, people preying off of guilt due to man made climate change is stupid.
Reasonably, we should be able to continue the debate about where something comes from and still prepare for what it brings. In reality, it seems that every opportunity for us to mitigate severe weather disasters is hampered by those denying that such a thing is possible.
Edit:
Maybe I've yet to make myself clear. Planning for these events isn't the same as accurate reporting on them.
Do you know why New Orleans was so bad? It was because NOAA had indicated evacuations so often that people became numb to it after some time. Unsurprisingly, after the half dozenth evacuation, that turned out to be for nothing, people stop paying the huge costs to evacuate. By the time the national hurricane center competently predicted Katerina, people were trapped already.
Additionally, 80 miles versus 800 is crap accuracy for a hurricane location. 800 miles would be predicting "this will hit Florida somewhere, unless it hits a neighboring state." Being 80 miles off, to account for inaccuracies you'd have to have 160 miles of coast evacuated for safety. Let's say you only evacuate a 1 mile distance inland. 160 square miles of people to evacuate would break any emergency services, by sheer volume.
If you really want to make the argument that 80 miles off is acceptable, demonstrate the plan that accepts 160 square miles of people into the surrounding area without breaking everything. We couldn't during Sandy. We couldn't during Katerina. We are kinda there with South Carolina (largely because a state of emergency was declared more than 24 hours in advance). If you call that adequate preparation, I'm never going anywhere that relies upon your planning skills.