Given that no one seems to know what President Trump thinks about the reality of human-caused climate change,Watch online Sexy Warriors (2014) full movie perhaps we can agree that it's about time that he received a briefing on the subject.
Normally this would fall to his science advisor, or someone from the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, or perhaps the head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or even the NASA administrator.
However, he hasn't appointed anyone to those positions... So, it's up to me to get this on his desk.
SEE ALSO: Trump flips the middle finger to the world, your futureIn putting this together, I had to constantly remind myself that the briefing can't be just any old document. Recent news reports have revealed that Trump consumes his intelligence information the way an eighth-grader researches assignments on Wikipedia.
He's a fan of short bullet points and an abundance of maps and charts, rather than dense text and pesky nuance or ambiguity. He also apparently likes it when the daily brief, or "PDB," as intel pros call it, refers to himself.
As Director of National Intelligence and presidential briefer Dan Coats put it to the Washington Postrecently, "Sometimes... pictures do say a thousand words."
So, here's the President's Daily Brief on climate change, presented in the way that Trump prefers it: bullets and charts, and a few references to DJT himself:
CLIMATE CHANGE PDB/June 5, 2017
*****TOP SECRET/PLEASE DON'T TELL RUSSIA/SERIOUSLY THIS TIME****
It has not stopped or significantly slowed. It's not an artifact of bad data, either, and it's not part of a continually changing, natural climate cycle. Anyone who says, "the climate is always changing," without making clear that current developments are new, concerning, and very real, is not being honest.
Also, anyone who tells you there are more jobs to be generated in the coal industry than solar power is straight up lying.
Now here's the BEST chart!
This one shows how temperatures have trended since 1880, which is when instrument records began.
Perhaps a video is more your thing... here's the BEST global warming video.
This shows 136 years of global warming in just 30 seconds.
Global warming is mainly caused by the burning fossil fuels like coal and oil for energy. Land use change like cutting down forests also plays a role.
There are natural causes of climate change, but they're not the main reason why the Earth is warming right now.
Stop shaking your head, I'm serious about this. It just ain't natural. I wish it were. Most scientists wish it were.
The level of carbon dioxide -- which the Supreme Court and the Environmental Protection Agency have labeled as a "pollutant" -- in the Earth's atmosphere is the highest it has been in all of human history.
Here's a chart showing how current levels of carbon dioxide compares to the amount throughout all of human history and even further back in time, to 800,000 years ago. The ups and downs in past periods represent natural occurrences, whereas the current spike is due to human activity, according to scientists.
As the National Climate Assessment (and many, many others) found, "natural drivers of climate cannot explain the recent observed warming. Over the last five decades, natural factors (solar forcing and volcanoes) alone would actually have led to a slight cooling."
That was a lot of text, DJT, so here's a FABULOUS way of saying the same thing:
Isn't this a pretty chart? It has blue and black and red on it. It's about the oceans.
It's not just the air that's heating up either. The fingerprints of climate change can be found throughout the climate system, including in the oceans, which are absorbing the vast majority of extra heat.
Here's the PERFECT graphic for you. It's known as the "climate spiral" and it shows the increase in global temperatures from 1850 to 2016. Isn't this the most beautiful piece of cake... I mean, the most beautiful climate graphic ever?
Several studies have focused on how many climate scientists agree or disagree that global warming is mainly human-caused.
It turns out that at least 97 percent of climate studies examined agreed that human activities are the main cause of global warming since the industrial revolution. This is what people mean when they refer to the "scientific consensus" on global warming.
Head's up, POTUS: The people who work for you tend to fall among the 3 percent who don't recognize this consensus, including Scott Pruitt at the EPA, Rick Perry at the Energy Department, Sonny Perdue at Agriculture, and numerous White House advisors.
But hey, maybe that's a coincidence?
Climate change is already causing longer-lasting, more intense heat waves, an increase in the proportion of heavy downpours compared to gentler rainstorms, and sea level rise that's inundating coastal areas worldwide.
Sea ice is thinning and melting, clearing the way for a seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean. Land ice is also melting at increasing rates in Greenland and Antarctica, which is, in turn, raising sea levels. The ocean is turning more acidic. Species and diseases are on the move.
These problems and more aren't going away.
Your properties are not immune to sea level rise, either. For example, here is what Mar-a-Lago may look like with 7 feet of sea level rise -- which is at the upper end of projections for this century.
Even the military is concerned about global warming, since it could bring greater instability to already stressed regions, such as the Middle East. It also may imperil U.S. facilities, with more frequent flood events at Navy and coastal Air Force bases, for example.
Here's THE MOST AWESOME animation of sea ice trends.
It's up to us to decide how much the planet will warm, and therefore how high the seas will get, in coming years.
The Paris Agreement, which you just tossed aside, would help limit global warming but wouldn't entirely solve the problem. It might cause the country to incur some costs at the outset, as we switch to more renewable energy sources, but it would ultimately save money since global warming has its own costs.
A 2014 studyby a bipartisan group of business executives and former political leaders found that extreme heat and sea level rise will threaten human health and put up to $3.5 billion of U.S. property in jeopardy by 2030, with even more severe and expensive impacts to come after that.
Here's the MOST BEAUTIFUL climate chart you've ever seen, showing where the climate was headed before Paris, where it's going with the current Paris goals, and where it needs to go to meet the agreement's temperature target.
Climate and weather are different. Weather is comprised of day-to-day atmospheric events. Climate is the average of those events.
Weather is variable, chaotic-even, and difficult to forecast. Climate trends are controlled by larger forces, like greenhouse gases or changes in Earth's orbit.
Therefore, it's actually easier to project climate change on longer timescales compared to long-term weather forecasts.
*****TOP SECRET/PLEASE DON'T TELL RUSSIA/SERIOUSLY THIS TIME*****
NYT Connections hints and answers for December 24: Tips to solve 'Connections' #562.Raiders vs. Saints 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL onlineCES 2025: 5 car trends we expect to seeNASA spacecraft just plunged into the sun and broke stunning recordsSouthampton vs. West Ham 2024 livestream: Watch Premier League for freeJets vs. Bills 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL onlineCardinals vs. Rams 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL onlinePackers vs. Vikings 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL onlineGet 40% off floor care at Target4 radio emissions Earth received from space in 2024Best streaming deals: These Prime Video add ons are just $1.99Best Buy Drops this week: 20% off a Nintendo eShop gift cardBroncos vs. Bengals 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL onlineGet 40% off floor care at TargetNYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for December 26: Tips to solve Connections #94NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for December 24: Tips to solve Connections #92Is 'Blink Twice' streaming anywhere? Here's what you need to know.NASA Parker Solar Probe survives plunge into sunTrump tells SCOTUS that only he can save TikTok from banNYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for December 25: Tips to solve Connections #93 May Will Always Be the Best Month of the Year Indian spacecraft captures stunning view of moon before intense landing Robert Indiana and the Meaning of Love What We‘re Loving: Good Friday Riffs, Your New White Hair Recapping Dante: Canto 27 or Let’s Make a Deal with the Pope The Morning News Roundup for April 18, 2014 Looking for your next great binge? Head to Cameo. The Last Days to Apply for Our Residency at the Standard How to not let body shame keep you from LGBTQ Pride 2021 Apple Watch 7 to get redesign, but big health updates may be coming later X introduces 'sensitivity settings' to revive ad sales The Search for Solitude How to avoid flashing lights and photosensitive videos on TikTok Threesomes are seemingly more popular than ever in 2021 The Story Behind “Cunning” Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for August 9 Twitter comforts the intern behind that mass HBO Max email The Morning News Roundup for April 16, 2014 The Great Lime Shortage of 2014 How to add an admin to a Facebook page
2.2049s , 10187.8203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch online Sexy Warriors (2014) full movie】,Exquisite Information Network