Not a normal day, but a weather 'event'. The prediction is that such events will become more frequent. The proof will be in the record of statistics.
In our local case, believe me it is normal.
Jumping to conclusions that GW is the cause of a weather event is normal today, instead of the reverse. Here is a good example of the proof being in the record of statistics.
Bruce Sterling, a writer and futurist whom I generally have had a high degree of respect for, recently
wrote this in Wired.
Sterling asserts the cause of the recent tragedy in which 180 Chinese miners drowned to ...
You guessed it...Global Warming. Quoting the final sentence -
There's not a coal mine in the world that could avert nine inches of sudden Greenhouse rain. Those miners were digging their own graves.
Facts don't matter. For example, the fact that no one turned the pumps on. Or the fact that the dike broke. Or the fact that there is such a thing as a rainy season.
In this article, Sterling brings up a good point regarding the
"Wexelblat disaster syndrome" and this is quite intriguing.
However he extends it without any scientific rationale to attribute the cause to global warming.
Facts.
Checking the China news story.
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=3497515
"The miners have been trapped since Friday afternoon when a dike on the Wen river burst, sending water rushing into the Huayuan Mining Co. mine, stranding 172 miners. Nine more miners were trapped in a nearby mine shaft. Both are about 370 miles southeast of Beijing."
A comment from a local villager.
"Li and others gathered under a billboard explaining Huayuan's "safety ideals". She said every year during the rainy season there is flooding in the mine, and officials did not seem to be prepared this year."
After writing a letter to the Wired editor complaining about this and receiving no response, I'm posting it here. It's quite disingenous and intellectually dishonest to assert that the known problems with the death rates in Chinese mines are attributable, not to Chinese flagrant disrespect for human rights and safety, but to a problem caused by the western world, increased levels of CO2 in the atmosphere.
According to Sterling, to put it bluntly, you and I are responsible for the Chinese miners deaths.
The comment blog on this article at Wired was closed right away.
I think I know why.
Background.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wexelblat_disaster
http://blog.wired.com/sterling/2007/08/climate-crisis-.html
Beijing is a couple hundred miles from Xintai, and here is rainfall and temperatures by month - obviously, July and August have a lot of rain.
http://www.world66.com/asia/northeastasia/china/beijing/lib/climate