I seemed to have touched a nerve in regards to the ideas being bandied about in the seventies, as to what to do if the cooling didn't stop.
Harbors were unusable, people were trapped by snow, the temperatures had been falling for so long, there was even a huge report to congress about it.
You're talking about the US, yes? No offence meant, but US Americans do tend towards the hysterical. I'm sure the older (nay,
greatest) generations weren't reticent about how much worse it was in their days.
I remember the winter of '62-63 (in the UK) and that really was cold, for a very long time. Not an enormous amount of snow but it just didn't go away for months. The (UK again) winters just after The War were, I was told, much worse. Young people today don't know they're born, most of 'em.
The scientists who said it was pollution, combined with volcanoes, it turns out they were right.
Colour me amazed.
I also remember when Pinatubo went off, and the whole world cooled down. Even the experts were shocked at how quickly the warming began again, after the short lived sulfur particles were cleaned out of the atmosphere.
Unless by "expert" you mean TV weather-presenters, no, they weren't. The Hansen
at al climate model as run against the observed releases within months and pretty much nailed what happened after.
That the warming trend stopped, and the sun has gone quiet (another thing the predictions about were 100% wrong it seems), it makes sense with the huge increase in coal use from China, that warming would be stalled.
I can see you're making "warming has stopped" hay while the Sun shines weakly, and that's a sound policy. La Nina is fading, and who's to say when her leedle brother will arrive? Of course you can then blame the warmth on El Nino, but that'll take 1998 out of your arsenal.
The irony is it seems the people claiming this years record cold is due to warming, can't also be right, if there isn't warming.
You're not referring to the US here, obviously, and I know it's not the UK, so where is this "record cold"? By "this year" you do mean 2012, don't you?
That there is argument over the global mean, that casts some serious doubt about the state of climate science in the world today.
There may be confusion about it in your mind, and there's certainly denial out there that there's any such thing anyway, but there's really not much doubt about it. To the extent that there is uncertainty, 1998, 2005 and 2010 were all equally warm. 2011 was the warmest La Nina year. 2012 is looking good to be an ENSO-neutral year. While we wait that out the 2012 Arctic melt season will will divert us (by tradition, on a separate thread).