Thursday 25 August 2022

Hot or Cold?

 
This coming winter is going to be something of dilemma for the powers-that-were. On the one hand, they're pushing the climate change narrative and in order to ram home the terror that the world is dying in a global warming catastrophe and it's all the fault of white Western civilization. In that case the ideal winter will be an over-typical southern English one; lots of wind and heavy rain with mild temperatures and no ice or snow. On the other hand they are also pushing the cost-of-living crisis including food, water and energy shortages. To generate a state of dependency they will need conditions in which a scarcity emergency will hit hardest. They will need freezing conditions, blizzards and icy pipes etc. So which will they choose? You might ask: "What do you mean 'choose'? They can't control the weather?" Well, maybe they can, see: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2015/01/eyes-in-outer-space.html. Even if I'm wrong about that, the point still stands because the weather has to be one thing or the other by chance. It's amusing to see that the Deep State hasn't thought the situation out very well beforehand. The conditions coming up in the next few months will mean they will have to abandon one strategy and continue with the other alone. Ideally they would want to keep their options open and leave the door open for both. That is unless they're going to drop everything else and wheel in the aliens! We'll soon see. Personally I wouldn't offer odds, but as the late year develops the situation will become more certain.
See here for background: http://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2022/02/chemtrails-portal.html.
And: http://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2021/11/climate-change-portal.html.
And: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2022/02/the-next-crisis.html.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Interesting point. If weather has been deliberately manipulated in UK winters they have done a pretty dire job of it if they wanted to control a narrative of either global warming is happening or global warming isn't happening if we look purely at temperature... 2010-2019 were the mildest winters in the past century which would go some way to reinforce the 'global warming' is happening narrative however the last 2 years have been colder and Dec- Jan 2009-10 was actually one of the very coldest on record (a big 2 month freeze) jumped upon by climate change sceptics to say it's all a ruse.

Temperature is however only one observable variable and if climate change is happening then a more accurate measure is precipitation rather than average temperature. Warmer air holds more moisture so we should expect more rain and snow as each year goes by if it's warming.

Long range weather being hard to predict (though most certainly not random) my expectation is for more snow than average as cities and homes keep the heating off/lower to pay the bills and the ambient air temperature is lower than normal meaning in the colder months we may see more snow in cities at an educated guess. This will impact the poorest and homeless sadly. Geography also plays a part as areas close to power stations and in valleys are often up to 1 degree Celsius warmer ambient temperature too and some power stations are being brought back online for this winter such as Radcliffe on Soar coal fired in Nottinghamshire (or more accurately the decommissioning has been halted)

Ben Emlyn-Jones said...

Oddly enough I drove past that very power station today. It has a huge mountain of coal in it waiting to be burned. We'll see if your speculation comes true. I didn't know domestic heating itself could affect precipitation in freezing conditions, ie snowfall.

Anonymous said...

Yes, the ambient temperature in cities is known as the 'urban heat island' effect and is caused by the residual heat from buildings warming the ambient air. Normally in colder weather snow will fall in the countryside more regularly than cities due to this.

I suppose my expectation this winter in the UK is businesses and homes will be reducing their energy usage deliberately which could mean more snow in cities as this 'urban heat island' effect will be less.

It's quite noticeable if you live in a city and drive out when we have had snowfall, the countryside could have a dusting and it wouldn't have had a single flake in the city.

Ben Emlyn-Jones said...

Yes I have noticed that myself, especially in the biggest cities like London and Birmingham.