UAH v6.1 Global Temperature Update for December, 2025: +0.30 deg. C

January 5th, 2026 by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.

2025 was the 2nd warmest year (a distant 2nd behind 2024) in the 47-year satellite record

The Version 6.1 global average lower tropospheric temperature (LT) anomaly for December, 2025 was +0.30 deg. C departure from the 1991-2020 mean, down from the November, 2025 value of +0.43 deg. C. (In the following plot note that the 13-month centered-average trace [red curve] has now been updated after several months of not being updated).

The Version 6.1 global area-averaged linear temperature trend (January 1979 through December 2025) remains at +0.16 deg/ C/decade (+0.22 C/decade over land, +0.13 C/decade over oceans).

2025 Ended the Year as a Distant 2nd Warmest Behind 2024

The following plot shows the ranking of the 47 years in the UAH satellite temperature record, from the warmest year (2024) to the coolest (1985). As can be seen, 2024 really was an anomalously warm year, more than can be attributed to El Nino alone.

The next plot shows how our UAH LT yearly anomalies compare to those posted on the WeatherBell website (subscription required) for the surface air temperatures from NOAA’s Climate Data Assimilation System (CDAS). There is pretty good correspondence between the two datasets, with LT having warm outliers during major El Ninos (especially 1987, 1998, 2010, and 2024). This behavior is due to extra heating of the troposphere (which LT measures) during El Nino by enhanced deep moist convection in the tropics when the tropical Pacific Ocean surface warms from reduced upwelling of cold water from below, an effect exaggerated by the several-month lag of tropospheric warming behind surface warming during El Nino:

The following table lists various regional Version 6.1 LT departures from the 30-year (1991-2020) average for the last 24 months (record highs are in red).

YEARMOGLOBENHEM.SHEM.TROPICUSA48ARCTICAUST
2024Jan+0.80+1.02+0.57+1.20-0.19+0.40+1.12
2024Feb+0.88+0.94+0.81+1.16+1.31+0.85+1.16
2024Mar+0.88+0.96+0.80+1.25+0.22+1.05+1.34
2024Apr+0.94+1.12+0.76+1.15+0.86+0.88+0.54
2024May+0.77+0.77+0.78+1.20+0.04+0.20+0.52
2024June+0.69+0.78+0.60+0.85+1.36+0.63+0.91
2024July+0.73+0.86+0.61+0.96+0.44+0.56-0.07
2024Aug+0.75+0.81+0.69+0.74+0.40+0.88+1.75
2024Sep+0.81+1.04+0.58+0.82+1.31+1.48+0.98
2024Oct+0.75+0.89+0.60+0.63+1.89+0.81+1.09
2024Nov+0.64+0.87+0.40+0.53+1.11+0.79+1.00
2024Dec+0.61+0.75+0.47+0.52+1.41+1.12+1.54
2025Jan+0.45+0.70+0.21+0.24-1.07+0.74+0.48
2025Feb+0.50+0.55+0.45+0.26+1.03+2.10+0.87
2025Mar+0.57+0.73+0.41+0.40+1.24+1.23+1.20
2025Apr+0.61+0.76+0.46+0.36+0.81+0.85+1.21
2025May+0.50+0.45+0.55+0.30+0.15+0.75+0.98
2025June+0.48+0.48+0.47+0.30+0.80+0.05+0.39
2025July+0.36+0.49+0.23+0.45+0.32+0.40+0.53
2025Aug+0.39+0.39+0.39+0.16-0.06+0.82+0.11
2025Sep+0.53+0.56+0.49+0.35+0.38+0.77+0.30
2025Oct+0.53+0.52+0.55+0.24+1.12+1.42+1.67
2025Nov+0.43+0.59+0.27+0.24+1.32+0.78+0.36
2025Dec+0.30+0.45+0.15+0.19+2.10+0.32+0.38

The full UAH Global Temperature Report, along with the LT global gridpoint anomaly map for December, 2025 as well as a global map of the 2025 anomalies and a more detailed analysis by John Christy, should be available within the next several days here.

The monthly anomalies for various regions for the four deep layers we monitor from satellites will be available in the next several days at the following locations:

Lower Troposphere

Mid-Troposphere

Tropopause

Lower Stratosphere


154 Responses to “UAH v6.1 Global Temperature Update for December, 2025: +0.30 deg. C”

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  1. Bellman says:

    Only the 6th warmest December

    1 2023 0.74
    2 2024 0.61
    3 2019 0.43
    4 2015 0.35
    5 2017 0.31
    6 2025 0.30
    7 2003 0.26
    8 1987 0.25
    9 2021 0.22
    10 2016 0.16

    Interesting that 1987 was so warm.

    This is the first time since May 2023 that the anomaly has been below the current trend line.

    The anomaly for the USA is very high. Second warmest anomaly for any month, and the warmest December.

  2. The 1877 spike continues to serve as a template. I wasn’t sure if the tail would be longer this time given the origin of the spike is different.

    https://localartist.org/media/HTvAkjsaENSO2512.png

    I’ve nearly finished a paper explaining why climate largely repeats after 3560 years. I hope to make it public in January.

    https://localartist.org/media/NGRIPCores3500shift.png

    Dr. Spencer, let me know if you’d like to see a draft copy.

  3. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    I posted this comment last month, and now I see that the linked graphs have been viewed over 100 times.

    I’ll re-up the graphs https://ibb.co/chfy3mmq and the accompanying follow up post for the benefit of any new lurkers.

  4. MFA says:

    Today’s entry notes that December, 2025 was +0.30 deg. C departure from the 1991-2020 mean. However, the earliest mean, covering the first 20 years of observations (1978-1999) was about 0.22 lower than the current, meaning the departures you report appear smaller because of the use of a later baseline average–otherwise Dec. 2025’s anomaly would be something like .52 Deg C.

    Why raise the baseline other than to reduce the apparent anomaly?

    • Bindidon says:

      MFA

      ” Why raise the baseline other than to reduce the apparent anomaly? ”

      This was not the reason, even if many of those I name the pseudo-skeptics would welcome it.

      The reason to the change of the reference period, first from 1979-1998 to 1981-2010 and then from 1981-2010 to 1991-2020 is manifestly the will to be in agreement with WMO’s respectively newest recommendation.

      Some follow it too, e.g. JMA, the Japanese Met Agency.

      Others don’t, especially NASA GISS (1951-1980), RSS (still on 1979-1998) or partly NOAA which for global time series keeps on 1901-2000.

      My guess (!): this might be due to how these climate data providers construct anomalies out of historical data; the probably tend to keep as reference the period with the most available absolute data, what reduces the standard deviations and gives thus better estimates.

      • MFA says:

        But it downplays and therefore misrepresents the amount and rate of change.

        To remain honest, Dr. Spencer should display the original baseline as well as the later one.

      • Bindidon says:

        ” But it downplays and therefore misrepresents the amount and rate of change. ”

        Not so. The reference period shifts change the anomalies but don’t significantly change the trends in the time series, even if the shifts result in obtaining the data from sources slightly differing over time (satellites, surface stations).

        However, what very significantly altered the rate of change in all UAH time series has been the transition from revision 5.6 to 6.0 in 2015, with a downward change from 0.14 to 0.11 °C per decade in LT.

      • Anon for a reason says:

        MFA,
        You are correct that the placement of the axis affects the interpretation of the data. Well know effect. It’s why pie charts are often used to disguise the numbers or why certain colours are used to highlight the message.

        People like Bindy don’t really understand this.

    • Rawandi says:

      In a few months we may start to see negative anomalies.

    • Recent 30-year baselines are traditionally used by most weather and climate data reporting organizations, and the most recent baseline is 1991-2020. But the linear trend is the most important metric if you are interested in how much warming there has been over the entire period, which I also document every month. If I wanted to “hide the incline” I’d just compute anomalies relative to the most recent 10 years rather than the 30 year baseline.

      • MFA says:

        Thank you for the reply. The incline is visually obvious from the graph; what isn’t as clear is how far the anomalies have already departed from the original baseline–which tells a different, less attenuated story than variations from a floating/rising baseline. On the same front, I hope you will consider updating this 2010 post…

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/global-warming-background-articles/carbon-dioxide-growth-rate-at-mauna-loa/

        …to reflect the additional 15 years of collected data that to my eye show a clear acceleration in the accumulation of CO2 at Mauna Loa.

        I often cite your work/this site in discussions with Climate Torporists as it is the most conservative popular outlet with legit data. Thank you for continuing it.

      • Mark B says:

        MFA,

        The CO2 Concentration measured at Mauna Loa (and elsewhere) is accelerating, but the effect on temperature anomalies is expected to be logarithmic and CO2 concentration has been approximately linear in recent decades when plotted on a log scale.

        Here’s my graphical version of global land temperature using the Berkley Earth time series with atmospheric CO2 levels on a log scale overlaid.

        https://southstcafe.neocities.org/climate/bestAndCO2.png

        An alternate way of looking at this is to plot the regression of log(CO2) and temperature anomaly which is an simplistic estimate of climate sensitivity.

        https://southstcafe.neocities.org/climate/bestAndCO2.png

        I say this is simplistic in that it presumes CO2 alone is responsible for observed warming, but in reality there are contributions from other greenhouse gases, aerosols attenuating warming, and variation in natural forcings and internal variation that are not considered.

      • Mark B says:

        Whoops, the correct link for the regression plot is here:

        https://southstcafe.neocities.org/climate/best_land_vs_co2_doubling_long.png

      • David says:

        Hi Mark B,

        I am looking at the log CO2 charts.

        What is the reason for only including land temperatures?

        /David

      • Mark B says:

        David,

        There’s two motivations behind that particular graph.

        First, Berkeley Earth’s land-only is the longest running, nominally global temperature anomaly dataset available (1750-present), thus allowing a longer time period over which to illustrate the CO2-temperature correlation. Global land/ocean series including the BEST and HadCrut start in 1850.

        Second, in the estimation of climate sensitivity, land temperatures respond more quickly to changes in forcing whereas ocean including ocean surface temperatures are subject to the considerable thermal inertia of the oceans. Thus the sensitivity estimate is plausibly a better estimate of equilibrium climate sensitivity rather than a transient sensitivity subject to thermal inertia.

        The broad shape of the land, ocean, and land/ocean time series is the same except the magnitude of ocean (thus land/ocean) anomaly is smaller which results in a smaller calculated sensitivity, albeit one with a different meaning.

        For example, here’s the regression for GISS land/ocean with CO2 since 1959, that being when the Mauna Loa CO2 record starts:

        https://southstcafe.neocities.org/climate/giss_vs_co2_doubling_1959.png

      • David says:

        Thanks Mark,

        The risk of using only land-only temperatures is that the stations are subject to heat the heat island effect. Especially for those stations that have long time series.

        Dr Spencer have some extensive articles about it here on the blog.

        Have you taken that into account when performing the regression analysis?

      • Clint R says:

        Mark, you can be easily tricked by charts and graphs. For example, there has been a huge increase in ice cream production in the last 100 years. Companies like Ben & Jerry’s, Haagen-Dazs, Baskin-Robbins, and Cold Stone Creamery, didn’t even exist before 1900. So you could prepare a chart showing a link between CO2 and the increase in ice cream. Does that mean CO2 is causing more ice cream?

        You have to be careful. Don’t be tricked. There are many frauds and cultists out there….

      • Mark B says:

        David,

        For the graphics linked above, I’ve simply taken the BEST series at face value. If one were inclined to be more rigorous, they could incorporate the BEST uncertainty estimates in the analysis but my educated guess is that the issues I mentioned earlier are more significant than potential residual UHI induced bias.

        I say this because the BE project was undertaken specifically to address perceived potential issues with existing temperature anomaly series including UHI induced biases.

        https://berkeleyearth.org/methodology/

        https://berkeley-earth-wp-offload.storage.googleapis.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/03232406/UHI-GIGS-1-104.pdf

        My impression is that they’ve done so far more rigorously and transparently than have their remaining critics, so until and unless the counterargument becomes more robust and compelling, I’m not inclined to spend much time dwelling on it.

      • David says:

        Well, it’s not really transparent to present the data series starting from 1750 in a line without confidence interval implying that the precision is the same over the entire timespan.

        If their method is a “rigorous” as with the other temp datasets where old stations are interpolated over time and sensors mounted near heat absorbing objects it does not really hold much quality.

        Also I don’t really understand why it always has to be a fixed reference period. In your regression you are indexing against 1750 which do not make sense. If the warming effect works as stated a delta value between two consecutive years would suffice.

        Indexing two values with two completely different precision over 100 years apart does not make sense.

  5. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    https://youtu.be/l2QjDA9QgNE

    20 years ago 60 Minutes ran a segment titled Rewriting the Science, in which James Hansen spoke out about White House censorship of climate science.

    The amount of CO2 in the air then was ~382ppm; it’s now ~428ppm.

    • Buzz says:

      So it will take 186 years to double CO2…which would give us perhaps less than 1°C. So need to worry, then.

      I don’t know where I’ll be then, but I sure as hell won’t smell too good.

      • MFA says:

        No, it won’t take that long, because the rate of CO2 increase is accelerating.

        https://gml.noaa.gov/ccgg/trends/

        Try to keep up.

      • MaxC says:

        MFA: The amount of plants also accelerate at the same rate. It’s a well known fact that CO2 boosts plant growth. Plants tend to use all extra CO2 they can get. The average residence time of CO2 molecule in the atmosphere is found to be 3-4 years.

      • Buzz says:

        MFA:
        185 years, then.

      • Mark B says:

        I get about 120 years to double from the current level (428 ppm to 856 ppm) and about 50 years to double from preindustrial (280 ppm to 560 ppm).

        This is using compound growth with 0.6% increase per year.

        Obviously this depends upon the actual trajectory of future emission.

      • Nate says:

        Using the trend of the last 5 years, and having it staying constant, we reach 560, double the preindustrial value, in 56 years.

        It will likely takes some time to slow down from our present rate of increase.

    • I remember this event regarding Jim Hansen, and I was a NASA employee at the time. Hansen wanted to say whatever he wanted to congress and the press, whenever he wanted. But there are NASA rules against unilateral interactions with congress and the press. You are supposed to go through the chain of command, including the Public Affairs office. Hansen didn’t want to do that. So, since NASA is an Executive Branch agency, all the WH did was tell NASA to rein Jim in and make him follow the rules. Then Hansen went to the press (of course) claiming the WH was muzzling him.

      A member of congress asked me, “How does Hansen get away with this?” The only conceivable answer was that Hansen’s alarmism helped support NASA Earth science missions, the funding for which was directly proportional to the amount of alarm over the threats of anthropogenic climate change.

      I personally decided I didn’t want that kind of control over me anymore, so I resigned from NASA and joined UAH, even though I continued on as the U.S. Science Team leader for the AMSR-E instrument on Aqua for many years afterward.

      If Jim didn’t like NASA rules, he should have resigned, too.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        First and foremost, happy new year, and welcome to the future.

        Respectfully, focusing on intent (“alarmism,” “agenda,” “seeking patronage”) rather than engaging the substantive evidentiary claims makes Hansen look like a modern day Galileo, no?

        There is no publicly verified evidence that Hansen’s communications were deliberately used by NASA administrators to secure funding.

        I get your overarching point about internal coordination requirements, but the specific enforcement at that time was less formal than you imply. NASA’s written policy did not strictly prohibit direct scientific communication until it was formally codified in the 2006 policy update; from the IG Report dated June 2, 2008:

        NASA’s management review described above further confirmed that existing Public Affairs Office procedures were not effective or clear, concluding that policy guidance was often verbal, ad hoc, inconsistent, and occasionally lead to episodes of confusion and misunderstanding by the respective Field Center Offices of Public Affairs.

      • Clint R says:

        Ark, Roy is likely referring to the Hatch Act.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatch_Act

      • John W. Garrett says:

        …which is, of course, exemplary and a testament to your integrity and honesty.

  6. James Porter says:

    Typo in the table? Dec (2025) has a 2026 year ?

  7. Buzz says:

    So…what caused the 2024 spike in the LT? If it was CO2, why wasn’t it sustained?

    • Math says:

      Can it be anything other than Hunga Tonga?

      • Tim S says:

        The evidence is very strong, but like everything in climate science, it is complex and there are competing theories. The best case is that there were different effects from the various gases, such that the initial effect was cooling and the long term effect was warming. This concept would explain the lag between the eruption and the sudden and strong effect in the atmosphere in early 2023.

    • bill hunter says:

      These spikes are frequent throughout the holocene and in the instrument record in the late 19th century, mid 20th century, and 1980-2024.

      They are in time with the motions of Jupiter and Saturn operating on a 60 year pattern.

      Insolation models used by NASA decades ago built the idea of longer term variations by retained heat from variations in the motions of Jupiter and Saturn leading to the idea of perhaps a linear 100,000 year cycle via the retention of heat in snow and ice and the resulting albedo effects of advances and retreats of glaciers. This brings us to longer termed cycles of the planets.

      These effects are variously thought to also build up over time into a 100,000 year linear effect on earth’s eccentricity. But this is more science community myth than anything available in print as what is in print suggests strongly otherwise.

      The pattern lines up with 20 and 60 year period motions of Jupiter and Saturn. This creates the major spikes and stepped warming noted in the instrument record. The physics is based on the gravitational influence on variations in earth’s speed in its annual orbit. Through half of earth’s orbit this influence changes the time earth spends in its orbit furthest and closest to the sun. Each ~450 years it moves from a warming influence to a cooling influence as it takes 900 years for jupiter and saturn close encounters to cover the entire celestial compass.

      So for ~450 years earth’s travel closest to the sun move 1/2 an orbit more slowly and then the next ~450 years it moves faster. These are only approximate because the outer gas giants have an influence on the timing on longer term orbits and there may be yet to be identified space objects beyond Neptune that cause other perturbations that are too distant or too distributed to be observed regularly because they emit nor reflect significant light.

      These forces create the major bumps in the temperature record that some have attributed to AMO and PDO variations in temperature that are seen in the instrument records.

      In addition to the combined motions of jupiter and Saturn (20 year pattern of conjunctions each occurring about 240 degrees apart meaning over 60 year period they will line up once or twice in one half of the orbit with that pattern which half gets 2 varying once every ~450 years in a 900 year cycle. These variations created the larger bumps seen in the ice core records, like the MWP period, Roman Optimum, and the Minoan Warm Period. Likewise between the MWP and the present its responsible for the LIA.

      The combined motions of Uranus and Neptune besides influencing the 60 year pattern and 900 year pattern of Jupiter and Saturn, moves slowly around the heavens over an approximate 170 year cycle via the close 2:1 orbit ratio between those two major gas giants. The effect is very small but it lasts a long time creating short term effects of ~80+years and 170+ years (also creating the conditions for the Voyager expeditions using planet gravity to cover vast distances in space for those space vehicles that NASA says occurs about once every 175 years)

      It is also believed that axial motions of earth while not influencing the mean annual insolation received by earth, influences how much of that is reflected from variations in snow and ice cover.

      CO2 may have some effect in that the recent peak is a good deal warmer than late 19th century effect. And in the 1940’s peak Uranus was in opposition to Neptune having a cancelling effect. But effects if CO2 still needs sorting out from these longer termed natural cycles.

      • Buzz says:

        Thanks for that. I feel that there are many planetary effects (on Earth) that we have yet to discover.

        To what do you attribute the 45 year drop in global cloud cover (which coincides with the modern warming period)? Do you believe it is cosmic rays or, I read only yesterday, yet another effect from CO2? However, even many proponents of this theory say that the level of CO2 would have to be very high to affect cloud formation.

      • bill hunter says:

        Since cloud cover is heavier later in the night and early in the morning while cloud burn off occurs later in the morning through the warmest parts of the day; a loss of cloud cover is consistent with an increase in annual mean global insolation due to the orbital speed effects of the shorter term Milankovic cycles.

        Earlier this year I posted references to a review of Milankovic’s work that shows a orbital variation that occurs on a 20 year cycle which happens to correspond to conjunction cycle of Jupiter and Saturn. All these individual orbit cycles are influenced by other cycles not on exact short term ratios moving dates. That is why a significant modeling effort is needed to fully understand mathematically what is going on. In 1980 the 4 major planets were all left (on the cool side) of earth’s major orbital axis. From then until now Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune all moved to the right side (warm side), while Jupiter moved from the cool side an entire rotation and then into the warm side with the 4 major planets becoming most closely aligned on the warm side between mid 2023 to mid 2024. . .very close to 45 years.

        If CO2 does the same then I would expect you would see above the clouds a warming sky moving closer to the temperature of the cloud tops to fulfill the GHE requirement of something above getting warmer than before. I can’t speak to that because I haven’t seen any compilation of data over long enough periods to deign what might be happening there. At least there are available ephemeris to track the planets.

      • Robert Cutler says:

        Bill,

        The Jovian planets are the primary drivers of the 3560-year pattern I mentioned above. While they certainly affect Earth’s orbit, they also modulate solar activity.

        The effect of Jupiter-Saturn conjunctions on climate is not immediate; for 20- and 60-year conjunctions, there’s a ~15-year delay, likely a bit less a few hundred years ago. Some of this delay is likely in the Sun, but I suspect most of it comes from the delay of ocean heat integration.

        Not all Jupiter-Saturn conjunctions are the same. Here’s a plot of conjunctions delayed by 15 years.

        https://localartist.org/media/JupiterSaturnConnectionAMOLong.png

        In the upper panel, the x-axis labels are the dates of the 60-year conjunctions (delayed by 15 years). The most recent 20-year conjunction (delayed) lines up with the 2016 El Niño event. I believe this is the start of what will be at least a 20-year cooling period which we should return to as the HT anomaly fades.

    • b.nice says:

      Because CO2 has absolutely nothing to do with it. !

    • Bindidon says:

      Why should such a short, sudden increase be attributed to any source identified as having rather long-term effects?

    • Mark B says:

      Buzz,

      There’s a nice article by Zeke Hausfather looking at attribution of 2024 exceptionally high temperature anomaly here:

      https://www.carbonbrief.org/analysis-what-are-the-causes-of-recent-record-high-global-temperatures/

      The summary attribution is shown in this figure from that article:

      https://www.carbonbrief.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/recent-warming-7.png

    • barry says:

      CO2 isn’t responsible for the annual departures, only the background average climate over which the interannual departures sit.

      CO2 isn’t alone in this function. Orbital variation changes background temps over millennia, for example. But CO2 is the dominant driver of the increasing background temps.

      What’s the quote? Climate loads the odds, weather rolls the dice.

      • Clint R says:

        barry just keeps parroting the cult nonsense: “But CO2 is the dominant driver of the increasing background temps.”

        He’s got no science, only beliefs.

        Nothing new.

    • bill hunter says:

      Robert Cutler says:

      ”The Jovian planets are the primary drivers of the 3560-year pattern I mentioned above. While they certainly affect Earth’s orbit, they also modulate solar activity.”

      I agree. I came up with a number roughly around 3,600+ years based upon ephemeris data on conjunctions of Uranus and Neptune, very near a 2:1 orbit ratio in about 17 degree steps, between 1607BC and 1993AD.

      With Jupiter and Saturn having a conjunction every 20 years in its 2.5:1 orbit ratio one could say it roughly circumnavigates the compass once every 60 years in 3 steps and then fills in that circumnavigation to within about 5 degrees once very ~900 years.

      Robert Cutler says:

      ”The effect of Jupiter-Saturn conjunctions on climate is not immediate; for 20- and 60-year conjunctions, there’s a ~15-year delay, likely a bit less a few hundred years ago. Some of this delay is likely in the Sun, but I suspect most of it comes from the delay of ocean heat integration.”

      What I did was a mean half orbit gravitational influence calculation of the Jovian planets to get an idea of what the possibilities are. And to explain the warming we have experienced from that in the past 45 years I came up with a number that seems pretty reasonable with a water feedback at the popular number. but with that number in contention there could be room for significant CO2 warming (but I am not convinced)

      Robert Cutler says:

      ”Not all Jupiter-Saturn conjunctions are the same. Here’s a plot of conjunctions delayed by 15 years.

      https://localartist.org/media/JupiterSaturnConnectionAMOLong.png

      Very good!

      The shifting of the conjunctions back and forth from the cold side of the orbit to the warm side over a 900 year cycle in 60year increments is due to the shifting of the conjunctions in any particular location by about 8 degrees every 60 years.

      You can take your methodology out to the 900 year and 3600 year cycles and match it almost perfectly with this ice core sample with the roughly 4:1 ratio between the J&S conjunctions and the U&N conjunctions landing them into unique alignments.

      https://co2coalition.org/facts/temperatures-have-changed-for-800000-years-it-wasnt-us/

      • Bill, I wish it were as simple as warm and cold sides. The J-S conjunctions give us a basic 20-40-60-year patterns, but the Sun’s orbit is also involved and there are many more cycles — too many to model. For example, there are at least three 900-year cycles all having periods within a 60-year span.

      • Willard says:

        > https://localartist.org/media/JupiterSaturnConnectionAMOLong.png

        Let’s see.

        The cycle keeps making lower highs since 1579.

        The 20y conjunction is clearly non-cyclical.

        Yet there’s a hockey stick after 1937.

        As a famous contrarian astrologer would say: LOL!

      • bill hunter says:

        there is no doubt that there are a huge number of influences.

        but the major forces of just the 4 jovian planets give a good approximation quantitively to the relative anomalies seen the instrument temperature record. i plotted out the 4 largest warming peaks since 1860. every one had three or four jovian planets on the warm side. and both the most recent ones are the only ones that had all four.

        venus is the planet with the 2nd greatest gravitation effect on earth. but its orbit period only affects earth’s orbit in one direction for less than 4 months. so it can enhance a few months but it doesn’t add up to a significant effect on mean annual global insolation.

        i think other important work is related to longterm carefully calibrated solar brightness measurements and feedbacks from cloud variations. if you get those on track you should be able to show that while climate change requires adaptations as it always has there simply isn’t much of anything remaining to worry about.

        there are challenges in dealing with newtons three body problem limiting long term predictions but that shouldn’t amount to much afa adaptation planning goes unless of course you put somebody like gavin newsom in charge of the planning. then you will need lead times to be 4 or 5 times longer.

        i don’t understand you point about 3 900 year patterns. one 900 year jupiter and saturn alignment pattern covers 360 degrees of sky down to less than 5 degrees increments in one 900 year period. 5 degrees has a very small effect on a gravity vectors force.

      • Bill Hunter:

        “i don’t understand you point about 3 900 year patterns. one 900 year jupiter and saturn alignment pattern covers 360 degrees of sky down to less than 5 degrees increments in one 900 year period. 5 degrees has a very small effect on a gravity vectors force.”

        The Sun has it’s own orbit that interacts with the Jovian planets. The plot I showed only accounts for the interactions between Jupiter and Saturn. A faster 900-year cycle is found in the orbital motion of the Sun around the barycenter. Right now those two cycles are coming into phase with each other. ~4000 years ago they were out of phase.

        The third cycle relates to Jupiter-Saturn conjunctions, but beyond establishing its period, all I can say at this point is that it may relate to the 70k-year cycle associated with glacial cycles. The 70k-year cycle can be seen in my 3- and 12-term harmonic models.

        https://localartist.org/media/EPICA3term.png
        https://localartist.org/media/EPICA12term.png

      • bill hunter says:

        Robert Cutler says:

        ”The third cycle relates to Jupiter-Saturn conjunctions, but beyond establishing its period, all I can say at this point is that it may relate to the 70k-year cycle associated with glacial cycles. The 70k-year cycle can be seen in my 3- and 12-term harmonic models.”

        I mucked around with barycenters early on and got tangle footed. Computer models have to deal with the 3 body problem but its really only a major factor for longterm predictions beyond thousands of years. Predictions of a few hundred years have been easy to handle for some time and is central to planetary mission planning and the Voyager expeditions launched in 1977. Building a computer model to redo Milankovic’s work for the glacials might be difficult but probably manageable and produce much stronger evidence beyond yeah his theory makes the most sense.

        I don’t pretend that this will end the search for all factors of climate change but the association of these easily calculated cycles corresponding to ALL our climate observation data provides an order of magnitude more evidence than the popular science CO2 theory.

        Further to discount the fairly easy calculable results over a few hundred years, those calling it into question will have to attack the sensitivity estimate of a 3:1. . .and with that mission accomplished.

        The end result will be yes we should have some good information to aid adaptation to whatever climate change that occurs, either anthropogenic or natural. But I am convince that the natural processes that are responsible for climate change in the past up to 3C during the Holocene take considerably longer than 100 years.

      • Bill Hunter:

        “But I am convince that the natural processes that are responsible for climate change in the past up to 3C during the Holocene take considerably longer than 100 years.”

        I’m convinced that rapid warming and cooling events are solar in origin. I have more evidence than this single data point in my paper, but if you look at the left panels of this data I showed earlier (repeated below), after shifting 3560 years the termination of the Younger Dryas lines up with the 8.2ka event (6200 BC). These transitions take less than 200 years.

        https://localartist.org/media/NGRIPCores3500shift.png

        BTW, I use data from the JPL Horizons system.

      • bill hunter says:

        Robert The 8.2ka event may is believed to be a northern hemisphere anomaly, possibly the draining of Lake Agassiz.

        The ice core of R.B. Alley shows both the 8.2ka event and a ~7ka event as peak 3.

        https://co2coalition.org/facts/temperatures-have-changed-for-800000-years-it-wasnt-us/

        The dating for this is believed to be accurate to +-10%

  8. Tim S says:

    I am going to take a wild guess that whatever effect raised the temperature so dramatically in early 2023 has now changed. Was it the Hunga-Tonga effect?

    • Buzz says:

      I thought that Dr Spencer attributed it to be Hunga Tonga a couple of years ago, but he now states that there was no such effect. Bill Hunter’s is plausible.

    • Nate says:

      I think we will find that the super El Nino in 23-24, after several La Ninas, was the main cause of the warm spike, riding on top of the ongoing long term warming trend.

      Some ocean warming cycles appeared to also play a role by warming parts of the N. hemisphere ocean significantly.

      Given that 2025 was the second warmest year, it appears that are cooling from these events to a new higher plateau, similar to what happened after 1998, and 2016 El Ninos.

  9. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    It’s the most magical time of the year — when estimates of last year’s global average temperature anomaly come out. Time to dust off my “last year was hot” auto-response.

    https://bsky.app/profile/andrewdessler.com/post/3l7yxx4mc4b2h

  10. Bindidon says:

    According to MEI (Multivariate ENSO Index)

    https://psl.noaa.gov/enso/mei/data/meiv2.data

    the UAH-LT anomalies could remain low for some time due to the time lag between ENSO signals (here: La Niña) and their appearance in the LT data.

    However, La Niña will not last longer if the prediction nino3+4 is correct:

    https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/CFSv2/imagesInd3/nino34Mon.gif

  11. kevin says:

    well finally some of you guys are starting to join the dots up.
    For many years I have been reading these blogs, and rarely do I see any comments or theories put Forword, as to why earth rapidly warms up about 1°C over about 16 months AND THEN rapidly cools, about 1°C during the next 2 years, (as occurred 1997 to 2000 and 2023 to 2027 my prediction)
    I have observations 14 of these rapid warming cycles and rapid cooling cycles embedded in the UAH RECORDS since 1979.
    THESE warming cycles coincide with high gravity anomaly periods, and the cooling cycles coincide with the following weaker gravity force periods. the strongest Planetary alinements for 174 years = 50 years of Global Warming, “just finished”.
    PLANETARY ALINEMENTS such as the Earth the Sun Veins Mars Jupiter Uranus are the most powerful warming periods.
    Vee shaped aliments such as the planetary positions as of 15th MAY 2024, was the strongest Alinement possible for the current 174-year planetary cycle. I forecast Rapid global cooling will now dominate most of 2026.
    A new global cooling trend will dominate the next 100 years.
    The Key to the recent 50 years of global warming was the recent conjunction of URANIS and Neptune
    well done Bill Hunter.

    • Entropic man says:

      Correlation alone does prove causation.

      To demonstrate causation you need a credible mechanism.

      • Anon for a reason says:

        Entropic, that could easily be said about the rise in Co2 that is good for the plants and the rise in global temperature.

        The arguments for it being a causation is problematic to say the least.

      • bill hunter says:

        Of course EM. The physics is gravity and the fact that a distant planet will maximally affect the speed of an object through space by alignment of the pull of gravity tangent to a point on its orbit path.

        This effect is monitored astronomically and is known as an orbit perturbation. It creates a significant perturbation of an orbit to have allowed for the discovery of Neptune by first observing Neptune’s influences on Uranus, plotting the forces and vectors and then looking closely in the sector of the sky where those vectors converged. Viola Neptune was found sitting right there. The perturbation isn’t in question its known to exist by physics.

        The next question is whether the perturbation affects mean annual global insolation on earth. Well that also can be figured out by physics and given an invariable source of insolation. Now we know the orbit influence correlation has a physical connection to how much radiation impinges on the earth system. Well we know that the sun gives us 7% more sunlight at perihelion than at aphelion. So you spend more time at or near perihelion vs aphelion you will be gaining more sunlight.

        The only thing you have to do is 1) account for changes in solar brightness over time and 2) account for how much additional orbit time you get languishing in the various points in the orbit.

        This sounds easy peasy but it requires careful calculations as you have many perturbations going on simultaneously affecting not just earth but also the other bodies in the solar system.

        To figure it out how important this is its a no brainer it accounts for significant amounts of climate variation as the correlation is very strong virtually all the climate records. . .despite Al Gore spending a lot of money to convince us that we can just ignore that without producing anything scientific.

        These effects cover the multi-decadal stepping of warming, the major peaks and valleys of the entire instrument record and I have matched the periods to ice core data as well.

        Finally the lack of perfect ratios in orbit periods tells us the variations may occur regularly but with a lot of variations in intensity.

      • Willard says:

        Anon, it might be less easy to say that the evidence is very clear that, on net, the changes going on in the atmosphere, including all the climate changes, are a risk to a lot of major production systems and to a lot of food insecure areas. So there’s definitely a reason that we that we continue to work on how to adapt to these changes.

        But it’s truer than what you said:

        https://www.theclimatebrink.com/p/is-co2-plant-food-why-are-we-still

      • Anon for a reason says:

        Bill, the calculations for earth exact orbit is a three body problem, so you need very accurate observations and a super computer. I find it amazing that there are many who believe in a fluctuation of a trace gas will have a huge impact and yet ignore the simple inverse square law.

        I think it was last Sunday that the earth was at its closest. A few million miles difference between closest & furthest points has a impact on the whole planet which is only a few thousand miles across.

      • Entropic man says:

        Bill Hunter

        To show that planetary influence has caused the 1.4C warming you need to show

        1) How the planetary influences have changed Earth’s orbit since 1880.

        2) How this has changed solar insolation.

        3) That the change in insolation accounts for the change in temperature.

        Please supply references which will allow us to check your calculations.

      • Anon for a reason says:

        Entropic, using anything from David Appell is not credible.

        Sure!y a man of your expertise would understand the inverse square law. Do you really believe that the earth follows a simple ellipse?

        If you understand that the orbital path is never duplicated then you may start to understand that your simple dismissal is pure Willard.

      • Tim S says:

        Entropic man is now a comedian. I hope you are not trying to fool educated people. David Appell is not a credible source for anything, but neither is Gavin Schmidt. Claiming that a particular theory is false does not in any way validate your own false claim.

        This is the whole problem with climate hype. The base science about the effect of increasing CO2 does not in any way validate any of the extreme claims. In fact, they cancel each other.

        There have been enough claims that are already debunked. In addition, with such a diversity of wild claims, they cannot all be true at the same time. Therefore, none of them can be taken as valid. The only result is that science cannot define the present case when highly complex known and unknown interactions are involved, and it certainly does predict the future.

      • Tim S says:

        Entropic man is now a comedian. I hope you are not trying to fool educated people. David Appell is not a credible source for anything, but neither is Gavin Schmidt. Claiming that a particular theory is false does not in any way validate your own false claim.

        This is the whole problem with climate hype. The base science about the effect of increasing CO2 does not in any way validate any of the extreme claims. In fact, they cancel each other.

        There have been enough claims that are already debunked. In addition, with such a diversity of wild claims, they cannot all be true at the same time. Therefore, none of them can be taken as valid. The only result is that science cannot define the present case when highly complex known and unknown interactions are involved, and it certainly does NOT predict the future.

      • Tim S says:

        My apologies. There is no edit feature here, so I need to proof read before, not after posting. Here is the correct final sentence:

        The only result is that science cannot define the present case when highly complex known and unknown interactions are involved, and it certainly does NOT predict the future.

      • Eldrosion says:

        Tim S,

        You say:

        “Claiming that a particular theory is false does not in any way validate your own false claim.”

        Then immediately after, you proceed to label Appell and Schmdit as ‘not credible’ and use that label to dismiss Entropic man’s references, without addressing the substance the references provide.

        If simply asserting that a claim is false does not validate your own position, then simply asserting that sources are ‘not credible’ does not invalidate theirs either.

      • Eldrosion says:

        That should say:

        But immediately before

      • Tim S says:

        My statement is fully logical and consistent. You cannot prove a negative, or prove that pure speculation is true. The criticism directed against my statement is not logically valid. Sorry.

      • Eldrosion says:

        Tim S

        I see now that I misunderstood the statement I quoted, and I apologize for that.

        That said, you may want to consider how your argument comes across when you make assertions such as:

        “David Appell is not a credible source for anything, but neither is Gavin Schmidt.”

        without providing any justification.

      • bill hunter says:

        Entropic man says:

        ”Bill Hunter

        To show that planetary influence has caused the 1.4C warming you need to show”

        I agree EM!

        The correlation is very strong, at least an order of magnitude stronger than CO2 theory.

        But causation requires careful and deliberate calculations. All I have done I have already described making shortcut calculations used by auditors to assess risk. Should I spend more time in this area because the test says substantial risk exists that this effect is capable of explaining a major piece of climate change.

        A climate model centered around widely accepted Milankovic principles will require a substantial effort.

      • Tim S says:

        This is the reason that David Appell has zero credibility. Actually, he is reliably unreliable.

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2024/09/david-appell-awaiting-the-death-of-climate-skeptics/

        [This blog received the following comment from our alarmist friend David Appell, freelance writer:

        “Roy, nobody who is serious about climate change takes you seriously. You’re a denier who has made too many mistakes. No one who knows anything is going to bother commenting here–they upset you so much that all you can think to do is block them.

        You long ago left the realm of science. As they say, science advances one funeral at a time. Nobody believes your time series anyway. You did that to yourself.”

        As many here know, our UAH temperature dataset is used by researchers around the world, including those who believe the more alarmist narrative of anthropogenic climate change. It has been validated with global weather balloon data in multiple peer reviewed studies.]

      • Nate says:

        I am shocked, shocked I say, that Tim is attacking messengers, without rebutting any of the scientific evidence they show.

      • Nate says:

        And we can notice that all of the evidence comes from Gavin Schmidt.

        Somehow David A has tarnished it by merely quoting Gavin discussing its significance.

    • barry says:

      I count no more than 2 times in the UAH record where the temperature “rapidly warms up about 1C,” so your thesis is false from the start.

      But I found a couple of data sets that do correlate well.

      First up, the S&P 500 has plenty of high years that correlate with the peaks every few years in the UAH record.

      https://www.slickcharts.com/sp500/returns

      The other one, that is possibly much less related to global temperature than the stock market, is the interannual temperature oscillations in the Pacific Ocean, otherwise known as el Nino and la Nina.

      https://psl.noaa.gov/enso/dashboard/img/nino34.png

      Now that LOOKS to be closely correlated with the UAH peaks in the temp record, but I don’t trust the statistics of a natural system based on temperatures across a swathe of ocean.

      No, I think the stock market probably has a much stronger mechanism driving global temperature swings.

    • Entropic man says:

      Correlation is not causation.

      Nobody will accept this planetary alignment nonsense without a proper mechanism.

      • Nate says:

        Yep.

      • Anon for a reason says:

        Entropic man,
        The mechanism is called the inverse square law that affects how much energy the planet receives.

        Of course go and prove the inverse square law is false. Or prove that the earth’s orbit is identical each year.

        I’m not surprised that Nate is riding on your coat tail, just need Bindy to form the trio.

      • Clint R says:

        Ent January 6, 2026 at 6:07 AM: “Correlation alone does prove causation.”

        Ent January 7, 2026 at 8:23 AM: “Correlation is not causation.”

        Ent has no knowledge of science, and now he’s even confused about his own beliefs.

      • Nate says:

        Clint is too ignorant to detect obvious typos.

        No surprise.

      • Nate says:

        “The mechanism is called the inverse square law that affects how much energy the planet receives.”

        Which we all know, but tells us nothing specific for this problem.

        Since Bill provides no calculations using the inverse square law to back up his assertions, nor does he link to anyone doing the calculations and confirming his notions.

        I spent time finding the NASA JPL calculated Earth-sun distance, and showed them to Bill a couple of times.

        Eg:

        https://astropixels.com/ephemeris/perap2001.html

        They show negligible changes in the Earth-sun distance (and thus insolation) on the short time scales he discusses.

        He simply ignores contradictory evidence and provides none himself.

      • Clint R says:

        Child Nate attempts to cover for the incompetent Ent. He claims Ent made a typo, but does not correct it.

        But, as usual, he gets in his obligatory insult.

        Kids these days….

      • Nate says:

        “obligatory insults”

        You mean like “Child Nate” and “incompetent Ent”?

      • Clint R says:

        Child Nate, “Child Nate” and “incompetent Ent” aren’t insults, they’re reality.

        If you’re insulted by reality, that should tell you something….

      • Nate says:

        So you think that, in reality, I am a child?

        OMG.

        Just adds to list of things you are really bad at.

      • Anon for a reason says:

        Nate,
        Like Bindy you find a couple of numbers and think you have proved your point.

        People on your side claim that a couple of watts per square meter increase will be too much. Yet the slight change in the orbit will account for this.

        So do you care to reconsider your view
        ?

      • Clint R says:

        It’s even worse than that, child Nate. Not only are you a child, but you’re a child-of-the-cult. You’ve been so indoctrinated that you can no longer think for yourself, or learn.

        You can’t see that in yourself, but if you had any maturity you’d be able to see it in others like Willard, Bindi, Ark, and Ball4.

        And I didn’t even mention your incessant stalking of me….

      • Willard says:

        Anon,

        Have you found the slight change in the orbit yet?

        “Fun fact: Venezuela has six million women of childbearing age. Most of them are desperate for money. If we employ them as surrogates, we could easily make 60 million more Americans in one generation, and fight poverty in the global south.” — @wylfcen, a fan of Dozing Donald

      • Nate says:

        “Not only are you a child”

        Thanks for confirming your irrationaliyy.

      • Anon for a reason says:

        Willard, so you don’t understand the inverse square law, not really a surprise. So if you can’t understand that what hope have you got to understand the complexities of the climate.

        Do the maths, how many watts per square meter difference is there between summer & winter. And what change is there each year. You might want to ask Nate & Bindy for help.

      • Nate says:

        Anon,

        “Like Bindy you find a couple of numbers and think you have proved your point.”

        Indeed thats what we need to prove a science point. Its all about the numbers.

        And I checked a century of Earth-sun distance numbers. They do not support Bill’s claims.

        Where are your numbers?

  12. winston says:

    Typo in table last row, first column should read 2025 vs 2026 for December.

  13. winston says:

    Typo in Table, first column, last row, should read 2025 vs 2026.

  14. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    More alarmism…

    Parkinson’s is the Canary in the Coal Mine Warning Us That Our Environment is Sick. https://www.ru.nl/en/donders-institute/news/bas-bloem-parkinsons-is-the-canary-in-the-coal-mine-warning-us-that-our-environment-is-sick

    TL;DR

    Parkinson’s should be viewed as a warning indicator of broader environmental health issues. Acting on environmental risks could reduce Parkinson’s incidence.

    If only we had a dedicated public Agency tasked with evaluating Environmental risks on the basis of scientific evidence rather than political convenience, and Protecting us from said risks.

  15. Willard says:

    BREAKING

    ClimateWorkingGroup.com

    Another Donald win!

    • MaxC says:

      Willard: Thank you for the link. I bookmarked it. I hope the site opens soon despite of legal battles. According to news articles the DOE Climate Working Group has been disbanded, but it is still working independently.

      “True science is never settled”.
      -Stephen Hawking

    • Ian Brown says:

      Debate not your thing,i take it?

    • Ian Brown says:

      I get your point, not a fan of disrespecting people,even if you disagree with them. so no disrespect was meant,

      • Willard says:

        All good, Ian.

        “That’s fine, dude, I’m not mad at you” – Renee Good, right after the ICE agent says “[expletive] [expletive]” and murders her.

    • MaxC says:

      So you have bunch of different scenarios and afterwards you choose the best match.

      • Willard says:

        I thought I had a non-working website you tried to excuse by blaming those you like to blame, Max.

        If you’re looking for cherrypicked contrarian crap:

        https://ilmastorealismia.blogspot.com/2014/04/vedenkierron-vaihtelu-ilmaston.html

        Cf. fig 5-6

        “I think we’re going to see those deportation numbers ramp up as we get more and more people online working for ICE, going door to door” — James Donald Bowman, proudly displaying a shirt that may have been silver.

      • MaxC says:

        Willard: Figures 3, 4 and 5 proof in 3 different ways that Kauppinen’s math formula really works!

        Fig. 6 is done by the blogger, not Kauppinen, so I can’t comment on that.

      • Willard says:

        That’s not a knife, Max. Here’s a knife:

        https://judithcurry.com/2012/12/04/multidecadal-climate-to-within-a-millikelvin/

        The only thing your guru proves is that he’s stuck on “But RCPs”.

        Check Roy’s more recent post for something less problematic.

        “If I have to create stories… That’s what I’m going to do.” — James David Hamel, defending his false claims against otters.

      • MaxC says:

        Willard: My advice to you and other believers:

        1) Draw a hockey stick as high and steep as possible.
        2) Adjust the scale of y-axis to match the hockey stick.
        3) Say a prayer “I believe in IPCC…”

        You need a bigger knife, Willard. Instead of Crocodile Dundee’s knife you should try Rambo’s survival knife with compass. You may need it when IPCC’s tipping point is reached, doomsday comes and the sky falls on your head.

      • Willard says:

        Max: my pro-tip for you, and you alone –

        Stop trying to poison my sub-threads with irrelevant crap. Every time you do it, it comes at a price you can’t afford.

        Stop pretending you know anything about how science works. You don’t. So every time you do you just look like a fool.

        Finally, beware of the rhetorical tricks you are trying to pull. It might turn against you. Witness your silly quote, about a platitude. Now it has turned into the monthly theme.

        “In the shadows of Dirty Donald’s mass deportation blitz, a lethal pattern has emerged. Since July, immigration agents have shot at least six people behind the wheel of a vehicle (two of them fatal, including Wednesday’s shooting). In each instance, the playbook is the same: the agent claims self-defense, asserting they “feared for their life” as a vehicle was “weaponized” against them.” — Mike Fox

  16. Bindidon says:

    ” Minnesota Law Enforcement Blocked From FBI’s Probe of Fatal ICE Shooting

    State officials said the FBI reversed course on a joint investigation of Renee Nicole Good’s death. ”

    Sounds suspiciously like the dictatorial behavior of Putin in Russia, Xi in China, or Khamenei in Iran.

    Thanks to The Apprentice… dictator!

    • Tim S says:

      That headline is rather misleading. They are not “blocked” from investigating, they made a decision to withdraw. Here is the official statement in part:

      “Later that afternoon, the FBI informed the BCA that the U.S. Attorney’s Office had reversed course: the investigation would now be led solely by the FBI, and the BCA would no longer have access to the case materials, scene evidence or investigative interviews necessary to complete a thorough and independent investigation”

      This is a logical step given the fact that Minnesota is a declared “sanctuary sate” in defiance of Federal immigration law. As such, the state is openly hostile to ICE, and openly supportive of the protestors. They are free to conduct their own investigation based on evidence they gather on their own. They will not have access to investigative material obtained by the FBI.

      A report will be issued at some point mostly likely by the Justice Department which oversees the FBI. The free press will have the opportunity to review, question, and conduct their own investigations.

      ICE is a legally sanctioned agency that enforces Federal Law within the US legal system. Unlike many countries in Europe, the US justice system does not operate like the Inquisition. Defendants have full Constitutional Rights within the justice system. This includes undocumented residents.

      • Tim S says:

        Part of the tragedy is that these 2 women were laughing and having fun interfering with armed federal law enforcement agents. The agents who are employees, that do not make policy, were attempting to carry out their assignment. Obviously, they were not having fun.

        The investigation will not matter to the local officials, or the local jury pool. This agent will be persecuted and prosecuted for a split second decision at a moment of high stress. Actually, I think all three gun shots occurred in less than a second.

        How many can claim they have had the experienced of a car being driven directly at them at short range? How many with police training cam claim they would have responded differently? Many of you without police training will say that he should have just jumped out of the way. That is the way I see it as well, but I was not there.

      • Norman says:

        Tim S

        Can’t answer your questions but one I will ask you. Why would someone walk in front of a running vehicle when you do not know the person and you are confronting them. I have read this is totally against procedure and you cannot claim self defense if you put yourself in a dangerous position. If the ICE agent is not charged he should be removed from ICE as being incompetent to put himself in a dangerous position.

      • Willard says:

        Good question, Norman, however it’s only hypothetical. All the forensic teams from investigative and news outlets published analysis that shows beyond doubt that Renee’s murderer wasn’t in the path of the vehicle.

        Either our Ivy Leaguer is a tool or a fool, propagating a lie.

      • Nate says:

        -It appeared that he had time to step back, well out of the path of the vehicle.

        -He did not. Instead he used that time to unholster his gun and fire, THEN fired two more for good measure.

        -Video from his POV showed her turning tbe steering wheel away from him.

        -Policy forbids firing at vehicles just to stop a suspect fleeing a scene.

    • Anon for a reason says:

      Bindy, as you are the one who loves socialism tell us which colour shirt you would have worn during the 1930. I bet it would have been brown.

    • Willard says:

      You might like:

      Though neighbors told the Daily Mail that [Renee Good’s murderer] is a hardcore MAGA supporter, social media posts reveal he also has foreign-born in-laws.

      His 38-year-old wife, whose doctor parents live in the Philippines, married him in August 2012 according to posts on her Instagram page.

      Her first picture with Ross on the social media account was posted two months earlier.

      In July 2013, when the couple lived around El Paso, Texas, Ross’s wife posted a picture posing next to a US Border Patrol helicopter.

      She also shared photos of baking recipes from a Spanish-language cookbook.

      One neighbor at Ross’s 10-house cul-de-sac told the Daily Mail that until recently Ross had been flying pro-Dozing-Donald flags and a ‘Don’t Tread On Me’ Gadsden Flag, an emblem of the Make America Great Again movement.

      On Thursday afternoon there was no sign of Ross, his wife, or the flags.

      ‘I think he’s in the military. He has a military license plate,’ one neighbor said. ‘He had a don’t tread on me flag, and Dozing-Donald/Vance stickers up during the election.

      ‘The wife is polite, very nice, very outgoing, while he’s very reserved. They have a couple of kids.’

      https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15447739/ICE-shooter-Filipina-wife-father-Minneapolis.html

    • Nate says:

      The govt, particularly Vance and ICE-Barbie, have been absurdly gaslighting the public over this.

      Pre-juding the investigation. Slandering the victim:

      Apparently this was ‘an act of domestic terrorism’.

      Apparently she was “a deranged leftist’ and “part of a larger, sinister left-wing movement”

      And apparently she most definitely “weaponized her vehicle” to “ram” an agent.

      Apparently agent was previously dragged and injured by a vehicle, and thus his instantaneous shooting of the driver in this instance was deemed a reasonable action…

      Oh, and the agent has “absolute immunity”.

    • Clint R says:

      It didn’t take long for the cult kids to take over this latest UAH results post. As usual, they grab any news story they believe will make Trump look bad. They suffer from extreme TDS.

      They never understand this issues — see their nonsense about tariffs from months ago. They were sure Trump was going to ruin the US economy. But, he’s corrected most of the trade imbalances other US Presidents let happen. The kids likely had never heard the word “tariff”!

      As to this latest issue, the kids obviously have no clue about the concept of “officer safety”. “Officer safety” is a legal group of policies and procedures that allow law enforcement officers more protection in dealing with the public. In simple terms, a citizen must obey any legal order from a LEO. If the citizen feels he is being treated unfairly, he can go to court. He can NOT fight a LEO on the street. Typically, battery on a LEO is a felony. And in this particular situation, a moving vehicle is considered a “deadly weapon”.

      Don’t expect the cult kids to understand any of this….

      • Willard says:

        Hey Puffman, riddle me this:

        Suppose you’re terrified by a very dangerous queer poet.

        Before you decide to murder her, do you:

        (a) drop your phone and start to panic or

        (b) film the whole thing to lulz with your MAGA buddies while they flount another constitutional right by trying to steal state money?

        “Housing shortage – otters to blame” — Letter sticker, German Reich, 1938.

      • MaxC says:

        Willard: This is what happened:

        1. The wife have parked the car in the middle of the street obstructing the flow of traffic.

        2. The wife sits in her SUV, while her wife is outside the vehicle holding her cellphone up to agent’s face.

        3. The wife says: “You wanna come at us? You wanna come at us? I say go get yourself some lunch, big boy.”

        4. The wife tries to get in the car but the passenger side door is locked.

        5. The wife is asked to come out of the car.

        6. The wife then weaponized her vehicle and put the pedal to the metal hitting the agent.

        7. The wife is shot 3 times in the head by the agent in rapid
        succession.

        Reading: “Dead Poets Society” by N.H. Kleinbaum (ISBN 9781401308773)

      • barry says:

        There is ample video of this incident. The driver said she wasn’t angry at the agents. Seemed mild enough. She waved a car to go through in front of her. Agents jumped out of another car just after, told her to get the f**k out of the car, she backed up to make room to drive away, agents approached the car, she turned right while an agent was near her left front fender. He wasn’t run over, and she wasn’t trying to hit him, just get away. He was possibly grazed by the front corner of the car as it began to accelerate, remained on his feet and shot her three times. Now she is dead.

        There are numerous angles from numerous phones taking footage. Looks like murder, not self defence. Agents also prevented a physician from attending the woman, claiming they had their own present. She was not attended by medicos for 6 minutes. The officer who shot her strolled away from the car in no hurry and after walking 20 feet or so, motioned for someone to call an ambulance. No one rushed to the car after she’d been shot. The agents didn’t seem much to care about what had happened.

      • Clint R says:

        When a LEO is pointing a rifle at you yet you still threaten, that’s called “suicide by cop”.

        At least she wasn’t able to hurt anyone before she departed.

      • Willard says:

        And now an ICE has removed the personal computer of Renee Good’s murderer from his home.

        “I’ll dedicate my next arrest to you” — the same agent, after dangerously boxing in an ICE watch volunteer with his truck, on Dec 8.

      • Nate says:

        Sure officers orders need to be followed. They dont get to dole out instant capital punishment for that.

        Thankfully, they do not have ‘abssolute immunity’ as Vance claimed

      • Clint R says:

        Suicide is a leading cause of death in cults. Unfortunately, they often kill others in the process, as with suicide bombers and the 9/11 suicide murderers.

      • Willard says:

        Hey Puffman, riddle me this –

        WSJ investigation: In the past 6 months ICE agents have fired at vehicles 13 times, leading to:

        * 8 people shot
        * 5 of which were U.S. citizens
        * 2 died
        * no victims drew a weapon

        The playbook: Agents box in a vehicle, block attempts to flee, then fire

        https://www.wsj.com/us-news/videos-show-how-ice-vehicle-stops-can-escalate-to-shootings-caf17601

  17. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    “David” wrote:Arkady, I am also curious about these graphs, can you accompany them with some sort of analysis and what conclusions that can be made?

    The figure (https://ibb.co/chfy3mmq) is reproduced from Petty’s 2006 book titled A First Course in Atmospheric Radiation. Pages 225-226.

    The graphs show Earth’s outgoing thermal radiation emission spectra measured by NASA’s Nimbus-4 satellite in 1970. The global-scale molecular spectroscopy measurements were taken with the Infrared Interferometer Spectrometer (IRIS).

    These figures support a qualitative and semi-quantitative analysis of outgoing infrared spectral radiance. A fully quantitative energy-budget analysis requires the underlying numerical spectra, since the physically relevant quantity, outgoing flux, is obtained by integrating radiance over wavelength and solid angle. Values inferred directly from plotted curves can illustrate scale and structure but are not suitable for precise flux calculations.

    The dips at specific wavelengths match known molecular a b s o r p t i o n bands (CO2, water vapor, ozone) and show that Earth’s heat escapes to space in a spectrally selective way governed by atmospheric composition. This observation directly underpins radiative-transfer physics and the greenhouse effect. The fact that despite different surface temperatures and climates, the same molecular a b s o r p t i o n features appear everywhere, demonstrates that the controlling physics is atmospheric composition rather than local surface conditions.

    The scientific conclusion is straightforward: The measurements show that outgoing infrared radiance is strongly wavelength-dependent because of molecular a b s o r p t i o n, which determines how much thermal energy ultimately escapes to space.

  18. Entropic man says:

    Has it occurred to any of you Americans that it is a bad idea to have a police force which is allowed to kill civilians at will?

  19. Entropic man says:

    Bill Hunter, Anon for a reason.

    I did a quick back of the envelope calculation.

    To raise the average temperature of the Eargh by 1.4 C by adjusting its orbit would require an extra 27W/m^2 of solar insolation.
    That would require Eargh’s orbital radius to decrease by 1 million miles which would make the year 360 days instead of 365.

    Surely we would have noticed.

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