Global warming, study can be found at The Global Warming Policy Foundation, launched by Lord Lawson and Dr Benny Peiser on November 23, 2009, in the House of Lords (London, UK) -- in the run-up to the Copenhagen Climate Summit.
[In the most recent study], Goklany provides a table, setting out all the
scaremongering claims made by environmental groups — and then comparing
them with observed reality. Only one of the claims stands up, according
to the study — weather has been getting slightly warmer:
More hot days and fewer cold days — Yes
Cyclones/hurricanes more intense or frequent — No
Tornadoes increase and become more intense — No
Floods more frequent and more intense — No
Droughts more frequent and intense — No
Area burned by wildfire increasing — No (area peaked in mid-19th century)
Cereal yields decreasing — No (they have tripled since 1961) - discussed on the blog ears ago
Food supplies per capita decreasing — No (increased 31 per cent since 1961)
Land area and beaches shrinking, coral islands submerged — No. (Marginal expansion) -- we talked about this on the blog years ago, also
None of the doom-mongering claims made about a decline in human welfare stands up, either, according to the study.
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Powerful Playthings
A Keeper: A Two-Hour On-Line Video
The WSJ.
I was so lucky / fortunate some years ago to visit the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles before it was closed for re-modeling and then closed again because of the pandemic. We took a midday break at the collocated fast food hamburger restaurant inside the huge building.
Maybe I'll get back there some day.
For now The WSJ article:
The centerpieces of “Supercars,”
the Petersen Automotive Museum’s new online video tour of an exhibit
that can’t be viewed in person because of Covid-19, are the 1988
Lamborghini Countach 5000QV as well as a stable of Ferraris that defined
the category from the 1950s to today. That’s as it should be. Those
were the cars whose images adorned the bedroom walls of teenage boys
starting in the 1960s and ’70s, usually with a bikini-clad supermodel
splayed across the hood. But as this overview makes clear, covering some
30 automobiles spread across the entire 14,000 square feet of the
museum’s third floor, there is much more to the history and development
of so-called supercars.
Michael Bodell,
the museum’s deputy director, is our guide (the show was curated
by Exhibitions Director
Bryan Stevens
), and he reminds us that these playthings of the uberwealthy and
well-connected have a long history. We see the 1913 Mercer Type 35-J
Raceabout, which competed in the first Indianapolis 500, and the 1923
Mercedes 28/95 Targa-Florio, its high hood-line hiding what was, at the
time, Mercedes’s most powerful automotive engine, adapted from aircraft
technology—a 7.2-liter, inline six-cylinder that produced about 95
horsepower. While these cars may not make us think of the Lamborghinis
or Ferraris to come, most of America at that time was driving
Henry Ford’s
boxy Model T, early models of which had 2.9-liter, inline
four-cylinder engines that produced only 20 horsepower.
The Art Deco period’s marriage of design and function is
clearly evident in the next two vehicles in the virtual tour, the 1933
Duesenberg Model SJ, an ultra-luxurious long-nosed convertible coupe
popular with Hollywood celebrities of the day that put out more than 300
horsepower and had a top speed of over 130 miles per hour. While
someone may have driven this car that fast, that wasn’t the purpose of
buying one. Rather, it was to be seen in it—leaving onlookers agog at
the silver-wrapped exhaust manifolds, spoke wheels and the distinctive
flying-goddess hood ornament.
Art Deco’s influence is even more evident in the 1938 Delahaye
145 with a custom body by French coachbuilder
Henri Chapron.
One of four Delahaye Grand Prix cars, it’s really a race car whose
bodywork makes it road-worthy and head-turning, with rounded, sculpted
fenders, streamlined hood and sloping tail, all in an elegant blue and
purple two-tone finish.
Where we really get into modern-day supercars is the 1952
Ferrari 212/225 Inter Spyder Barchetta, originally owned by
Henry Ford II
; he took it to his designers, who were inspired to create the
1950s Thunderbirds. One of the few all-original cars in the museum’s
collection, it has a staid black finish with white interior and
whitewall tires. Its sleek, rounded edges and open cockpit are so far
removed from the top-selling American car of 1952, the Buick Roadmaster,
that the two shouldn’t be discussed in the same sentence.
Much, much more at the link.