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NOAA NORTHEAST TEMPERATURE DATA SUPPORTS RETURN TO HEAVY MANUFACTURING, COAL ELECTRICITY AND LESS IMMIGRATION

Today, Breitbart published a work by noted crusader against the false story of man-made global warming, James Delingpole. In the work, Delingpole claims the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has been caught doctoring raw temperature data in their effort to support a man-made global warming theory.


Looking at that chart above, the Northeast was much colder during the heyday of manufacturing in the USA and the Northeast, between 1940 and 1980.

In those days, almost all electricity in the Northeast came from the burning of coal. Steel was still manufactured in New York in at least the first half of 1940 to 1980.

Look at the much colder period between 1890 and 1925. Again, those were days of ever growing manufacturing that depended heavily upon coal.

How could have it been much colder in the days of heavy manufacturing and more coal burning than it is today?

The NOAA chart runs counter to the man-made CO2 global warming narrative. Their chart reveals that it was much colder in the Northeast during the days of heavy manufacturing (1890 to 1980) and much warmer during the days of the Barista economy and heavy immigration.

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Americans in the Northeast depend upon much cleaner natural gas for their electricity needs. Back on May 14, 2017, CNBC reported:

The Northeast U.S. states — a vast market that generates and consumes much of America's annual electricity — is gradually using less coal to fire up its electricity plants.
In part of what the Energy Information Administration called a dramatic 10-year shift, the nine states that comprise the Northeastern U.S.'s energy grid have collectively doubled the share of natural gas used to generate electricity—even as the region churned out slightly less power from 2006-2016. Simultaneously, coal-fired power tumbled from 31 percent to 11 percent, the EIA said in a report.

Does this not support a shift in policy to have less immigration and more manufacturing?

To comment about this story or work of the True Dollar Journal, you can @ me through the Fediverse. You can find me @johngritt@freespeechextremist.com

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