MikeStanart
Member
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2007
- Messages
- 2,284
I don't ask very much from you, God....
But please; let it be a White Caucus.
But please; let it be a White Caucus.
I don't ask very much from you, God....
But please; let it be a White Caucus.
I don't ask very much from you, God....
But please; let it be a White Caucus.
Well now that's a misleading thread tittle.
The high will be 32 F. A high of 32 is mild for this time of year up here.
And WHO changed my thread title?
It IS predicted that early in the morning of the Iowa Caucuses... it WILL be -4 degrees.
WTF? This is BS. Friggin' coward didn't even identify themself.
And WHO changed my thread title?
It IS predicted that early in the morning of the Iowa Caucuses... it WILL be -4 degrees.
WTF? This is BS. Friggin' coward didn't even identify themself.
Well I don't know about anyone else but I reported the thread title because I thought it was clearly misleading based on what you said in your first post, and set a false expectation of what people would get when reading your thread, because you say right there that the high for the day of the Caucuses will be 32, not -4. Even citing the low of 10 would have made more sense.
You can't say that we are being helped by COLD weather when in fact there is a dramatic WARMING trend, leaving the high no the day of the caucuses 32 when only just the day before it was 18.
It's good to be optimistic, but lets' not be misleading.
AGAIN... the coldest part of ANY 24 hr cycle (on THIS planet) occurs between 2-4am... in the MORNING.
Early in the morning of January 3rd, the day of the Iowa Caucuses, it IS predicted to be -4 degrees BELOW ZERO. That FACT, combined with basic Physics, tells us that if there is ANY humidity in the air during that time... there will be substantial snowing and icing on the roads.
I'm sorry if this simple concept is too challenging for some to follow. But it IS basic scientific FACT. PERIOD.
It's not my fault if some people can't wrap their brains around simple ideas.
There are many variables that contribute to predicting snowfall besides ground temperature, including: relative humidity, frontal movement, wind speed. I would trust the weather services for this one. It's sort of their job.