See?Hmm. The so-called expert in "settled science" has now calculated the temperature difference starting from a La Nina year that was artificially below temperature trends. It doesn't look like he knows the difference between climate and weather.
The temperatures I cited were within the normal range of temperatures and are the numbers we must stick with.
As noted, the IPCC's prediction was off by nearly 300%. That sure doesn't seem "spectacularly accurate" to me.
BTW, Frankfooter's artificially inflated number is still only a little more than half of what the IPCC predicted. According to Frankfooter, a prediction that is off by nearly 100% is "spectacularly accurate."
No matter how often I try to explain basic stats to you, including the concept of 'cherry picking' you just can't understand it.
Its really quite amazing.
Look, all of these sets of numbers are correct and came from the same NASA source:
Global Surface Temperature | NASA Global Climate Change
Vital Signs of the Planet: Global Climate Change and Global Warming. Current news and data streams about global warming and climate change from NASA.
climate.nasa.gov
Your numbers - cherry picked to find the lowest possible change
- 2001 temperature anomaly: 0.54ºC.
- 2021 temperature anomaly: 0.85ºC.
The increase over 20 years: 0.31ºC.
My numbers - cherry picked one year later to find a higher number
- 2000 temperature anomaly: 0.39ºC.
- 2020 temperature anomaly: 1.02ºC.
The increase over 20 years: 0.63ºC.
I can cherry pick that even more to find higher numbers
- 1996 temperature anomaly: 0.33ºC.
- 2006 temperature anomaly: 1.02ºC.
The increase over 20 years: 0.69ºC.
The IPCC projection is for 0.2ºC per decade, which is where the 'trend' sits. As posted in charts above.
The really basic concept of 'cherry picking data' is that you ignore trends and try to find the one specific set of data points that you try to claim = a trend.
Its a really fucking stupid technique, you'd be failed out of first year university if you tried this shite.
Cherry picking, suppressing evidence, or the fallacy of incomplete evidence is the act of pointing to individual cases or data that seem to confirm a particular position while ignoring a significant portion of related and similar cases or data that may contradict that position. Cherry picking may be committed intentionally or unintentionally.[2]
The only real question is whether you are really so stupid as to not understand this concept despited being told about it for 7 years or if you are so dishonest and so stupid that you think you'd get away with the same trick that has failed you for 7 years. I can't figure it out, are you that stupid or that stupidly dishonest?