Groups | Search | Server Info | Keyboard shortcuts | Login | Register [http] [https] [nntp] [nntps]


Groups > sci.environment > #101998

Re: Yay, faux meat!

Date 2026-07-01 13:28 -0600
From squillage <yy@aba.et>
Newsgroups rec.food.cooking, sci.environment, alt.global-warming, alt.home.repair
Subject Re: Yay, faux meat!
Message-ID <20260701132807.45c3b969@z-z> (permalink)
References (8 earlier) <najukeFl1e3U1@mid.individual.net> <18be1c4a70759cb6$10900$223280$4296dcc3@news.newsgroupdirect.com> <nak3anFlnecU1@mid.individual.net> <T991S.2556$DcQf.13@fx17.iad> <1123i2a$21476$1@dont-email.me>

Cross-posted to 4 groups.

Show all headers | View raw


On Wed, 1 Jul 2026 17:16:58 -0000 (UTC)
Cindy Hamilton <chamilton5280@invalid.com> wrote:

> On 2026-07-01, Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca> wrote:
> > On 2026-07-01 5:01 a.m., Leonard Blaisdell wrote:  
> >> On 2026-07-01, Nicolas Edme Restif de La Bretonne
> >> <restif@invalid.invalid> wrote:  
> >  
> >>> Yeah right, climate isn't changing at all. All kinds of weather
> >>> records are being broken, but climate isn't changing, ladies and
> >>> gentlemen!  
> >> 
> >> 
> >> Climate has changed since this world was formed. Weather records
> >> aren't broken. They're only broken since mankind started keeping
> >> track. Explain the most current ice age to me. We had nothing to
> >> do with it. It's all taxpayer funded, government jive to achieve
> >> the goal of "more government power" and happily preached by the
> >> leftist media. Don't listen and think deeper. Is that possible?  
> >
> > I live in the middle of the Niagara Peninsula and am just south of
> > the southern most point of glaciation about 15,000 years ago. The
> > glacier was so big it dumped a huge amount of sand and gravel that
> > it had pushed hundreds and hundreds of miles.  The ice cap has been
> > receding ever since.  I am not denying climate change or the
> > possible contribution of man and industry, just pointing out that
> > it has been going on for thousands and thousands of years.  
> 
> Slowly for thousands and thousands of years.  More quickly for
> the past couple of hundred.
> 

Far more concerning:

https://dailygalaxy.com/2024/11/magnetic-north-pole-shifts-in-an-unprecedented-ways-never-seen-before-by-scientists/

The Earth's Magnetic North Pole is moving faster than ever before, in a
way that scientists have never observed before. This unprecedented
movement could have far-reaching consequences for modern navigation
systems and everyday technology.

Back to sci.environment | Previous | Next | Find similar | Unroll thread


Thread

Re: Yay, faux meat! squillage <yy@aba.et> - 2026-07-01 13:28 -0600

csiph-web