![[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]](https://i.imgur.com/nXH6vZm.jpg)
Look on the chart where studies have proven that CO2 levels are today.
Jimmy, look at your own graph, which goes back 600,000 years. I can clearly see several times where temperatures were falling, but atmospheric CO2 levels were still elevated.
If CO2 drives global temperatures, then the temperatures should have still remained high, or been rising during those times.
We also see several periods in the past where global temperatures were higher than they are now. Yet you and the Nutty Professor keep saying that 2023 was the hottest year in history. We had a day last week when our temperature got up to almost 63 degrees. I wondered if that was a record, so I looked at the Historical Data on the National Weather Service website. The record for that date was 70 degrees... in 1937.
Then look at the extreme right side of your precious Al Gore graph, to more recent times up to the present. Al's graph clearly shows present day CO2 levels higher than at any time in the last 600,000 years, yet we see several periods where the temperatures were significantly higher than the present. How can this be?
It looks like you went out of your way to post a graph that proves you and Al Gore are wrong about the direct correlation between elevated CO2 levels and high temperatures. Why did you wish to prove that you are wrong?
They're lying to you Jimmy. And they have you even lying to yourself. You know that, right?
Of course, it helps to remember that climatologists were using data from about 7000 weather stations around the globe in the 1960's, and they are using data from only about 3000 today. Many of the stations they eliminated were in colder regions like Siberia and Mongolia. Gee, I wonder why average global temperatures are rising??? And it's a hoot to see NOAA posting CO2 levels from their station on top of Mauna Loa.
![[Linked Image from i.postimg.cc]](https://i.postimg.cc/5N4XJtbD/Mauna-Loa-2022-eruption.jpg)
Jimmy, you do know that Mauna Loa is an active volcano in Hawaii? It frequently vents large quantities of CO2 into the atmosphere. There are presently six active volcanoes in Hawaii. They all vent large amounts of CO2 into the air. NOAA using CO2 data from on top of Mauna Loa is like monitoring water quality in the Great Lakes by taking samples from the intake of a sewage treatment plant. Time to wake up Jimmy.