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NBC and ABC Scare Viewers: 'Extreme Weather' Could Kill 10,000 People!

By Kyle Drennen | April 10, 2012 | 17:27

A  A
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On Monday, both NBC's Nightly News and ABC's World News hyped a finding by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) that, in the panicked words of NBC environmental correspondent Anne Thompson, "Extreme weather blew March 2012 into the record books....It saw almost three times the average number of reported tornadoes."

ABC weather editor Sam Champion noted how some enjoyed the unseasonably warm weather, but then ominously warned of a "potential downside" being "so much darker." He proclaimed: "Local governments are racing to meet these challenges head on. Los Angeles today hosting a meeting of top scientists and public heath officials to plan for what they're calling, 'extreme climate risks.'"

Champion listed the threats:

Danger number one, extreme weather. The rising temperatures may create ideal conditions for more severe thunderstorms and tornadoes....Danger number two, economic crisis....It's feared these extreme temperature fluctuations can endanger a whole year's crops....Danger number three, a possible public health crisis....a Harvard study revealed that even small increases in summer temperatures, as small as 2 degrees, had a direct link to shorter life expectancy for seniors with chronic medical conditions....Researchers predicted a tiny heat spike could result in 10,000 additional deaths a year.

Thompson admitted that there was "no one culprit to blame for the rising thermometer," but quickly added: "there is a prime suspect." A sound bite followed of Tom Karl, the head of NOAA's National Climatic Data Center: "Right now, we have a climate on steroids. What we mean by that is green house gases continue to increase in the atmosphere."

In 2011, Karl was accused of trying to suppress global warming data by a fellow climatologist.

Despite the assertions made in both reports, NOAA's own Frequently Asked Questions section of its website largely dispels the notion of global warming causing an increase in tornado activity: "Does 'global warming' cause tornadoes? No. Thunderstorms do. The harder question may be, 'Will climate change influence tornado occurrence?' The best answer is: We don't know." [h/t to The Heritage Foundation's The Foundry blog]

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Here is a transcript of Thompson's April 9 Nightly News report:

7:10PM ET

BRIAN WILLIAMS: Back in this country tonight, there are now definitive facts to prove what we all felt was true during this very bizarre winter season just past. Some places witnessed summer arriving in March, really. A ton of records fell, and violent weather hit across a lot of the country. Our report tonight from our chief environmental affairs correspondent Anne Thompson.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: This is a tornado!

ANNE THOMPSON: Extreme weather blew March 2012 into the record books. It saw almost three times the average number of reported tornadoes. NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, says our the unusually warm weather created conditions favorable for twisters. And while there's no one culprit to blame for the rising thermometer, there is a prime suspect.

TOM KARL [NOAA]: Right now, we have a climate on steroids. What we mean by that is green house gases continue to increase in the atmosphere.

THOMPSON: The average temperature this March, 51.1 degrees, 8.6 degrees above normal. This time lapse animation from NOAA shows where the 15,000-plus records were broken. Every state in the nation set at least one daily record high in March. March brought rain and drought relief to eastern Texas and parts of Oklahoma, but above the tree line on the Rocky Mountains, near Boulder, Colorado, there is bare ground where there should be snow. Colorado's snow pack, just 49% of average. Less snow means less water for Tim Farrell's organic farm. Today, he laid down a barrier to hold in moisture for his strawberries, but without water, he may have to make a tough choice.

TIM FARRELL: We've been trying to save our fruit trees and we would then have to let go of all of our vegetables.

THOMPSON: NOAA's forecast is for this warming trend to continue, particularly in the mid-Atlantic and southern sections of the country, and nowhere is it predicted to be colder than normal. Anne Thompson, NBC News, New York.

Here is a full transcript of Champion's April 9 World News report:

6:39PM ET

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: And it's official, the nation's top scientists crunched the numbers and declared March 2012 the single hottest March on record, dating back to 1895. Watch this, every dot another record shattered, more than 15,000 in all. And as ABC's weather editor Sam Champion explains, that extreme weather could have extreme consequences for everything from your health to your wallet.

SAM CHAMPION: Some are calling it the year without winter, and now, it's one for the record books. The average temperature in March is usually 42.5 degrees. But this year? 51 degrees, about 8.6 degrees higher than normal.

JAKE CROUCH [NOAA, NATL. CLIMATIC DATA CTR.]: Under normal circumstances, we would expect this large of a temperature departure from normal about once every 280 years.

CHAMPION: The upside of the heat wave, scenes like this, people enjoying the sun, skiing in bathing suits. But the potential downside, so much darker. And some say, we're already seeing it. Local governments are racing to meet these challenges head on. Los Angeles today hosting a meeting of top scientists and public heath officials to plan for what they're calling, "extreme climate risks."

Danger number one, extreme weather. The rising temperatures may create ideal conditions for more severe thunderstorms and tornadoes. 223 twisters reported in March alone, a month which typically sees 80.

Danger number two, economic crisis. This unprecedented heat also raising alarms for farmers.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: To say that they're concerned would be an understatement.

CHAMPION: It's feared these extreme temperature fluctuations can endanger a whole year's crops.

Danger number three, a possible public health crisis. Today, a Harvard study revealed that even small increases in summer temperatures, as small as 2 degrees, had a direct link to shorter life expectancy for seniors with chronic medical conditions such diabetes, heart failure or lung disease. Researchers predicted a tiny heat spike could result in 10,000 additional deaths a year.

RICHARD SOMERVILLE [PROFESSOR, SCRIPPS INST. OF OCEANOGRAPHY]: There are many public health consequences and I think this is a wake-up call.

STEPHANOPOULOS: So, Sam, we had this warm winter, warmer March, what does it mean for summer?

CHAMPION: George, you know you and I have talked about this and I don't really believe in long-term forecasts, but the weather service does put out an outlook for 30 days and 90 days, and I think that's reasonable, it kind of gives us a guideline. On the 30-day outlook, they're basically saying 2/3 of the country to expect warmer-than-normal, warmer-than-average temperatures. In that 90-day outlook, the longest distance they'll go in an outlook, says at least half the country to expect warmer-than-normal temperatures. So the answer is, yeah, more heat throughout the summer.

STEPHANOPOULOS: Okay, Sam, thanks. See you in the morning.                                

About the Author

Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Kyle Drennen on Twitter.
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Comments

This story ran before folks......

Submitted by Founders1791 on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 5:35pm.

OBAMA MAKES UP WILD CATASTROPHE NUMBERS

May 2007, he claimed that tornadoes in Kansas killed a whopping 10,000 people: “In case you missed it, this week, there was a tragedy in Kansas. Ten thousand people died — an entire town destroyed.”

The actual death toll: 12.

OMG. He wouldn't know JOBS CREATED or SAVED. How could they have elected such an IDIOT? He makes up numbers you want to hear. DECEITFUL

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jc_WKBymCEY

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Hey -- no fair!

Submitted by Galvanic on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 6:02pm.

The President was merely making what the Congress calls "a rounding error" when they can't account for $ millions in the $3 trilliion budget.

Considering that there are over 6 billion human beings on the planet, rounding off "12" to the nearest 10,000 is no big deal. Left wing pundits would tells us that "It's what Jesus would do," and other crazy bits of un-wisdom.

Remember, it's the conservatives who are illiterate in science and math.

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A Chicago hack at heart

Submitted by frank_andrini on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 8:11pm.

The current president is a Chicago hack politician that got lucky. Why not dig up Richard J. Daley and run him next- excuse me I'm a little out of sorts today dealing with the Veteran's Administration Medical Center West Lost Angeles. President Obama answered neither my email at The White House web site nor the Tweet I Twittered the...no I won't disrespect the office of the President. Rather let me quote one of my Tweets which posted thusly "@Obama you suck.

Trust America not politicians
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The

Submitted by grammajane on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 5:50pm.

only thing scaring the audience, if they have one, is george's and brian's face when they hit the screen with their bias and fake unimportant news. The constant fawning over BO and Michele and their every move in society is becoming quite boring.

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"Local governments are racing

Submitted by tcm14 on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 6:00pm.

"Local governments are racing to meet these challenges head on. Los Angeles today hosting a meeting of top scientists and public heath officials to plan for what they're calling, 'extreme climate risks.'"

And we no longer need any further proof that there are officially too many government employees with not enough to do.

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The Veracity Of NBC

Submitted by Rikki_Doxx on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 7:17pm.

I wouldn't believe anything NBC says - they can say the sun rises in the east and sets in the west, water is wet and the sky is blue and I'd call them a liar!

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Since I live in the state where we had tornadoes recently,

Submitted by drsamherman on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 7:42pm.

I can honestly say we get these bouts of bad weather from time to time and they are just as routine as traffic on a Friday night. San Antonio gets horrible thunderstorms and rain every so often because of we were are located, same for Austin, Houston and Dallas/Fort Worth. West Texas (Amarillo, Lubbock, Midland, Odessa) gets bad winter storms from time to time, but so does Dallas. Again--we take this in stride and learn to keep an emergency kit in our cars and our homes.

As for the "10,000 people dying!" stupidity, FDA taking away the breast cancer indication from Avastin probably will cause more deaths than a change in temperature. Of course, the whackos in the government and media will never report that.

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Yeah, no kidding

Submitted by jon_torlin on Wed, 04/11/2012 - 9:07am.

It's safe to say that the US government in its current form has been responsible for more deaths than any natural disaster in the last 3 years in this country.  Not that they would take responsibility, but they are the culprits.  That includes abortions(planned parenthood), forced power shutdowns for enviro-wacko reasons rather than common sense, involvment in other countries' uprisings(Arab Spring, Libya, etc), gun running(Fast and Furious), lack of border security, lack of government aid after disasters like Tennessee, the wildfires in various states and etc, and those are the ones I can think of right off the top of my head.

So no, Georgie, it's not extreme weather, it's extreme government a la the Obeyme administration that can kill 10,000(or more) people.

-Jon

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extremes

Submitted by milootoole on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 7:47pm.

If extreme stupidity or partisanship killed media folk, there would be thousands of jobs open around the country.

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From AccuWeather on GW and tornadoes

Submitted by Gary Hall on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 8:13pm.

From a March 22, 2012 article, Are Tornadoes More Powerful Due to Climate Change?

There is no strong evidence to support severe weather becoming stronger, more frequent or more widespread during the past 50 years in the United States as a result of climate change.

Don't suspect that either NBC's Nightly News nor ABC's World News will be calling AccuWeather for an expert interview anytime soon.

(;~/ gary

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Can anyone say

Submitted by nixon on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 9:46pm.

How many people has liberalism in all it's various forms killed ? Bet that's never going to be a talking point in the media .

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The "twisted" stats

Submitted by deadeyedan on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 10:42pm.

There's more to this. The gap of eight years between tornadoes of Fujita Force Scale five (1999-2007) beat the old record by three years. Notice that one of the included years in that gap was 2005, when all we heard about was Katrina and the record setting Atlantic Basin tropical storm season.

But there was something else special about that particular year. There were no fatalities from tornadoes anywhere in the country in April, May, June and July and that had no precedent going back to 1854.

Though always having had tornadoes in April since its inception in the late 1800's, Oklahoma had no twisters in April of 2005.

All that "nothing happened" didn't get reported, did it? That's the nature of the beast; a high-profile event is trumpeted by all sorts of media outlets and provides fodder for just-can't-wait-to-jump-in-Democrats, providing all kinds of positive reinforcement of the AGW/"wild weather" connection.

When nothing happens, even if without precedent, there are no big headlines to demonstrate that the opposite may be occurring, allowing for no commensurate negative reinforcement.

And whenever there's a cold spell or big snowstorm they don't get the play of a heat wave by that mass media.

GLOBAL WARMING - authoritarian, rather than authoritative, science

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Dr Zero

Submitted by FaulknerFan on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 10:36pm.

"In that 90-day outlook, the longest distance they'll go in an outlook"

Lets see now, the old journalism school graduate and scientific expert in climate change, better known as zero, Sam Champion, one of the most hyperventilated GW advocates, says that he doesn't believe in long term forecasts and ninety days is the farthest the weather service will go. Seems I remember ole Zero has been telling us for years we should believe model data is accurate in predicting conditions a hundred years from now.

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How long

Submitted by oldfart on Wed, 04/11/2012 - 7:16am.

have humans been keeping accturate records of the weather and the temperature? Less than 300 years. That time period is a wart on a fly's ass compared to the history of the planet.

The chicken little reporting is really getting old - yawn.

The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius
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Surprised? Leftist drones in MSM lie all the time.

Submitted by stunned on Wed, 04/11/2012 - 10:11am.

North America got a mild winter while Europe got slammed. It even snowed as far south as Libyia where they got the most snow since 1956 and thousands died in Europe due to the extreme cold weather but none of this fits into the MSM hype of global warming and so they ignored the biggest story over there this year. The change in the ocean current and jet stream left us enjoying a European winter and Europe enjoying a Minnesota winter. Last wimter was tough there as well but you would never know it if you only watched or read our MSM.

LOL The one good thing is that the belief in myth of man made global warming is at its lowest is Europe in over a decade. Not to fear though when we are digging out next year the MSM wll be telling us it will be because of MMGW as well.

tired of liberal lies

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"Reported" tornadoes

Submitted by CobraMan on Wed, 04/11/2012 - 10:40am.

"It saw almost three times the average number of reported tornadoes."

Hay, "smart" people," how many tornadoes were "reported" before the advent of Doppler Radar back in the 80's? I would estimate that, perhaps, 1 in every 5 tornadoes were actually reported because who saw a tornado outside a town or city? Most people never would report these tornadoes as most occured OUTSIDE towns and cities and were never seen.

Here's what you're doing: you taking 30 years worth of data and using any "extreme" numbers in to claim something is "historic." Just how many "extreme weather events" occurred during the 30's, when the Dust Bowl, a 10 year drought, occurred? We don't know because YOU WON'T TELL US!

The same is true for "reported daily highs." You're taking temperature measurements for places that, around 50 years ago, never made these measurements because very few people lived there (The South West was sparely populated until the advent of indoor air conditioning, so how many "daily highs" were actually REPORTED? Damn few!) and are using this as a means to claim that "historic highs" are occurring. But what WAS the "average highs" of these areas just 50 years ago? Once again, we don't know BECAUSE YOU WON'T TELL US!

I am sick and tired of these people reporting what is actually new observations and claiming that "new" variations represents something historic.

The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution

Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court

Or Anwar al-Awlaki.

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