Opinion: Climate change can’t be stopped at the border
By David Horsey, Los Angeles Times
At Squaw Valley last weekend, skiers were half naked. Guys were going shirtless. Girls were in bikini tops. Everybody was in shorts. Ski season in California has not ended and may not completely stop before the snow starts falling again in late autumn.
Skiing with skin bared is not unprecedented. Years ago at Heavenly Valley, I got the worst sunburn of my life when I shed my shirt for a day on the slopes. But that was a day in March, not a day at the end of June.
For the last several years, the snowpack in the Sierraswas far below normal, severely stressing the water supply of a state locked in a five-year drought. But that drought ended abruptly this year as the precipitation poured down. The mountain snow got so deep that some ski areas experienced temporary shutdowns when chairlifts could not clear the top of the accumulated snow.
More hot air from the Times. Los Angeles had 111 degrees in 1958 or 1957. Death Valley’s record setting temp was a 100 years ago. And most climate scientists do not believe human induced global warming is significant. I guess the Times just has a poor memory when it comes to salient facts.
Maybe Pravda West would be a better name for this propaganda outlet.