Climate Change Changes Weather

Has anyone noticed the weather has been behaving like an unruly punk lately? Acting wild. Taking things to extremes. And all because it has been spending a lot of time with a bad influence -- climate change.
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Has anyone noticed the weather has been behaving like an unruly punk lately? Acting wild. Taking things to extremes. And all because it has been spending a lot of time with a bad influence -- climate change.

While scientists have traditionally been quick to point out that no single weather event can be attributed to climate change, a growing number have been declaring that climate change is priming the pump, sewing the seeds, greasing the wheels, and laying the groundwork for more extreme weather. I suspect climate change is also responsible for my sudden uptick in metaphors, but I have not yet confirmed that.

The journal Nature, the ACE (Attribution of Climate-related Events) coalition, and the Climate Communication group, are among those who are now referring to climate change as "the steroids of weather," whose influence leaves us with "really no such thing as natural weather anymore."

Global warming creates a warmer atmosphere, and "a warmer atmosphere has more energy," according to Jeff Masters of Weather Underground. Increased energy in people is good. Increased energy in our atmosphere... not so much.

Our weather spends time with the wrong crowd and our atmosphere acts like it's ramped up on energy drinks. After all the greenhouse gases we've generously given them over the years and this is how they treat us?

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