Stop focusing so hard on surface temps and start looking more at ocean temps. That will give you a more realistic view of global warming. Anthropogenic climate change is a thing. How alarmist you want to be about it can be debated... but that it is a thing that is happening... really should not be.
Besides, the article is not arguing against the validity of climate change at all. Only that cooling cycles are not discussed as heavily as warming ones, indicating a media bias. Which, even if true, has no affect on climate change the phenomena.
From your reference,
"None of this argues against global warming. The 1950s was the last decade cooler than the previous decade, the next five decades were all warmer on average than the decade before. Two year cooling cycles, even if they set records, are statistical noise compared to the long-term trend. Moreover, the case for global warming does not rely primarily on observed warming; it has models, historical studies and other science behind it. Another point is both February 1998 and February 2016 were peak El Niño months so the record declines are starting from high peaks—but it's also true that there have been many other peak El Niño months in the past century and none were followed by such dramatic cooling."
Besides, the article is not arguing against the validity of climate change at all. Only that cooling cycles are not discussed as heavily as warming ones, indicating a media bias. Which, even if true, has no affect on climate change the phenomena.
From your reference,
"None of this argues against global warming. The 1950s was the last decade cooler than the previous decade, the next five decades were all warmer on average than the decade before. Two year cooling cycles, even if they set records, are statistical noise compared to the long-term trend. Moreover, the case for global warming does not rely primarily on observed warming; it has models, historical studies and other science behind it. Another point is both February 1998 and February 2016 were peak El Niño months so the record declines are starting from high peaks—but it's also true that there have been many other peak El Niño months in the past century and none were followed by such dramatic cooling."
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