European Heat Wave

European Heat Wave

Interesting story about the omega blockade.

A meteorologist explains why it’s so warm this week (and no, it’s not due to climate change

The omega blockade — that’s the real meteorological explanation behind the extreme temperatures currently being measured across a large part of the European continent. While major media outlets like NOS reflexively link the heat to climate change and greenhouse gases, critical scientists point to a much more straightforward and better-supported explanation: a persistent weather pattern in the upper atmosphere that has gripped Europe many times before.

What exactly is an omega blockade?

An omega blockade is a specific pattern in the jet stream — the powerful wind current at high altitude that largely steers the weather in our latitudes. The name comes from its resemblance to the Greek capital letter omega (Ω): a large high-pressure ridge in the middle, flanked by two low-pressure areas on either side. This pattern ensures that air masses can hardly flow through and the weather pattern can remain stuck for weeks.

In the case of the current heatwave, hot Saharan air is transported northward toward Western Europe by the anticyclonic (clockwise-rotating) airflow pattern. As that air mass rises and falls under the high-pressure ridge, it is adiabatically compressed — a purely physical process that causes the temperature to rise further. No CO2 involved.

Meteorologist Chris Martz sounds the alarm.

The American meteorologist Chris Martz shared his extensive analysis of the current weather pattern via social media. His conclusion is clear: this omega blockade has nothing to do with climate change or greenhouse gas emissions. It’s a well-known, thoroughly documented weather dynamic that has always occurred and would have led to record heat even in a hypothetical pre-industrial climate.

Martz also points to a striking scientific paradox. There are, in fact, various studies suggesting that warming of the Arctic would actually lead to fewer frequent blocking weather patterns like the omega blockade, because the temperature difference between the equator and the polar regions becomes smaller. That stands in stark contrast to the claim that climate change causes or intensifies this kind of heatwave. Martz acknowledges that there is debate on this topic, but the simplistic climate message conveyed by the media is oversimplified anyway.

Europe hit more often, but why exactly?

Then there’s an increase in solar radiation reaching the Earth’s surface, due to less cloud cover from low and mid-level cloud layers. That decrease in cloudiness is partly linked to strict European air pollution regulations, which have led to fewer atmospheric aerosols. Fewer particles in the air means less cloud formation, more direct sunlight, and thus higher surface temperatures.

In other words: Europe’s own environmental regulations contribute to the increased heat. That’s an uncomfortable conclusion you’re unlikely to encounter in mainstream media.

Media choose sensation over scientific nuance

Think tank Clintel, represented by science journalist Marcel Crok, endorses Martz’s analysis. The conclusion is simple: if you want to understand the cause of the European heat, it’s better to consult a meteorologist than a newspaper editorial team chasing a clickbait story.

It’s become a fixed pattern by now: as soon as it’s warm somewhere, the link to climate change is made, almost without nuance, rarely with meteorological backing, and certainly not with reference to possible alternative explanations. That’s not journalism — that’s activism disguised as science.

Quote of the Day

“Permanence, perseverance and persistence in spite of all obstacles, discouragements, and impossibilities: It is this, that in all things distinguishes the strong soul from the weak.” – Thomas Carlyle, Philosopher (1795 – 1881)

Billionaire’s WARNING: I’m SELLING. The Crash Is Already Here!

Jeremy Grantham

The man who predicted the dot-com crash and the 2007 housing collapse warns that the AI bubble is the biggest in American history. Billionaire investor Jeremy Grantham reveals why it will burst, the exact strategy to protect your money, and why house prices need to fall 30%.

Jeremy Grantham is the co-founder of GMO, an institutional investment firm in Boston, and serves as the firm’s long-term investment strategist. He is also the chairman of the Grantham Foundation For the Preservation of the Environment, and co-author of “The Making of a Permabear: The Perils of Long-term Investing in a Short-term World”.

Jeremy Grantham’s comments are all his personal opinions.

He explains:

◼ Why Wall Street will never warn you when to get out of the market, and what to do instead

◼ The exact portfolio Jeremy recommends to protect your money before the crash

◼ What everyday chemicals in your food and cosmetics are doing to your fertility

◼ Why house prices need to fall 30%, and what it means for your finances

◼ Why the AI boom won’t automatically lead to higher profits, and what to buy instead

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32u5T6lO8qk

Compressed Air Power Plant

Ragged Chutes

What’s actually possible is suppressed from public view. This is a diagram of an actual compressed-air power plant that ran for over 70 years; it was shut down because an insurance company claimed that it attracted too many observers and someone could get injured, so they shut it down… They are trying to control the rain, the groundwater, your ability to save seed, and so much more – why wouldn’t they hide basic things like nearly-free energy generation? This is #Permaculture in practice, and this is a diagram from The Permaculture Student 2: https://www.thepermaculturestudent.com/shop/the-permaculture-student-2-the-textbook-ebook

Livestock Farming

Livestock Farming

A pasture grazed by cattle alone is a good pasture. Put cattle and sheep on it together and it becomes something else.

The cattle take the long grass, the coarse stems, the rough patches. The sheep come behind and clear what the cattle left: the short regrowth, the wildflowers, the plants a cow won’t touch. Two heights, two mouths, two patterns. Twice the use, none of the waste.

Add a goat and the bramble line retreats. Add a pig on the woodland edge and the parasite cycles break. Add a few geese and weeds you never knew you had quietly vanish. Each animal eats what the others refuse and breaks the worms the others carry. The system tunes itself.

The result is about as biodiverse, productive and low-input as farming gets. More carbon in the soil. More birds. More wildflowers. Less disease. Less spent on feed, wormer and fertiliser. Ground that would grow no crop at all turns into meat, milk and wool.

This is the oldest idea in farming. Nearly every working agricultural culture has done it since the beginning: Roman estates, medieval manors, Mongolian camps, Welsh hill farms.

The single-species, single-field, single-product model that shoved it aside is barely a century old, and it is running out of road on every measure you can name.

The fix is older than the problem. A Welsh farm with cattle on the low pasture, sheep on the high, a goat on the bramble line and a couple of geese in the orchard.

The farmer would explain the whole thing in four minutes, if anyone asked.

The policy paper never has.

Dr. Thomas Seyfried

Dr. Thomas Seyfried

Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death in the United States, with thousands of lives lost each day. Researchers widely agree that healthy lifestyle choices including avoiding tobacco, maintaining a healthy weight, being physically active, limiting alcohol, protecting against excessive sun exposure, and following recommended cancer screenings reduce the risk of many cancers.

Some scientists, including Dr. Thomas Seyfried, have proposed that disruptions in cellular metabolism play an important role in cancer development and have explored metabolic therapies, such as ketogenic diets, fasting, and other approaches, as potential areas of research. While this work has generated scientific interest, unfortunately the broader medical community continues to view cancer as a complex group of diseases involving interactions among genetic mutations, metabolism, environmental exposures, lifestyle factors, and the immune system.

Standard treatments such as surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy, and hormone therapy are claimed to have improved survival rates for many types of cancer and remain the treatments of choice.

Ongoing research aims to better understand cancer biology and develop more effective, personalized treatments while emphasizing prevention through healthy lifestyle choices and early detection.

Fact: According to leading cancer organizations, an estimated 30–50% of cancers may be preventable by reducing known risk factors and participating in recommended screening programs.

The WHO estimate 90%+ of cancer risk is diet and lifestyle, not genetic.

The blame on genetics fails to account for the fact that diet, exercise and environmental factors (like toxins), labelled epigenetics (Dfn. epi above’ genetics), have ability to ‘turn on’ or ‘turn off’ gene expression.

Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes only. Claims that any single diet, supplement, or metabolic therapy can prevent or cure cancer are not supported for all cancers, and treatment decisions should always be made in conjunction with someone who has a proven track record of helping the body recover from cancer.