Sami Kukkonen ꪜ
16.1K posts

Sami Kukkonen ꪜ
@SnowOrDeath
Wood elf. My engineering hobby finances my snowboarding career. NAFO expander. Kysy minulta Alppien parhaista puolukka- ja mustikka-apajista.








THL:n erikoistutkija suosittelee rokotuksia myös suomalaisille, jotka ovat menossa epidemia-alueelle eli Canterburyn suuntaan. THL Nohynek: – Tällainen epidemiapyrähdys ei vielä ole syy rokottaa Kentiin lyhyeksi ajaksi menijöitä meningokokkirokotteella..🤡is.fi/kotimaa/art-20…










Said Aw-Musse, ette ole siinä asemassa että te voisitte kritisoida kenenkään suomalaisen lausuntoja. Suomessa eletään suomalaisten säännöillä. Miksi te olette Suomessa? Somalian presidentti kutsui teidät jo yli 10 vuotta sitten palaamaan kotiinne. iltalehti.fi/politiikka/a/5…







Eläketurvan keskittäminen veisi valtion ohjaukseen Erinomainen kirjoitus @RistoMurto Kumpaa onkaan hoidettu vuosikymmenet paremmin: eläkejärjestelmää vai Suomen taloutta? hs.fi/paakirjoitukse…


Uutissuomalainen: Kaikkonen ehdottaa Suomeen eläkekattoa bit.ly/4lFZxBp






The stunning expansion of Earth's green biomass is continuing to track consistently northward. Studies show 70% of this greening is due to higher CO2 levels, which contradicts the doomsday climate narrative. NASA studies explain that this expansion of a greener, leafier world is driven by rising carbon levels, helped by longer growing seasons and warmer winters. Studies confirm overall greenness is moving north into traditionally barren colder regions. The frigid wastes are yielding ground to more productive new biomass. This latest finding is published in a new study in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences), a leading science journal. The spread of greening, higher leaf cover and improved agriculture yields is being tracked by a flotilla of satellites. They include NASA's PACE satellite (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem) launched in 2024, which has now completed its first full year of hyperspectral data (March 2025 to March 2026). The carbon gift has now been confirmed. It's now measuring specific plant pigments (chlorophyll, carotenoids, and anthocyanins) from space. The data also show massive productivity spikes in the US midwest corn and soy belts and greening hotspots in India and China. Increased leaf cover is cooling the land surface in 93% of vegetated areas, according to NASA. This is explained by leaf cover creating a more efficient vertical mixing of heat and water vapor. This becomes a natural air conditioner that the UN's urgent code red models often avoid. The MODIS instrument on NASA's Terra satellite is nearing the end of its mission (set for late 2026). NASA is currently transitioning that data stream to VIIRS (on the Suomi NPP satellite) and PACE. The data remains consistent - the global leaf area index continues to climb. If 93% of vegetated areas is cooling via increased leaf cover, why is this missing from the UN climate narrative?







