jacob Ladder
8.9K posts

jacob Ladder
@jacobLadder9
Bear, Enjoy bearing about. Love salmon, honey and trees (useful for itchy bears) Also like commenting on political happenings and political journo's comments X

Time to get the 'big coat' back out 🧥 Temperatures are dropping widely below average but in brisk northerly winds, it will be feeling closer to freezing for many of us 🥶









@afneil Does Jonathan Harmsworth own the Daily Mail ? If not, I apologise Andrew 😔





🚨 Westminster Voting Intention: ➡️ REF: 23% (-2) 🌹 LAB: 19% (+2) 🟢 GRN: 18% (-1) 🌳 CON: 17% (=) 🔶️ LDEM: 13% (-1) From @YouGov From 22nd - 23rd March Changes with 16th March






🚨BREAKING: MET OFFICE FALSIFIES RECORD RAINFALL!!! It was a dull, damp month, but it was certainly a long way from the being the wettest February on record. Twenty-five years had wetter Februarys in the UK. It was therefore a surprise when the Met Office announced that this year Worcestershire saw its wettest February on record since 1836. The announcement was naturally accompanied by the usual blaming of climate change, with the BBC claiming without any evidence, that increased burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil causes heavier rainfall. Data since provided by the Met Office under the Freedom of Information Act have now shown that its claim of record rainfall does not stand up to scrutiny. The Met Office currently only has three official weather stations in Worcestershire: Pershore, Pershore College and Astwood Bank. According to the Met Office data released, rainfall last month at the stations was 128mm, 121mm and 146mm respectively. If we discard Pershore as effectively duplicating the College, we get an average of 133.5mm. None of these stations were around in 1836: the college has the longest record, dating back to 1952 and Astwood only goes as far back as 1976... (text by Paul Homewood at Climate Skeptic). dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ar…

#BREAKING Vance spoke by phone with Israel PM Netanyahu and discussed efforts to open negotiations with Iran: Axios










