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Dr. David DiIley, a former Meteorologist with the National Weather Service, United States <br />Air Force, Senior Research Meteorologist, and Climatologist at Global Weather Oscillations Inc., <br />has 50 years' experience in meteorology and climatology. He's also a working partner in the <br />International Hurricane Protection Association. This is what he has to say about global warming: <br />"Global warming begins in the Arctic and Antarctic. It has about a 230 -year cycle. <br />When it comes back, it takes about 20 years for it to hit its peak. It started in the <br />1990s and hit its peak this past year. With global warming, the Antarctic and <br />higher regions warm up. As it warms up, you have less cold air available to filter <br />south into the middle latitudes, and it warms the middle latitudes. That is global <br />warming2." <br />DiIley explained that the same thing happens with global cooling but in reverse, as the <br />temperature increases and decreases in cycles. DiIley then shared that 2022 was the coldest <br />spring and summer on record, with the winter of 2021 being the coldest winter on record. He <br />also shared that in April 2023, five months before the Lahaina Fire, the Earth was running <br />low -to -normal temperatures, and the Arctic was actually cooling down. <br />DiIley is also an expert of the "Milankovitch Cycle," which illustrates the rotation of the <br />Earth, sun, and the moon, and their effects on global warming. According to DiIley, every <br />120,000 years, the Earth comes closest to the sun. Then, about 68,000 years later, it's the <br />furthest approach from the sun. He says that our closest approach was 8,000 years ago. DiIley <br />states, "We were warmer 6,000 to 8,000 years ago than we are today. The reason was that we <br />were the closest approach to the sun and we had just come out of an Ice Age. We're 8,000 <br />years off the peak now, and so we're actually cooling down." <br />John Coleman, also an expert on the weather, shares the same thoughts. Coleman was <br />the original weatherman on Good Morning America in the 1970s. He founded The Weather <br />Channel in the 1980s. In 1982, he was voted "Meteorologist of the Year" by the American <br />Meteorology Society. With regards to the Arctic and sea levels, Coleman states: <br />"They tell us that we're melting the polar ice caps. The Antarctic polar ice cap is <br />at an all-time high, and the Arctic ice cap is increasing again after diminishing. <br />They tell us that we're flooding the shorelines. Do you live on the coast? How <br />much has the water come up in your lifetime? They manufactured data to make it <br />look like we're increasing the water level of the oceans, but we're nota." <br />Professor Richard Lindzen states: <br />https://youtu.be/pwvVephTIHU?si=XoxAcPc51 JNT)XdeF: <br />2"Signals - Global Cooling Cycle Beginning - Global Warming Ending -Professor David Dilley," by David Dilley <br />GlobalWeatherCycles, May 10, 2023. <br />3 "John Coleman's case against significant man-made global warming," by Kusi News, June 24, 2013. <br />https://youtu.be/K56fms2VZTc?si=Cn-ApS8z2Y_kiI76 <br />