The more I see this guy on Fox and MSNBC, the less seriously I take him. Nye appeared on Fox last week talking about the recent outbreaks of killer tornadoes and pretty much made himself look like a moron.... and of course attributed part of cause to global warming. I'm honestly not sure why Nye is even asked on to discuss weather related topics being that his degree is in engineering. Its unfortunate he's fallen for the whole global warming thing too... you'd think he would be smarter then that but even the smartest people can be fooled. Anyhow, among the things Nye claimed is that because north America is unique that we are just about the only place that even has tornadoes.... he said a place like Norway doesn't have them. One little problem with that statement though... Norway does have tornadoes.

Maybe someday people wont be so easily duped by the GW misinformation that its supporters like to say is fact but who knows.

The link here is a link to the video from Nye's Fox appearance last week:

http://www.mrctv.org/videos/bill-nye-science-guy-falsely-claims-not...

This is a story from Newsbusters that featured the video above.. the reference to a video in the first paragraph is the video above:

Bill Nye "The Science Guy" was on Fox News's "America's News Headquarters" Saturday trying to make the case that despite it being "very difficult to mathematically connect" this year's tornado activity to global warming, "Tornadoes are almost certainly a consequence."

When host Uma Pemmaraju asked a seemingly simple question, "Are other countries seeing the same type of activity, the intensity of these tornadoes picking up in those regions as well," "The Science Guy" first seemed completely stumped, and then gave a rather absurd answer (video follows with transcript and commentary):

 

BILL NYE: The tornadoes very difficult to mathematically connect to climate change, but the rains, the extra warmth in the atmosphere, the extra water vapor in the atmosphere, that’s, those are facts. That’s the real deal. Now, we, we are patriots. We are from the U.S. I am. And you would like the U.S. to be the leader in addressing this problem. We would like to be out in front in trying to deal with whatever it is that’s holding in all this heat and creating all this extra water vapor in the atmosphere. Tornadoes are almost certainly a consequence.

It is indeed telling that "The Science Guy" didn't once mention the impact of this year's La Niña on tornado activity which most climatologists and meteorologists on both sides of the global warming debate agree is largely the culprit.

On the other hand, what would you expect from a guy with a degree in mechanical engineering?

But the best was still to come when Pemmaraju asked a pretty simple question, and "The Science Guy" looked like he had been asked to prove Riemann's Hypothesis:

UMA PEMMARAJU, HOST AMERICA’S NEWS HEADQUARTERS: Are other countries seeing the same type of activity, the intensity of these tornadoes picking up in those regions as well?

NYE: Other countries?

PEMMARAJU: Other countries with tornadoes?

NYE: Well, there’s not that many other countries that have the configuration of North America to make tornadoes. And the word “hurricane,” you know, is a word coined in the Caribbean, like, so this is a unique, unique area in that regard. We have the Gulf of Mexico. We have this access for cold air from Canada or from the Arctic. And these two things conspire to move the jet stream, and then that helps carry this extra water vapor across this part of the North America. So, it’s a unique place, and you don’t have this kind, you don’t have tornadoes in Norway, for example. It’s just set up different, the weather’s set up differently. Here in the U.S. it’s a serious problem.

Well, not exactly.

Contrary to "The Science Guy's" odd view on this topic, tornadoes have been observed on every continent on this planet with the exception of Antartica. A study of insurance records across the globe finds tornadoes causing significant losses in Europe, India, Japan, South Africa, and Australia.

Although the United States typically has more tornadoes than any other country, as a function of land area, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom both actually have more.

Also contrary to today's conventional wisdom, Bangladesh is the nation with the most tornado-related deaths averaging 179 per year having also experienced the deadliest tornado in history on April 26, 1989, killing approximately 1300. That country has had at least 19 tornadoes that have killed more than 100 people, almost half the total of the rest of the world.

So much for "The Science Guy's" claim "there’s not that many other countries that have the configuration of North America to make tornadoes."

The reality is Bill Nye "The Science Guy" appears to know absolutely nothing about tornadoes.

Why he's believed to be an expert about matters related to meteorology and climatology truly boggles the mind.

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Bill Nye didn't watch Mr. Wizard over twenty years ago when he totally debunked the global warming myths about the ice caps melting causing coastal towns to go under water in this simple demonstration with a glass full of ice cubes.  Mr. Wizard knew his science-- of all types:

 

But But But But you can't use real science though... that's not fair!

A thought:  I wonder if the young girl with Mr. Wizard who forecasted the glass would overflow, but then found out it didn't through experimentation, went on to believe in global warming science or not.

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