I am reading a book right now, by Dr. S. Fred Singer and Dennis Avery called: Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1500 years. Here is a review of the book, by the authors, at the Hudson Institute.

Today, Powerline writes about an interview with Fred Singer on the failure of global climate models. The Post is Linked Here. Here is one of the more interesting quotes from the article:

“I think climate science is on its way to becoming pathological, to becoming abnormal in the sense that it is being guided by the money that’s being made available to people.”

There is another new book coming out this month by Danish scientist Henrik Svensmark, called ” The Chilling Stars: the New Theory of Global Climate “. A short summary of the book follows:

As prize-winning science writer Nigel Calder and climate physicist Henrik Svensmark explain, an interplay of the clouds, the Sun and cosmic rays – sub-atomic particles from exploding stars – seems to have more effect on the climate than man-made carbon dioxide.

This conclusion stems from Svensmark’s research at the Danish National Space Center which has recently shown that cosmic rays play an unsuspected role in making our everyday clouds. And during the last 100 years cosmic rays became scarcer because unusually vigorous action by the Sun batted many of them away. Fewer cosmic rays meant fewer clouds and a warmer world.

The theory, simply put here but explained in fascinating detail in the book, emerges at a time of intense public and political debate about climate change. Motivated only by their concern that science must be trustworthy, Svensmark and Calder invite their readers to put aside their preconceptions about man-made global warming and look afresh at the role of Nature in this hottest of world issues.