My full time occupation is in Information Technology but it brings the following skills
* the ability to read and process digital data (and there's plenty of that in climate research)
* the ability to analyse data
* skills in logical thinking
Compare those skills to the skills(?) that some other voices on climate have, like biologist or politician, and to Phil Jones, head of the UK's Climatic Research Unit, who was ranked as one of the UK's top 100 scientists in 2010, but admitted in a Climategate email that he had no idea how to use Excel to calculate a trend.
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John’s “Global Warming Issues” site: http://mclean.ch/climate/global_warming.html
John’s 2021 book: “How the Atmosphere Works: An introduction for people interested in climate change”:
https://robert-boyle-publishing.com/product/how-the-atmosphere-works/
John’s 2018 book: “Audit of the HadCRUT4 Global Temperature Dataset”: https://robert-boyle-publishing.com/product/audit-of-the-hadcrut4-global-temperature-dataset-mclean-2018/
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https://linktr.ee/tomanelson1
Tom Nelson's Twitter: https://twitter.com/tan123
Substack: https://tomn.substack.com/
About Tom: https://tomnelson.blogspot.com/2022/03/about-me-tom-nelson.html
Notes for climate skeptics:
https://tomn.substack.com/p/notes-for-climate-skeptics
ClimateGate emails: