 What is the difference between weather and climate? Weather, as we know, can be sunny, rainy, windy, snowy or even stormy. But such events are weather. They are not climate. So what's the difference? Well, climate is not weather over a week or a year or a decade. At the very least, it is weather over a 30-year period. Preferably longer, but that is the minimum. So let us take a graph of the hottest days since the late 1800s and have a look at that in terms of climate. There have been different phases of climate alarmism, but here now we're in extreme weather alarmism and that, frankly, is not scientific. You cannot pick a single weather event and then claim it's climate. So, for example, you take a hurricane or a flood, anything else. What you would have to do is look at the pattern of that event, that flood, that rain, over a long time to see what the trend is. And when you do that, it exposes the complete lying and the word has to be lying of today's modern climate alarmists. This is a record of the actual temperatures measured on a normal scale. For Central England since 1880. The red line shows the climatic change in temperature. You can see how small it is, there's a small and gradual rise, which is what you would expect from the warming out of the little ice age. And there was no doubt there was a little ice age, but that warming actually started in the year 1700. So it was warming about 150 years before the Industrial Revolution. A man started to put CO2 into the atmosphere. So at a time when all the alarmists are telling you we have the hottest days, the hottest day, etc. It's simply not true. Even their own model shows the Earth is currently cooling. Seven and a half years is too short a period to show a climate change. I will not resort to the same dirty tricks of the alarmist use by using weather to describe climate.