Emotionally Unstable “Climate Scientists” Don’t Like Being Criticized, Run to Daddy (Nature)

The Guardian article titled ‘We have emotions too’: Climate scientists respond to attacks on objectivity is a remarkable exercise in self-pity, featuring climate scientists venting about the supposedly unjust criticism they face​. This is in reaction to the pushback received after publication of an idiotic survey by the Guardian last May

These self-appointed climate saviors insist that their projections should be accepted without question, and when they aren’t, they moan about how harsh and unfair the world has been to them. This isn’t science under attack—it’s fragile egos crying foul when the rest of us refuse to buy into their doomsday narrative.

guardian whiny scientists

The researchers said they had been subject to ridicule by some scientists after taking part in a large Guardian survey of experts in May, during which they and many others expressed their feelings of extreme fear about future temperature rises and the world’s failure to take sufficient action. They said they had been told they were not qualified to take part in this broad discussion of the climate crisis, were spreading doom and were not impartial.

However, the researchers said that embracing their emotions was necessary to do good science and was a spur to working towards better ways of tackling the climate crisis and the rapidly increasing damage being done to the world. They also said that those dismissing their fears as doom-laden and alarmist were speaking frequently from a position of privilege in western countries, with little direct experience of the effects of the climate crisis.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/25/we-have-emotions-too-climate-scientists-respond-to-attacks-on-objectivity

The Real “Crisis”: Hurt Feelings

The Guardian piece is full of climate scientists’ complaints about being criticized, a situation that apparently causes them great distress. They whimper about public skepticism as though it were some kind of assault on their personal well-being. In one particularly melodramatic section, a scientist whines about being called a “liar” on social media​. Well, welcome to the world of public debate, where people will scrutinize, question, and yes, sometimes rudely dismiss claims that seem dubious. But the Guardian seems determined to present these professionals not as robust researchers capable of handling criticism, but as delicate flowers wilting under the harsh glare of public doubt.

Instead of addressing substantive criticisms—like the failed climate models, inconsistent predictions, or the fact that climate policies often do more harm than good—these scientists turn to emotional appeals. They argue that the public’s harsh words are as much of a threat as climate change itself. They even suggest that “climate anxiety” is exacerbated by “online abuse” from skeptics​​. So, let’s get this straight: the models can handle the complex calculations of global warming trends, but the scientists can’t handle mean tweets?

The “Toxicity” of Skepticism

One theme that dominates The Guardian article is the scientists’ characterization of public scrutiny as “toxic”​. It’s a clever rhetorical strategy, designed to make criticism seem not only misguided but morally wrong. By framing dissenters as aggressors who “harm” scientists, the article tries to flip the script: suddenly, it’s not about whether the climate models hold up under scrutiny; it’s about whether the critics are hurting the scientists’ feelings.

If anything, this rhetoric exposes the scientists’ shaky confidence in their own predictions. People who are confident in their data don’t crumble under questioning. They engage, clarify, and persuade. But here, instead of rolling out hard evidence to silence their critics, climate scientists want sympathy. It’s a deeply unserious approach to a field that supposedly determines the fate of our planet.

Ben Pile’s critique in the Daily Sceptic nailed it when he observed that the current trend among climate scientists is to brand skeptics as not just wrong, but dangerous​. By shifting the focus to the alleged “toxicity” of criticism, the scientists evade the actual issues—like why their models frequently overshoot reality, or why predictions of imminent catastrophe keep getting delayed like a badly managed train schedule.

I believe that is the implication of Carrington’s series of Guardian articles and his survey. It shows that people with no scientific expertise to speak of are nonetheless routinely presented as ‘scientists’ and experts. It shows that even those with scientific expertise will happily and radically depart from both the consensus position and the objective data on both meteorological events and their societal impacts. And it shows they have no reluctance to use their own emotional distress as leverage to coerce others. Carrington thinks that showing us scientists’ emotional troubles will convince us to share their anxiety. But all it shows is that it would be deeply foolish to defer to the authority of climate science. It’s an unstable mess. Science must be cool, calm, rational, detached and disinterested, or it is just a silly soap opera.

https://dailysceptic.org/2024/05/13/many-of-the-climate-experts-surveyed-by-the-guardian-in-recent-propaganda-blitz-turn-out-to-be-emotionally-unstable-hysterics/

Victimhood as a Shield

A whole tantrum (see murder of crows, pod of whales), of climate whiners scurried off to their ideological shelter, Nature Climate Change, to cry for help. You see, when public skepticism became too much for their fragile nerves to handle, this tantrum ran straight to “daddy,” hoping for a pat on the back and a warm bottle of validation. And what better place than Nature, a publication that will bend over backwards to prop up their emotional narratives? These scientists clearly needed a safe space where their feelings could be stroked, rather than questioned. Forget rigorous defense of their models and theories—no, no, this time it was about defending their delicate psyches from the big, bad skeptics on Twitter.

The Nature article isn’t just a plea for public sympathy; it’s a full-on temper tantrum disguised as scholarly commentary. The authors aren’t interested in hard science or debate—they want therapy. With a straight face, they argue that public criticism is akin to abuse, reducing scientific discourse to a matter of emotional resilience. So rather than refining their models, this tantrum of whiners wants the rest of us to accept that hurt feelings are a legitimate basis for climate policy.

The Nature article doubles down on this victimhood narrative, describing scientists as burdened not only by the existential threat of climate change but by the hostility of the public​. The authors make a point of equating climate research with front-line war reporting, as if posting dire projections on X were the same as dodging bullets. This is a transparent attempt to invoke sympathy and sidestep criticism. If the scientists can present themselves as victims of a cruel public, then their arguments become untouchable.

The Guardian piece further amplifies this theme, portraying scientists as misunderstood martyrs who bear the emotional weight of foreseeing a bleak future​. It’s as if being skeptical of poorly substantiated projections makes one a tormentor of noble truth-seekers. The narrative is clear: “Don’t question us, or you’re part of the problem.” But when scientific discourse devolves into moral posturing, it loses its credibility and begins to resemble a political campaign—one driven by emotional manipulation rather than evidence.

Social Media Tears

Of course, no article about scientists’ suffering would be complete without a good dose of social media victimhood. The Guardian article features complaints about online “abuse,” as scientists recount harrowing experiences of being criticized on platforms like X​. According to these supposedly hard-nosed researchers, the online world is a mean place where people say unkind things about their predictions.

This is almost comical. After all, social media is a battleground for ideas, not a safe space for pampered experts. If scientists can’t handle criticism on X, how can they expect to withstand the scrutiny of peer review or public debate? Ben Pile rightly points out that climate scientists’ complaints about social media “abuse” often serve as an excuse to shut down dissent altogether​. Rather than engaging with criticism, these scientists prefer to play the victim, using their emotional wounds as a shield against legitimate questions.

“Science” as a Moral Crusade

The Guardian article’s melodramatic tone is matched by its moralistic language. It tries to turn science into a crusade, with climate scientists cast as righteous warriors battling the forces of ignorance and denial. This framing isn’t just patronizing; it’s manipulative. By presenting climate scientists as virtuous crusaders, the article implies that their opponents are not just mistaken, but immoral.

The scientists even manage to make their emotions seem like a badge of honor, arguing that their despair over climate change somehow legitimizes their work​​. But in reality, emotional outbursts and moral grandstanding are signs of weakness, not strength. Scientists are supposed to be objective and dispassionate—traits that make their conclusions reliable, not subject to personal bias or emotional manipulation.

The irony here is palpable: the same scientists who claim to be guided by evidence resort to emotional appeals when that evidence fails to convince. It’s a strategy designed to stifle debate rather than foster it. By making criticism a form of aggression, these scientists are effectively saying, “Agree with us, or you’re contributing to our emotional suffering.” This isn’t science; it’s emotional blackmail.

Public Scrutiny is a Good Thing

Contrary to the complaints in The Guardian, public scrutiny is not an attack on science; it’s a vital part of it. The scientific method thrives on skepticism, criticism, and revision. When climate models fail to predict reality accurately, the appropriate response is not to coddle the scientists’ feelings but to demand better models. If the scientists featured in The Guardian can’t handle that, they’re in the wrong field.

This thin-skinned response to criticism is particularly troubling given the sweeping policy changes that are based on climate projections. The rush to Net Zero, for example, has profound implications for energy costs, employment, and global inequality. Public skepticism is not only justified; it’s essential. If climate scientists expect to be taken seriously, they should welcome hard questions, not recoil from them.

Conclusion: Buck Up or Bow Out

The Guardian article offers a window into the current state of climate science—a field increasingly driven by emotional manipulation rather than empirical rigor. The scientists’ complaints about being criticized reveal more about their own insecurities than they do about the validity of their claims. If these researchers want to be seen as credible, they need to toughen up. Real science doesn’t hide behind emotions; it faces scrutiny head-on and welcomes challenges as a means to improve its findings.

So, to the climate scientists who complain about “abuse” on X: toughen up. If you can’t defend your models and predictions against public criticism, maybe you’re not as confident in your conclusions as you claim to be. And to The Guardian, which seems intent on shielding these delicate “warriors” from criticism: stop trying to turn skepticism into a sin. The future of the planet deserves better than a bunch of whining scientists seeking sympathy rather than solutions.

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Edward Katz
October 27, 2024 2:19 pm

It figures that The Guardian would publish this type of sob-story. The climate alarmists have been largely discredited for their excessive exaggeration and attribution of every weather-related event to human-induced climate change. Now that much of their bluff has been called and governments, businesses, industries and consumers have shown clearly that they don’t intend to make the major operational and lifestyle changes demanded, those crying wolf are claiming they’re being misunderstood.

Reply to  Edward Katz
October 28, 2024 10:33 am

Don’t give them too much credit, remember that the boy crying wolf was right in the end, no, these are chicken littles: afraid for the sky falling down.

October 27, 2024 2:20 pm

They made their own beds, so …

HB
Reply to  SasjaL
October 27, 2024 3:24 pm

They shat in their own bed so…….

October 27, 2024 2:30 pm

“The researchers said they had been subject to ridicule by some scientists,,,”

Yay for “some scientists!”

strativarius
October 27, 2024 2:43 pm

The term “Snowflake” is more than apposite

Reply to  strativarius
October 27, 2024 7:40 pm

I am skeptical of the narrative.

Somehow, the increase in atmospheric CO2 seems to be creating more Snowflakes!

Bob
October 27, 2024 2:45 pm

Very good news. These CAGW mongrels are pitiful. Do we have a list of names so we can mock them individually rather than as a group. I’m telling you we are winning, they know for certain they can not defend their claims. There is no reason to respect any of these cry babies.

Reply to  Bob
October 27, 2024 4:34 pm

I’m telling you we are winning,
________________________________________________________________________________

Maybe some points have been scored and maybe in a few weeks we will have a better idea if it’s the first quarter or the two minute warning and we’re 21 points behind.

What’s that Churchill quote about the end of the beginning? At any rate they aren’t holed up in the bunker pointing fingers at each other.

Bob
Reply to  Steve Case
October 27, 2024 8:54 pm

Steve think about what science they have offered even in the last decade. They are using the same argument they were using in the late 1990s. They insist they are right but can’t prove it. Contributors to WUWT have put forward dozens of reasons why they are wrong. Their only response is to call us names, threaten us and cry that we are mean. Their lies are crumbling but we need to push them harder.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Bob
October 28, 2024 10:29 pm

We are not winning. Regardless of the arguments, governments and those who pull their puppet strings are still in power and moving forward with their goals.

Alan M
Reply to  Steve Case
October 28, 2024 1:37 am

Churchill said after the battle of El Alamein “This is not the end, it is not even the beginning of the end, but it may be the end of the beginning”

HB
October 27, 2024 2:55 pm

What have they been doing to everyone that questioned their insanity ?
Strange behavior when the boot is on the the other foot , how about engaging in open debate you might learn something.
As my old mum used to say ” Sticks and stones will break your bones names will never hurt you “

Reply to  HB
October 27, 2024 4:03 pm

The one thing they can NEVER take, is reality and mockery.

Forrest Gardener
Reply to  bnice2000
October 27, 2024 6:53 pm

Sorry to nitpick but I think that’s two things.

Reply to  Forrest Gardener
October 27, 2024 8:02 pm

oops, I was initially just going to type “mockery“, then added in “reality”

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Forrest Gardener
October 29, 2024 8:54 am

Our chief weapon is surprise…surprise and fear…fear and surprise…. Our two weapons are fear and surprise…and ruthless efficiency…. Our *three* weapons are fear, surprise, and ruthless efficiency…and an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope…. Our *four*…no… *Amongst* our weapons…. Amongst our weaponry…are such elements as fear, surprise…. I’ll come in again.

Tom Halla
October 27, 2024 2:58 pm

As for the poster boy of whiny “climate scientists”, Michael Mann should have issued a retraction of MBH98 after McIntyre and McKittrick’s critique of the algorithm used. Producing “hockey sticks” out of red noise is devastating, but old Mikey doubled down.

October 27, 2024 3:02 pm

The irony here is palpable: the same scientists who claim to be guided by evidence resort to emotional appeals when that evidence fails to convince.”

I can think of at least Climate “Scientist” who has resorted to lawsuits instead.

Reply to  Gunga Din
October 28, 2024 9:32 am

“resort to emotional appeals when that evidence fails to convince.”

They don’t really have any evidence to fall back on. That’s their problem.

Climate Alarmist “evidence” is made up entirely of speculation, assumptions and unsubstantiated assertions about CO2 and the Earth’s atmosphere. Not a shred of evidence in there anywhere. And that’s after looking for 50 years.

Coeur de Lion
October 27, 2024 3:03 pm

I’ve been weeping a lot recently. At a cocktail party someone called me a ‘denier’ and I was terribly hurt.

Editor
October 27, 2024 3:20 pm

I must be reading the wrong articles: Neither The Guardian piece or the Nature Climate Change piece contain the word ‘toxic’.

The Guardian piece and the Nature Climate Change piece both contain the main complaint of the 3 victimized climate scientists: “The researchers said they had been subject to ridicule by some scientists.” Not nasty climate denying bloggers, not nasty snarky remarks in the comments sections, but “subject to ridicule by some scientists”.

They were ridiculed by their professional colleagues.

In fact, NOTHING in either article complained about the likes of authors or readers here or elsewhere in the climate skeptic world. Not that we wouldn’t have or maybe didn’t ridcule them, but it doesn’t appear that they even noticed us.

Worse yet, The Guardian article shows its lack of understanding in very title: “Climate scientists respond to attacks on objectivity” — The attacks were on the authors LACK of objectivity — the 3 offended authors railed against idea of objectivity in science.

The Guardian’s Damian Carrington didn’t even understand the issue he was writing about!

Chris Hanley
Reply to  Kip Hansen
October 27, 2024 9:59 pm

From the Guardian:
“The ideal of objectivity in science has long been criticised by philosophers of science, who argue that it is impossible to attain and not necessarily desirable in any case.”
The link goes to a long-winded Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy article titled “Scientific Objectivity” where a word count finds “empirical” used 6 times, “empiricism” 6, “observation” 23, “induction” 8, “inductive” 14 and “feminist” 29 times.

Reply to  Chris Hanley
October 28, 2024 4:15 am

Which philosophers’ I wonder. Popper and Kuhn recognized the difficulty but seemed to respect the necessity.

Reply to  Kip Hansen
October 28, 2024 1:08 am

“He didn’t understand …. .”
No change there, then.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  Oldseadog
October 28, 2024 7:54 am

You beat me to it!

October 27, 2024 3:32 pm

Quite ironic/hypocritical coming from a group of people who happily label those who question their science as “Deniers”

October 27, 2024 3:35 pm

(A) Some scientific hypotheses are attacked on grounds of evidence and logic. And they survive those attacks so they are promoted to the status of Theories.

(B) Some scientific hypotheses are attacked on grounds of evidence and logic. And they fail to survive those attacks so they are Rejected.

But this isn’t just about a search for truth and understanding. There are careers at stake.

Promotors of (A) are happy. They have success.
Promotors of (B) are unhappy. They have failed and are about to be thrown to the wolves outside the Ivory Towers. So they need a lifeline.

Their hypotheses may not survive testing by evidence or logic but there are other tests.

Who needs evidence when you have public opinion?
Who needs logic when you have feelings?

This is a sensible strategy for a failed hypothesis.

Reply to  MCourtney
October 28, 2024 2:12 am

Trouble is they invented ‘Post Normal Science’ to cover their tracks, if the data does not support your Hypothesis you can carry on as the consequences you predict are so dire. So think up any old rubbish hypothesis, say the world will end if you are correct and then take the money.

October 27, 2024 4:01 pm

A great LAUGH at those that make themselves into slop-stick climate comedians, then get upset.

Thanks 🙂 🙂

Oh, and GREAT article Charles..

… a total evisceration of the fragility of the bog-standard climate alarmist 🙂

Editor
October 27, 2024 4:22 pm

If scientists can’t handle criticism on X, how can they expect to withstand the scrutiny of peer review or public debate?“. Good question. The answer is straightforward: their pals control peer review, and they refuse to engage in public debate, but X has opened up a forum for dialogue that they can’t control.

October 27, 2024 4:32 pm

This ties closely in with the rampant flurry of “misinformation and disinformation” legislation being pushed through throughout the Western world. The idea will be to portray anything other than enthusiastic agreement with “the science” as some sort of hate speech. To disagree with the chosen experts of the bureaucracy will be made an actual crime. I wish this was hyperbole.

sherro01
Reply to  MarkH
October 27, 2024 5:16 pm

MarkH,
Hyperbole. We had an unfortunate female prime minister with a limited education who pronounced it Hyper Bowl as if it was a sports arena.
Geoff S

October 27, 2024 4:44 pm

What a bunch of egotistical idiots who are pushing global nations to waste trillions of dollars on flawed model driven garbage energy and climate schemes that are useless and incompetent while creating massive damage to energy systems that are critically needed to improve global benefits for billions of people.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Larry Hamlin
October 29, 2024 8:45 am

Still haven’t found any commas, I see.

sherro01
October 27, 2024 5:08 pm

The Nature article states that “It is overwhelmingly clear that climate change is both real and a serious threat to humans and ecosystems now, and increasingly so in the very near future.”
Nature is supposed to be a scientific journal.
Science is an ongoing quest for better understanding that requires testing of present understanding.
Nature has lost the path of science when it publishes belief, in the cloak of dogma, instead of progress along the path of inquiry.
Example. I spent decades as a geochemist in the science of new mineral discoveries. Often, we found substantial new mines where there was no or little prior indication that a mine was there. Monotonous acres of wheat farms, hundreds of square miles of alluvial plains covering and concealing the target. Nobody published in scientific journals words like “It is overwhelmingly clear that the thousands of square miles of land we define has not now and will not in the near future reveal any prospect for a new mine.”
You get the point?
Science does not advance by absolutely closing off options. It advances by encouragement of more inquiry.
Nature deserves reprimand for this strange, anti-science article. It smells of a post-2000 trend of menopausal women with hormone stress demanding equal time with men in science publications and lacking logical argument, resorting to weepy, female emotional stuff. Sorry, science does not progress that way. It is a hard, competitive, unemotional space where the best data win. Geoff S

Reply to  sherro01
October 27, 2024 11:59 pm

I think the word ‘overwhelming’ is used to cover up holes in arguments, hiding uncertainties by forever stating a falsehood over and over..

Duane
October 27, 2024 5:10 pm

What a bunch of hothouse flowers … pun intended.

Science is the search for truth … not a confirmation of religious fidelity. Consequently science has always been characterized by vigorous debate. Their whining that debate is somehow improper, even evil, just outs the whiners as non-scientists.

If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the scientific kitchen.

Mr.
October 27, 2024 6:04 pm

“Children won’t know what snow is”

But we’re seeing plenty of snowflakes now.

John the Econ
October 27, 2024 6:50 pm

Gee, Guardian. How about a profile of all the climate scientists who have had their careers irredeemably trashed for refusing to go along with your approved “consensus”; what they’ve had to suffer through and how they feel for standing up for scientific integrity?

That would actually be interesting.

trafamadore
October 27, 2024 7:16 pm

Old joke:

Only 6% of scientists are Republican.

Scientists are still trying to understand why that number is so high.

October 27, 2024 8:24 pm

From the article in the Guardian…
“As social scientists, we are very much aware that there is no such thing as neutral or unbiased [science] – you just have to take steps to make sure that your bias doesn’t take over.”

1) Social scientists? I thought they were meant to be climate scientists.
2) I think they didn’t take enough steps.
3) No such thing as neutral or unbiased science? Really? Just because these people aren’t any good at it doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.

David A
October 27, 2024 8:44 pm

“”They said they had been told they were not qualified to take part in this broad discussion of the climate crisis,””

BY whom, and where and when? They are the ones that avoid debate like the plague.

October 27, 2024 9:00 pm

A funny thing happened in the investment forum I belong to. Someone said that climate models are under estimating warming so maybe investments in coastal realestate will become uninsurable. I tossed in a comment that the models actually over estimate warming. Some guy jumps into the thread and says he is a climate modeler and just so anyone else reading the thread would know, said that I’m an idiot who doesn’t know what he is talking about. Well for those that know me, that was game on.

What followed was rediculous. I posted examples of climate models versus data. He replied that I didn’t know what I was talking about, then made some other claim. I refuted that with more data. It turned into a rather long thread. Early on he complained that he used to show up at WUWT but left because he would “win” arguments and be rewarded with abusive hate filled attacks.

Well you can probably figure out the rest. The thread could be summed up as me providing data and context and him saying “I’m a climate modeler and you are wrong”. Eventually he started throwing the exact abusive hate filled attacks that he claiimed he was the victim of.

I considered copying the whole thread and turning into an article for WUWT, but why bother? I’ve seen the same story over and over again.

They are a fragile bunch these young scientists and modelers. I suspect they lash out because they have an uneasy feeling that they might be wrong.

Reply to  davidmhoffer
October 27, 2024 9:05 pm

In fact when I quoted IPCC AR6, his reply was they were out of date, and also wrong.

Wow.

Reply to  davidmhoffer
October 28, 2024 1:12 am

That would be the famous “settled science” then.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  davidmhoffer
October 28, 2024 10:09 am

Your post makes me think of Idiocracy. “It’s got electrolytes!” and “What plants crave!”

October 27, 2024 9:16 pm

Will Happer has said (paraphrasing) that when he was the DoE Director of the Office of Science (1991-1993), he would interview scientists about their work. They were typically very eager to discuss their latest results, and would answer whatever critical questions he had.

Except the climate modelers. They were defensive and resented his questions. Will Happer said that was when he first realized there were problems in the field.

Clearly, given the head post, the problems have only worsened.

Reply to  Pat Frank
October 27, 2024 10:59 pm

Do you know what metric is used for CO2 in the climate models? Is ppmv or moles per cu. meter used? How do they take into account that in real air there is no uniform distribution of CO2?

For example, at the MLO the concentration of CO2 is 422 ppmv in dry air. One cu. meter of this air has 0.829 g of CO2 and a mass of 1.29 kg at STP. At 30 deg. C one cubic meter of this air has 0.745 g of CO2 and mass 1.16 kg. What value for the concentration of H2O vapor is used?

The modelers assume that CO2 cause heating of air. However, there is empirical temperature data that this is not true as shown by temperature data from
Death Valley. From 1922 to 2001 the temperature plots in the graphic are fairly flat. In 1922 the concentration of CO2 was 303 ppmv and increased to 371 ppmv by 2001 b but there is no corresponding increase in air temperature. Thus it concluded that CO2 did not cause any warming of the desert air.

The graphic was obtained the late John Daly’s website “Still Waiting Greenhouse”
available at: http://www.John-Daly.com.

Do you think empirical temperature data can be used to put an end to global warming and climate nonsense?

death-vy
Anthony Banton
Reply to  Harold Pierce
October 29, 2024 6:24 am

First off … just where is the source of that graph?

“Do you think empirical temperature data can be used to put an end to global warming and climate nonsense?”

If you intend to only look at cherry-picked denialist sourced data – then that may well be difficult — why this place exists of course.

Try looking at up-to-date data and from credible/multiple sources (rarely on view here from most denizens) – then unless you are a flat-earther the answer is as obvious seeing the sea from a “Torquay hotel window”.

comment image

https://www.ktnv.com/news/death-valley-says-this-summer-was-their-hottest-one-on-record

Reply to  Anthony Banton
October 29, 2024 10:52 am

First off … just where is the source of that graph?

I am genuinely baffled as to why you would want people to think you are incapable of reading English :

The graphic was obtained [from] the late John Daly’s website “Still Waiting Greenhouse”

available at: http://www.John-Daly.com.

That graph goes from 1922 to 2001, with individual season and annual lines.

Your graph goes from 1952 to 2024, but is only for summer.

Attached is a “mash-up” of the (red) “summer” line of John Daly’s graph re-aligned to yours. Notice any similarities ?

.

… the answer is as obvious [as]

From the link chosen by you :

DEATH VALLEY (KTNV) — The hottest place on Earth just had its hottest summer in recorded history, according to the Death Valley National Park.

Meteorological summer that is — which is June, July and August.

According to the national park, Death Valley experienced an average 24-hour temperature of 104.5°F (40.3°C) between June and August of this year. The previous record, set in 2021 and 2018, was 104.2°F (40.1°C) — but not anymore.

The hottest summer on record should not be confused with the hottest temperature on record for Death Valley. That record — which is also a world record — was set more than a century ago when Greenland Ranch (now known as Furnace Creek) recorded 134°F (57°C) on July 10, 1913.

What, exactly, is “obvious” about setting new “hottest summer” and “hottest 24-jour” hour temperature records without breaking the “hottest [Tmax] temperature on record for Death Valley” value ?

Death-Valley-overlap
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