HOW YOU CAN HELP STOP GLOBAL WARMING
We'll get to what you can do in a moment, but first we're going to talk about bear fat.
From time immemorial, the Apache Indians in what is now Arizona have had a fool-proof way of determining if the coming winter would be cold or mild. Sometime around October or so, they go into the mountains and shoot a bear. They stopped using arrows to do this a long time ago.
Skinning out the bear, they examine its fat layer under the skin. If it's thin and less viscous, the winter will be mild; the thicker and more viscous, the colder the winter will be. The Apaches on bear hunts over the past few weeks report the latter.
Ask ranchers out West, and they'll tell you that the coats of coyotes, ground squirrels, horses, cows, and any other critter with fur or a hide that lives outdoors are thicker this fall.
You'd be wise to pay attention to the Apaches and the ranchers, to the bears and coyotes, in preparing for this winter, rather than Algore and the glowarmers, or you are going to freeze your tush off.